This Photographer Is Highlighting The Strange Beauty Of Human Skulls
Artist David Orr uses mirrors to find symmetry in the macabre. Via Perfect Vessels.
Your skull has 24 bones in it when youāre born and 22 by the time you reach adulthood. When youāre dead, your life can be read from the skeleton you leave behind: Itās constantly remodelling and fusing ā recording diseases, diet, periods of stress. Los Angeles-based photographer David Orr has been photographing skulls in the Mütter Museum in Philadelphia, then mirroring half of the image, with all of the skullās oddities and history, to explore aesthetic and cultural ideals of perfection and symmetry.
The project is called Perfect Vessels.

Milan Joanovits, male, 30. Robber and murderer; executed in Belgrade.
Orr told BuzzFeed: āThe variation between skulls is infinite. Just as no two faces are absolutely identical in shape, neither are any two skulls. To me, a human face with all its idiosyncrasies is ultimately more fascinating than a balanced one, so I suppose I have a different standard for what works in life as opposed to art.
āWith the Perfect Vessels project I get to have it both ways: By repeating the imperfections, I get closer to perfection.ā

Unknown. Trans-orbital lobotomy.
āThereās a great study (Symmetry and Human Facial Attractiveness) that goes into detail showing that people with more symmetrical faces will earn more, are more likely to be chosen as sexual partners, are considered to be more trustworthy, and so on. It has primarily to do with symmetry being an indicator of good health. I was told that if a physician can see asymmetry from āthe end of the bedā then the patient is in the weeds. Well, all the skulls in this museum belonged to people who had rare medical conditions or died early, so you can imagine."

Unknown. Shattered; reconstructed.
āBut we are rarely, if ever, perfectly balanced. And it does look weird if you make a face perfectly symmetrical. We pick up on the falseness immediately: Studying faces is a large part of our daily experience, and we are uniquely adept at it. In the case of skulls, however, they are part of our understructure and not as common a thing to see in daily life, so thereās more leeway.ā

Unknown. Underbite; metopic suture.
āOne of the most fascinating things I discovered was the longstanding link between skulls and drinking vessels. I learned that skulls have been used as cups, chalices, and bowls for centuries. Warriors drank from the skulls of the vanquished to underline their supremacy. Monks sipped from Tibetan kapalas (ornate skull-cups) to reinforce the idea of lifeās transience."

Francisca Seycora, female, 19. Famous Viennese prostitute; died of meningitis.
āThere are amazing linguistic links where words for āskullā, ācupā, and ābowlā are often identical: āNogginā originally meant ācupā. Lord Byron drank from a cup heād had made from the skull of a monk found on his property and wrote a poem about it ('Lines Inscribed Upon a Cup Formed From a Skull', 1808).ā

Girolamo Zini, male, 24. Tightrope walker; died of broken neck.
āI also learned that areas of the skull have for centuries been considered auspicious in Eastern thought. The sagittal suture, at the top of the head, is known as the Aperture of Brahman and is the portal through which your prana or life energy flows when you finally break the cycle of reincarnation. Thatās the reason cremation has retained its popularity in India: They feel the the heat helps crack the skull open to aid release. Because my images match at the centre, these areas are often stylised, looking even more like true apertures.ā

Geza Uirmeny, male, 80. Attempted suicide at 70; lived until 80 without further melancholy.
āA funny thing began to happen as I worked on this project: I began to visualise the skulls beneath the faces of people Iād come across in daily life. During conversations, while passing people on the street, seeing people on the train, I was thinking about what each personās skull looked like and how it influenced the shape of their face. Eventually it felt like that was all I was seeing.ā

Unknown. Syphilitic necrosis.
āI felt a lot of relief when a Mütter staffer whoād been cleaning and restoring these skulls for the better part of a year asked if this had started to happen to me yet.ā