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The future face : image, identity, innovation / Sandra Kemp with contributions from Vicki Bruce and Alf Linney.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: London : Profile Books, 2004.Description: 222 pages : illustrations ; 21 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 1861977689
Subject(s):
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Non-Fiction Davis (Central) Library Non-Fiction Non-Fiction 599.948 KEM 1 Available T00309372
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Faces are endlessly fascinating. Their diversity, their versatility and their unrivalled ability to communicate make them an enigma. Artists and scientists have been trying to unravel the mysteries of what makes a face and how it functions for thousands of years. Where does the face begin and end? It is a slender and fragile boundary, where interior and exterior worlds meet. It is part of the body and yet it is elevated and fetishised. It is where our spirit and personality manifest themselves. The closer we come to an anatomical understanding of the face, the more impenetrable it seems to become. Future Face looks at the physical characteristics of the face and at how we read faces and use them to express our thoughts and emotions. Creatively juxtaposing historical and contemporary material, Sandra Kemp takes us on a journey through the myriad ways the face has been depicted and analysed, altered and reconstructed from pre-history to the present. It encompasses the physical - skin, bones and tissue - and the conceptual, where faces are re-imagined in the virtual-reality. Kemp invites us to consider perhaps the most urgent question about the face today - whether it will continue to be shaped by genetics and evolution, or whether we will ourselves determine its appearance in the future? She asks whether our self-image can keep pace with ever-accelerating technological advances, from airbrushing and digital manipulation to cosmetic surgery and face transplants. Do we face a crisis of identity now that realms of science fiction are within the reach of possibility? Published to accompany a major exhibition by the Wellcome Trust, Sandra Kemp's ambitious and wide-ranging study explores questions around the face, its representation and function. She unpicks some complex issues using a rich mix of intriguing material, drawing on art, technology, medicine and psychology. The book also contains a complementary chapter on the psychology of the face by Vicki Bruce and one on medical technology by Alf Linney. Future Face is a provocative and at times unnerving exploration of the human face.

Includes bibliography (p. [216]-219).

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Reviews provided by Syndetics

Publishers Weekly Review

?A face transplant would involve removing the face, facial muscles and subcutaneous fat from the recipient [?] The donor face from a recently dead person, complete with lips, chin, ears, nose, eight major blood vessels and even some bone would then be grafted into place.? Leaving no stomach unturned, Kemp?s fascinating study uses a combination of history and science to posit the future for the most engaging aspect of human morphology. From first impressions to appearance in death, the face holds an important place in the human psyche: every countenance is unique, and the human brain recognizes facial features instinctively. Yet scientists are still unable to explain in quantifiable terms what makes a face beautiful or to replicate the numerous expressions that cause the face to appear life-like. Manipulation or disfigurement involving the face may seem like the stuff of myth (Medusa), science fiction (Frankenstein) or performance art (plastic surgery artist Orlan), but Kemp?s book places these events in the context of new technologies and the resulting set of ethical questions. Just as sculptors and surgeons worked together to reconstruct the faces of World War II soldiers, the collaborative effort of scientists and artists will continue to push the boundary for what is both possible and acceptable when it comes to recreating the human face. Wide-ranging and arrestingly illustrated, Kemp?s book sits at the intersection of technology, medicine, cultural studies and aesthetics; it will pique the interest of anyone concerned with the politics of identity. In fact, the more bookish fans of ?Extreme Makeover? should love it. 111 b&w photographs and illustrations. (Mar. 15) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

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