The Face & the Passions Workshop

The Faces & the Passions workshop will be taking place on the 31st March 2014, at the Innovation Centre, Rennes Drive, Exeter. Below is the schedule for the day:

9.00 Coffee and registration
9.10 WelcomeDavid Houston Jones & Bernard Devauchelle
9:30 – 10:40 François Delaporte: La Fabrique du visage et des passions Chair & respondent : Bernard DevauchelleRound table : François Delaporte, Bernard Devauchelle and Iain Hutchison
10:40-11:00 Coffee
11.00-12.00 Julie Mazaleigue, Faces of desire : representations of sexual desire in the arts (18th – 21st century)Chair: Marjorie Gehrhardt
12:00 – 1:00 Alex Murray: Can the face be biopolitical? The face and historicising biopoliticsChair: David Houston Jones
1:00 – 2:00 Lunch: Innovation Centre foyerSteering committee meeting, Strand 3
2:00-3:00 Joe Kember: Reading the Inscrutable Face in Early and Silent Cinema Chair: Beatriz Pichel
3:00-4.00 David Houston Jones : Insignificant residues: the face, the grimace and trauma in Beckett, Agamben and Delahaye Chair: Suzannah Biernoff
4.00 – 4:30 Coffee
4:30- 5:30 Patricia Skinner: Reading The Medieval Face and its Passions Chair: Michelle Webb
5:30 Close

BBC One Spotlight: Walter Yeo

A recent episode of BBC One’s Spotlight saw Paddy Hartley and Marjorie Gehrhardt discussing facially-injured WWI sailor Walter Yeo and his surgeon Harold Gillies. Yeo, from Plymouth, underwent extensive and pioneering facial reconstruction surgery carried out over a number of years by Gillies. Paddy Hartley spoke about the influence of the Gillies archive on his work, and the inspiration he drew from this unique period in social and military history. One of Hartley’s pieces, a uniform sculpture displaying Yeo’s accident and recovery, was shown alongside a discussion of the lasting historical and medical significance of Gillies’s work and its evolution into increasingly complex modern-day surgery techniques. During an interview with presenter Justin Leigh, Gehrhardt considered the social implications of Yeo’s severe disfigurement during his reintegration back into society, including the positive impact of the accepting attitudes of his family and local community.