• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
Interface

Interface

  • about
  • collaborators
  • aesthetics
  • technology
  • transplants
  • Blog

Technology

Technology intersects with the face in critical ways in the past, and in the present. From the bias of facial recognition systems to the emotional impact of robotic faces, and from digital skins to represent ourselves to the increased proliferation of ‘deep fakes’, the representation of the face has critical implications for our psychological and social identity.  Interface explores the entangled relationships that have always existed between technology and human identity, and imagines what the implications are for our future face.

Our blog

view all
  • June 4, 2026

Marilyn Monroe at 100: the face, the fantasy, the fortune

  • April 17, 2026

Connecting humans: from faces to consciousness

  • February 18, 2026

The Many Faces of Truth 

  • October 14, 2024

‘People say, just get surgery, and I’m like: Bruh, this is after surgery’

  • May 9, 2024

The reconstruction of a 75,000-year-old Neanderthal woman’s face makes her look quite friendly – there’s a problem with that

  • April 9, 2024

Standardising healthcare: the case of face and hand transplants

  • January 10, 2024

NEW YEAR, NEW YOU?

  • March 15, 2023

The face race

disfigured
  • October 31, 2022

Disfigured Faces, “Accursed Ugliness”, and Hollywood

  • October 24, 2022

‘Like Changing a Windshield on a Car’ – Transplantation and The Eye (2008)

Interface
  • October 17, 2022

Silence, surgery and strangeness: face transplant and the film Eyes without a Face/Les yeux sans visage (1960)

Interface face
  • October 14, 2022

Transplantation narratives on screen: a Halloween blog series

Footer

logo logo

interface@kcl.ac.uk

Privacy policy

 ©Interface 2023