I, too, recommend track lighting for this situation -- Even quartz bulbs at 120VAC would give a great light. Be forewarned, however, that virtually all of the offered options will have some effect on photos taken.
-Daylight florescents have quite a green "spike", and may require some magenta filtering (there are now florescents with correct color temperatures that are used in TV studios and film making -- but these are not the kinds you'll find at Home Depot, and cost about 3x "normal")
-Quartz bulbs (high or low voltage) while "brighter and hotter" than "normal" incandescent bulbs are generally still not 3200¡K, the color balance point for "indoor" film, and will "warm" the color balance.
Your best bet for photography then, is to use actual photo lights and film that is matched (either daylight (approx 5600¡K) or photoflood (3200¡K)).
However, in between photo shoots, my track light lit layout looks great with sharp shadows (with consistent "sun angle") and bright illumination.