Abstracts
Abstract
During the First World War, French, British, and US sculptors dedicated their creative practice and knowledge to making masks for soldiers with facial injuries, thus allying art and science in an attempt to restore the most essential aspect of the soldiers’ identities. As artistic resources were mobilized to counter the destructive effects of the war, this new kind of sculpture engendered myths and fantasies about the artists’ power. This article argues that ultimately, though, the practice of mask-making was used as a strategy that benefitted the preservation of the prevailing economic and social order.
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Appendices
Note biographique
Ada Ackerman est chercheuse permanente en histoire de l’art au CNRS (THALIM). Spécialiste du travail de Sergueï Eisenstein (Eisenstein et Daumier, des affinités électives, 2013), elle s’intéresse aux échanges culturels ainsi qu’à l’intermédialité. La présente étude est issue de recherches qu’elle a effectuées pour l’exposition 1917, pour le Centre Pompidou-Metz.