
Instant Genius What faces reveal about us and the societies we live in
Feb 20, 2026
Dr Faye Bound-Alberti, historian and founder of the Centre for Technology and the Body at King’s College London, explores how faces shaped art, beauty ideals and social scrutiny. She traces classical proportion to modern social media, reviews the rise of cosmetic and reconstructive practices, and warns about biases in facial recognition and the future of face-driven culture.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Portraits Made The Face A Social Identity
- Portraiture's development mirrors how societies began to value individual faces over symbols.
- Faye Bound-Alberti links the rise of the face-as-self to Renaissance humanism and emotional representation.
Symmetry Became A Moralised Beauty Standard
- Classical symmetry and the golden ratio shaped Western standards of beauty that persist today.
- Those aesthetic rules became tied to moral judgments and modern cosmetic ideals, says Faye Bound-Alberti.
Galton's Composites Linked Faces To Crime
- Faye recounts Francis Galton's composite photography experiments linking faces to criminality.
- She traces that logic back to Lombroso and Victorian cataloguing of human worth.

