Working with Creative Industries: a Workshop Series
We have been awarded ‘Plus Funds’ by the UKRI Development Network to run a training and development programme over the...
Reflections on the themes, methods, challenges and opportunities of AboutFace research, by our team and invited guests.
In January 2023, AboutFace moved to King’s College London, where its work encompasses a wide range of technologies of the face. See the new project website here
We have been awarded ‘Plus Funds’ by the UKRI Development Network to run a training and development programme over the...
There have been fewer than 50 face transplants in the world since 2005, and only two people have undergone the...
As we near the end of 2021, the AboutFace team has been reflecting on the year so far. It’s been...
A Hidden Community: The Movement for Face Equality Facial disfigurement is a globally neglected human rights issue By Phyllida Swift...
Diminishing their Voices: Face Transplants, Patients, and Social Media A video showing a woman inside a spider monkey enclosure at...
Why hasn’t it happened yet? Barriers to face transplantation in the UK There have been 48 face transplants around the...
Robert Chelsea and the First African American Face Transplant: Two Years On By Fay Bound Alberti On 27 July 2019,...
History has Many Faces This is a post about the conditions in which I am able to research facial difference...
In April 2013, a Polish stonemason, Grzegorz Galasiński, received the world's first 'emergency' face transplant after an industrial accident. The operation was performed within three weeks of injury, and was the first face transplant performed in Poland. For the first time, doctors described the surgery as life-saving, rather than life-enhancing. Consultant plastic and aesthetic surgeon Dan Saleh reflects on this surgery in our latest guest blog.
—Even losing you (the joking voice, a gesture I love)— … Elizabeth Bishop, “One Art” Sensational Surgery: What does ‘success’ look...