#HUNGARIAN PSYCHOLOGIST HOW TO RAISE A GENIUS BOOK PATCH#
The patch is to restore that side of the face which has been disfigured’ © IWM (Q30452).įigure 10: Horace Nicholls, ‘The patient examining the mould of his own face’ © IWM (Q30455).įigure 11: Horace Nicholls, ‘Painting the plate’ © IWM (Q30457).įigure 12: Horace Nicholls, ‘Repairing war’s ravages: renovating facial injuries. ← vii | viii →įigure 9: Horace Nicholls, ‘Applying first coat of plaster for the purpose of taking the mould of the patient’s face, who has been blinded in one eye. The sculptor was Captain Derwent Wood, RA, 3rd London General Hospital’ © IWM (Q30450). The patient after a plate was fixed for the spectacles to cover the wound. It was extracted by massage without injury to the cheek’ © Imperial War Museum (IWM), London (Q30449).įigure 8: Horace Nicholls, ‘Repairing war’s ravages: renovating facial injuries. A British soldier wounded between the eyes by a piece of time-fuse, which lodged at the back of his cheek. Reproduced courtesy of Association des Gueules Cassées.įigure 7: Horace Nicholls, ‘Repairing war’s ravages: renovating facial injuries. Digital image, Historia de la Grande Guerre, Péronne.įigure 6: Front page of Bulletin 27, November 1931. Figure 1: Patient Mascard during his treatment at the Val-de-Grâce hospital © Musée du Service de Santé des Armées au Val-de-Grâce, Paris.įigure 2: Patient Mascard at the end of his treatment © Musée du Service de Santé des Armées au Val-de-Grâce, Paris.įigure 3: Series of wax models of Mascard © Musée du Service de Santé des Armées au Val-de-Grâce, Paris.įigure 4: Portrait of Yves Picot, reproduced courtesy of Association des Gueules Cassées.įigure 5: Jean Carlu, La Dette poster (1931?) © ADAGP, Paris and DACS, London 2014.