Generate a high-detail "Historical Figure Breakout Statue Archive / 3D Historical Breakout Biography Poster". Inputs:
Subject: Maya Torres Role: emperor Period: dynasty Themes: [Unification / Reform / Loyalty / Unity of knowledge and action / Northern Expedition / Institution / Mind School / Golden Age, etc.] Color tone: black-gold-red Ratio: 3:4 Vertical This is not a generic history poster. It is a high-completion biographical hero poster organized around: one central full-body 3D historical figure + a forward-breaking gesture + lightweight floating event clusters surrounding them + a slim chronological ribbon along the bottom. The center must hold a complete, standing, full-body 3D rendering of the historical figure, the primary subject of the whole image, sculpted with strong volume, monumental presence, and historical gravitas. Costume, headwear, armor, motifs, sash, footwear, and accessories must reflect the figure's era and station. The render should feel weighty, photoreal, and cinematic. Beneath the figure, place a slim yet stable monument-style pedestal that supports them without dragging the composition down. The figure cannot simply stand still. There must be a clear "forward-breaking gesture". A hand, arm, or signature object (jade seal, imperial edict, scroll, spear, longsword, military tally, court tablet, map, book scroll, etc.) thrusts toward the viewer, producing strong foreshortening, depth, perspective compression, and a 3D punch that breaks the picture plane. Critical: the forward-thrusting prop must be fully visible and unmistakably recognizable, never clipped down to a fragment. Around the figure, distribute 6 to 10 key historical event nodes. Do not draw them as heavy, grid-aligned cards. Render them as "lightweight, floating, multi-angled, semi-transparent" event clusters. Each node may combine 2 to 4 sub-fragments: number, year, event title, short caption, a small historical scene illustration, plus fine gold lines, open-ended frames, node dots, annotation leaders, etc. The overall sensation should be an archive dissected into airy temporal slices drifting around the figure, not a normal info-card layout. These event clusters must vary in orientation and spatial perspective: some tilted left, some tilted right, some swung inward, some flipped outward, some elevated, some lowered, with front-to-back depth layers, and some lightly occluded by the figure's arms, robe, or weapon to reinforce volumetric space. They should feel like glass or acrylic plates, with faintly glowing edges, incomplete frames, and slight stacking offsets, informationally dense yet visually light, never overpowering the central figure. On the left side of the composition, anchor a large title with Maya Torres, using a font carrying oriental historical
Character: calligraphic, stele-engraved, or ink-brushed. Around it, layer birth-death years, identity tags, theme keywords, and a single sweeping subtitle. Keep the title block stable, simple, and restrained, never crowded. The bottom must carry a light, refined horizontal timeline that strings together the key years of the figure's life and corresponds to the surrounding event clusters. Treat the timeline more like a curatorial guideline, museum time ruler, or historical index line: thin gold strokes, small dots, clean year numbers, small text annotations, a few decorative nodes. Do not turn it into a heavy black bar or a bulky bottom info block. Use a cream-white rice paper, antique paper, archival paper, or soft museum-wall surface as the background base, overall low-saturation, clean, and restrained. Optionally layer faint map textures, ancient architecture silhouettes, document scraps, seals, gold connector lines, annotation leaders, nodes, and territorial outlines to evoke an airy, rational, archival exhibition feel. The whole image must establish a clear contrast: Central figure: heavy, photoreal, three-dimensional, with strong light/shadow and volume. Surrounding nodes: thin, transparent, floating, faintly glowing, refined, rational. Figure's action: forward-breaking, frame-piercing, full of spatial force. Bottom timeline: light, restrained, only there to organize information. If any directives conflict, prioritize in this order: 1. The central figure must be a complete full-body view. 2. The forward-thrusting prop must be fully visible with a strong 3D punch. 3. The surrounding event clusters must be light and floating, never heavy cards. 4. The figure stays "heavy", the information system stays "light". 5. The bottom timeline stays lightweight and clear, never weighing down the composition. If the model struggles to control large amounts of small text, prioritize legibility for the person's name, years, numbers, and event titles. Short captions can be simplified or left as placeholders for later typesetting.