The person was modernized so that he was not afraid of car accidents
The famous Australian artist Patricia Piccinini has portrayed Superman, who will survive even the worst road accident, by Melbourne sculptor Patricia Piccinini. She didn't just fantasize - she was guided by the scientific recommendations of trauma surgeons and traffic safety specialists. As a result, Graham appeared invulnerable, he is Graham tenacious. That is, superman in a sense.
Airbags are integrated into the ribs
The head is like a helmet
Yes, Graham is not handsome. But health, as they say, is more important. Therefore, Superman's brain is protected by a massive skull, which is able to damp the impact of the car. He has a flat face - ears and nose are hidden so that they are difficult to injure. There is essentially no neck, which means that it is impossible to break it. The skin is thick - impenetrable. The ribs are hidden in fatty pads, again covered with thick skin. They serve as a kind of airbags and make the chest, with all its contents, highly resistant to injury. The joints in the knees bend in different directions - this reduces the likelihood of fractures.
There is no neck - and there is nothing to break
Promotional video:
Graham is also good as a pedestrian. He has strong legs that allow him to jump away from an approaching car.
REFERENCE
Patricia Pizzinini works in the genre of hyper-realism. And it is not the first time that it surprises the public with its sculptures. In the galleries of different countries, you can see the creatures she created. They are creepy, but not as fantastic as they might seem. Most of the figures demonstrate what the intelligent inhabitants of the Earth would look like if evolution went somehow sideways or with quirks.
Patricia "sculpts" sculptures from silicone, polyurethane, fiberglass, leather, animal hair and human hair.
This is what a humanoid pig might look like. Maybe a cow
And such could be reasonable meerkats
If a person at the dawn of his evolution did not climb down from a tree, then he might well have retained grasping feet
Scientists have figured out what the chauffeur of the future should look like
Vladimir LAGOVSKY