You dynamic camber idea looks terrible

You are attaching the wheel via a spring, so the cornering load will twist the spring and put the wheel into positive camber. That is looking at the sketch as drawn - otherwise it certainly is out of the box thinking
The geometric roll centre is harder to explain. I may attach some pics one day

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When the car rolls in a corner the roll happens along the longtitudinal axis of the car. But where is this axis?

The axis of roll is drawn along a line connecting the "roll centres" of the front and rear of a car. The roll centres are "made" by the suspension geometry and can be moved around by adjusting the geometry.
Stick a pencil lenthwise through a box and rotate the box - that is it's roll axis. You can stick the pencil through lower at the front than the back and the box will roll in a skewed fashion along it's axis (which is why some cars lift a wheel cornering). If you marked the box somewhere on it's side face to represent it's CofG and pushed the box around the pencil by it's CofG - by putting the pencil axis higher or lower the box is easier or harder to "roll" (more or less leverage between r/c & CofG). Put the pencil above the CofG and the box rolls into the corner instead of out
It is hard to explain how the roll centre is derived, but an easy one to explain is a beam axle (not De-dion) or a swing axle - these both have a roll centre at the centre of the differential.
For a wishbone setup (or any other, but harder to visualise) - you have to imagine that you project the arms past their mounting points to a point where the angles converge (you make the wishbones into virtual swing arms by doing this) and then project that point back to the contact patch of the tyre, do this for both sides and where the two lines from the tyres cross over (hopefully in the centre line of the car) this is the roll centre. Parallel arms give a r/c height at ground level BTW).
The position of the roll centres and the roll axis is critical to making the car handle well. Hard to explain, but the distance of the r/c height to the CofG at each end of the car is important in this due to the roll couple (pushing the box around a pencil by it's CofG) - if this is wrong as the car rolls into a corner and transfers it's weight diagonally front/rear then the weight transfer can be un-predictable and hard for the driver to cope with.
So, being able to chose exactly where the r/c is at each end is mighty important and I expect you will find that race teams fiddle with this quite a lot during a season.
BTW placing the roll axis on or above the CofG in the hope of getting zero roll or inward tilt causes other problems due to "jacking" which un-loads the tyre (another discussion

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