Virtual face-to-face interactions have become as commonplace as in-person encounters. Prior to the advent of 鈥渕oving pictures鈥 in the late nineteenth century, the human face as a still, two-dimensional image was often rendered on paper as both unique and reproductive artworks, ranging from intimate sketches to large print editions. This collections-based exhibition focuses on the universal appeal of the human visage, both revealed and concealed. Depicted by artists across centuries, cultures, and continents and in a wide variety of media, the faces displayed in spatial conversation with each other provoke issues of identity, celebrity, and divinity while positing different modes of engagement, from gentle intimacy to emotional confrontation.