What is it that makes a face or a body
beautiful?
This is a question that artists have asked themselves forever. There seems to be a universal beauty that exists
across different races and is determined by a certain proportion. A proportion and harmony between the different constituents
of the face and the body. Years ago when I started my practice, I was asking myself this same question. I had seen very capable
plastic surgeons perform procedures that they thought were very successful, but the patient did not look good. For example,
they would go to extreme measures to create a sharp angle between the chin and the neck, not realizing that it is always more
aesthetic to achieve a gentle and smooth sub mental angle. In the late 80s I red the book, The Principalization of Plastic
Surgery, written by one of the most respected plastic surgeons, Dr. Ralph Millard. There, I became familiar with the concept
of the Golden Proportion, also called the Divine Proportion. It seems that people in antiquity were familiar with this concept
and buildings like the Parthenon, by the Greeks, had been built using the golden proportion.
If one draws a line from point
A to B and from B to C in such a way that the ratio of the longer segment AB to BC is equal to that of AC to AB, the ratio
would be 1.618. This number is defined by the Greek alphabet (phi) and is the golden proportion. For example, a rectangle
that has a length of 1.618 and a width of 1 has the golden proportion. This proportion happens to exist everywhere from quasi-crystals to plants and animals, from mathematics
and geometry to the structure of DNA, and from the Fibonacci numbers to the human anatomy. Kepler called it one of the great
two treasures of geometry, but what interests me is it's relationship to the human face and beauty. If you compare most beautiful
faces from recent models and actresses to old Greek and Roman statues and even through racial lines there are common ratios
and proportions between the various components of the face. These ratios follow the golden proportion. For example the ratio
between the width of the eye to the width the mouth should be 1 to 1.618. Same goes for the width of the base of the nose
to the width of the mouth.
These ratios exist between most
parts of the face to the point that a mask has been drawn that would correspond to the ideal face this is called the golden
mask or the mask of the
golden ratio. Most beautiful faces that we know fit that mask. It is interesting
to think that just like in biology, where everything follows the same rules from a simple organism to humans, there could
be rules of beauty that exist universally.
The idea of harmony following a unique proportion is very appealing to the human mind. We look
for simplicity. Most of us believe in a single god ruling the entire universe who happens to be the god of the humans. The
golden ratio was also called the divine ratio, divine proportion and divine section (sectio divino). These all associate the
rules of beauty to the idea of divinity.
This is all very interesting but can we use these rules and ratios in our daily practice of
creating a beautiful face and bodies? The answer is yes. In fact it is sometimes better to aim for beauty than rejuvenation.
Because it happens in rare cases where I noticed that aging can make a face more beautiful. How could that happen? Well, if
the changes that happen in an aging face goes in the direction of bringing the ratios in the face closer to the golden ratios
then it is understandable that an aging face could in some case appear more attractive and in that case rejuvenation could change the proportion in an undesirable
direction. What I am trying say is that we have to be mindful of the idea of creating harmony and beauty and not be obsessed
with the idea of rejuvenation alone. The aim is not to go after every last wrinkle or to create a ninety degree angle between
the neck and the chin but to consider the overall picture and the end results. Here is where art meets plastic surgery. Fortunately
today we have a lot at our disposal. We can enhance facial features with fat grafting. We have powerful fillers like the Radiesse,
Restylane and Juvederm. We can change some facial features with neuromodulators like Botox and Dysport. We can adjust skin
tension with various face lifting procedures and even alter volumes in the face. Reshaping the nose (rhinoplasty), chin augmentation
and lip modification are all procedures that allow us to beautify the face. We may not be able to easily change every facial
feature but we can do more than we ever could before and a lot of what we do today could be done none surgically.
This is really where
the artistic sense and experience is so important. One can not follow a recipe. Mastery of all plastic surgery procedures,
improvisation and creativity is needed for success. One also needs great communication skills to find out if the patient really
desires the proposed changes. And evaluate the changes that the patient is asking for to see if they make sense. The patient
and the surgeon have to be in complete agreement. They both have to trust and fully respect each other.