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647 results for biface

Image for The Face in Medieval Sculpture
Essay

The Face in Medieval Sculpture

October 1, 2006

By Wendy Alpern Stein and Charles T. Little

The image of the head or face can have the capacity to instruct, but in certain forms it can possess a special power to protect, to heal, or even do harm.
Image for What's in a Face?
editorial

What's in a Face?

July 22, 2015

By Soyoung Lee

Associate Curator Soyoung Lee examines a portrait of eighteenth-century scholar Yun Dongseom currently on view in Korea: 100 Years of Collecting at the Met.
Image for The Changing Face of Art
editorial

The Changing Face of Art

May 17, 2013

By Ethan

Teen Advisory Group Member Ethan discusses the contrast in the late nineteenth century between works done in the academic, Salon-accepted tradition and those of the Impressionists.
Image for A Face Refuses Contact
video

A Face Refuses Contact

January 22, 2015
"If you try to replicate the exact expression, it's nearly impossible to do."—Alice Schwarz, educator
Image for A Fresh Digital Face for The Met
editorial

A Fresh Digital Face for The Met

February 29, 2016

By Sree Sreenivasan and Loic Tallon

Chief Digital Officer Sree Sreenivasan and Deputy Chief of Digital Loic Tallon outline the strategic initiatives applied to The Met's newly refreshed website and digital features.
Image for Set in Stone: The Face in Medieval Sculpture
Faces in medieval sculpture are explorations of human identity, marked not only by evolving nuances of style but also by ongoing drama of European history. The eighty-one sculpted heads featured in this beautifully illustrated volume provide a sweeping view of the Middle Ages, from the waning days of the Roman Empire to the Renaissance. Each masterful sculpture bears eloquent witness to its own history, whether it was removed from its original context for ideological reasons or because of changing tastes. As a work of art, the sculpted head is a particularly moving and vivid fragment; it often seems to retain some part of its past, becoming not unlike a living remnant of an age. In antiquity and throughout the Middle Ages it was generally believed that the soul resided in the head, as articulated by Plato in the Timaeus. The head was thus understood to be a center of power, the core of individual identity, and the primary vehicle for human expression, emotion, and character. Many medieval sculpted heads became separated from their settings—often churches or ecclesiastical monuments—by the seemingly endless destruction and displacement of art works in Europe during and after the Middle Ages. Political and religious ferment, neglect, shifts in taste, and simply time itself: all exacted a heavy toll. During the French Revolution, in particular, legions of stone figures lost their heads in a course of mutilation that paralleled the infamous guillotine. In many cases the artistic or aesthetic merits of a given fragment are all that remain of the original work's context, meaning, and significance. Some heads survived precisely because of their innate beauty, or perhaps out of reverence for the grand monuments to which they once belonged. Seven thematic sections retrace the history of these heads using both traditional art-historical methods, such as connoisseurship and archaeology, as well as the latest scientific technologies. In his introduction to the volume, Charles T. Little provides an overview of these general themes, which include Iconoclasm, The Stone Bible, and Portraiture. An essay by distinguished scholar Willibald Sauerländer discusses the complex and fascinating issue of physiognomy in medieval art, from menacing or carnivalesque grotesques to the beatific visages of saints and apostles. Sauerländer presciently observes, "To learn about 'the fate of the face' in the Middle Ages—a period torn by strife, faith, and fear—may prove today to be more than a mere art-historical concern."
Image for This 3,000-year-old Olmec face was made to last. What can we learn from it?
"Being able to recognize a face is one of those fundamental survival skills."
Image for Biface
Art

Biface

Date: ca. 600,000–150,000 BCE
Accession Number: 2019.422

Image for Biface
Art

Biface

Date: 700,000–200,000 BCE
Accession Number: 2018.51.5

Image for Biface
Art

Biface

Date: 700,000–200,000 BCE
Accession Number: 2018.51.6

Image for Biface
Art

Biface

Date: 700,000–200,000 BCE
Accession Number: 2018.51.3

Image for Biface
Art

Biface

Date: 700,000–200,000 BCE
Accession Number: 2018.51.7

Image for Biface
Art

Biface

Date: 700,000–200,000 BCE
Accession Number: 2018.51.4

Image for Biface
Art

Biface

Date: 700,000–200,000 BCE
Accession Number: 2018.51.2

Image for Biface
Art

Biface

Date: 700,000–200,000 BCE
Accession Number: 2018.51.8

Image for Biface
Art

Biface

Date: 700,000–200,000 BCE
Accession Number: 2018.51.9

Image for Biface
Art

Biface

Date: 700,000–200,000 BCE
Accession Number: 2018.51.1