Page from 'Mécanisme de la Physionomie Humaine'

Page from 'Mécanisme de la Physionomie Humaine'

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Science Museum Group Collection

Cover page from published book 'Mecanisme de la Physionomie Humaine', marked 'P1.5.' and consisting16 tables from no. 39 to 48 of various male patients having electrodes applied. The book was incorporated by Duchenne de Boulogne; photographer Adrien Tournachon and published by Jules Renouard, Paris, in 1862.

Cover page from Duchenne's book, 'Mécanisme de la Physionomie Humaine', published by Jules Renouard, Paris, in 1862.

In 1856, Duchenne began to photograph inmates of the Saltpetriere mental hospital in Paris, where he worked. He devised an experimental method for activating individual muscles in the face by applying electrodes to male and female volunteers. Duchenne believed that each muscle represented a 'movement of the soul' and he listed 53 emotions that could be classified in terms of muscular action. In this photograph we can see Duchenne, on the left, applying electrodes to the face of one of his volunteers.

Duchenne's photographs were taken with the assistance of Adrien Tournachon (1825-1903) who was the younger brother of the celebrated Parisian photographer Gaspard Felix Tournachon (1820-1910), better known as Nadar.

Details

Category:
Photographs
Object Number:
1991-5030/6
type:
book and albumen print
credit:
The National Media Museum, Bradford