Maris
Member
hi maris
i think before photographic images people knew exactly what they looked like.
there have always been shiny objects, mirrors, reflective surfaces, water, glass ..
while i admire your train of thought, i don't think people didn't know what they looked like ...
not even in "cave man" times
Precisely the point! Shiny objects, mirrors, reflective surfaces, ... always show a mirror-reversed face. This is not the actual appearance of a face or how other people see the same face. The portrait experiment I do with the flipped negative delivers a reversed face which matches what the subject sees thousands of times in a mirror. They think it's what they look like but it's not. I've even had it told to me "You're the first photographer to capture me as I truly am." when I show a flipped portrait. The portrait sitter's friends nearly always pick the mirror portrait as false and the straight portrait as true.
Before the invention of photography it was theoretically possible to use mirrors to see ones face as others see it. But using two mirrors and looking at a reflection of a reflection the left to right flip is cancelled. I've tried this and it is a somewhat disconcerting experience particularly when trying to shave or comb hair!