
Cleveland Museum of Art
Figure 7: Étude du méchanisme et de l'expression du muscle frontal chez un vieillard: à droit, attention; à gauche, repos
Guillaume-Benjamin-Amand Duchenne
- Date
- c. 1856, printed 1862
- Medium
- Albumen print from glass plate negative
- Department
- Photography
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
Duchenne embarked on the first scientific, systematic exploration of the physiology of human facial expression and hoped, through photographs of his experiments, to teach artists how to portray those emotions. The experiments were performed by applying electrical stimulation to a single muscle on one side of the face, so that the viewer could clearly see the impact of the muscular contraction. Duchenne, a neurologist at a hospital for the poor in Paris, turned to photography to record the grammar of human expression.
The authoritative record is held by Cleveland Museum of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Cleveland Museum of Art and other institutions.

Figure 45: Contraction électrique forte des triangulaires des lèvres et des sourciliers: douleur et déspoir
Cleveland Museum of Art

Figure 51: À droite, contraction partielle de l'élévateur commun de l'aile du nez et de la lèvre supérieure: mécontentement, mauvaise humeur; à gauche, repos
Cleveland Museum of Art

Figure 32: Natural laughter by the voluntary contraction of the two large zygomatics and the lower palpebral orbicularis
Cleveland Museum of Art

Mécanisme de la Physionomie Humaine
Getty Museum

Figure 54: Abaissement volontaire de la mâchoire inférieure: mouvement inexpressif
Cleveland Museum of Art

Spécimen d'une Expérience Électro-Physiologique
Getty Museum

Électro-Physiologie Photographique, Figure 75
Getty Museum

Mécanisme de la Physionomie Humaine, Figure 77
Getty Museum

Électro-Physiologie Photographique, Figure 59
Getty Museum

Électro-Physiologie Photographique, Figure 65
Getty Museum

Électro-Physiologie Photographique, Figure 42
Getty Museum

Électro-Physiologie Photographique, Figure 34
Getty Museum