Face to Face With Prosthetic Sculpture

Anaplastologist Kaylee Dougherty and the art of creating facial prosthetics

Share
Face to Face With Prosthetic Sculpture
Copy

Kaylee Dougherty is a board-certified ocularist and a clinically certified anaplastologist. She is also a classically trained sculptor who earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from Boston University in 2011.

Two years later, she joined Boston Ocular Prosthetics; she currently serves on the board of directors for the Board of Certification in Anaplastology.

Facial prosthetics are the ultimate in commissioned artwork, but the procedure is typically meant to go unnoticed by anyone other than the person for whom it was created.

Here is a conversation with Dougherty. The complete interview can be found here.

“A lot of what I’m doing is basically hyperrealist sculptures, so I do everything on the face, eyes, ears, noses, orbital, hemifacials,” Dougherty says. “Each piece is custom-made for each patient.”

Kaylee Dougherty is a classically trained sculptor, ocularist, and anaplastologist.
Kaylee Dougherty is a classically trained sculptor, ocularist, and anaplastologist.

Dougherty says that much of medicine is a combination of art and science. In her field, they intersect. Facial prosthetics is the natural progression of what she has enjoyed since she was a child.

“I wanted to be a sculptor when I was 7, so that’s been all I’ve ever wanted to do,” she says. “I went to school for sculpture at Boston University, and all of my focus was on portrait work and life-size figures.

“Now I do the same. It’s just parts of the portrait instead of the entire thing at any given time.”

While the outward appearances of the prosthetics are important, they also must help the recipient with typical functions, Dougherty says. The nose and ears, for example, help people hold their glasses and masks in place. The ears have an important function
in directing sound.

“I look at my process as the design process, so when I’m creating these products they are for my patients,” Dougherty says. “They need to be something that they can wear, that they can live with, that can meld right into their day-to-day life.”

She also designs prosthetics to give control back to her patients.

“Just by virtue of existing, and missing an eye or missing a nose, that does not mean that now you need to become this poster person for that existence,” Dougherty says. “If I get to sculpt and do something that I love to do and it’s helping someone else, then that’s wonderful.

“I prefer that the work that I do is not what’s front and center,” she laughs. “I want it to just support them to then live their lives the way that they choose to.”

Bryant University football’s Chris Merritt is returning to high school
Falling concrete from Route 10 connector shuts down rail traffic; officials say seven similar structures exist across Rhode Island
Tree canopy gaps mirror income divides in Newport, as conservationists race to restore native trees and lost federal funding threatens efforts to expand “tree equity” in the city’s North End
The closure of Spectrum-India after 59 years adds to the steady loss of small businesses in Providence neighborhood
The incident brought America’s commonplace gun violence just feet away from a room full of lawmakers, top officials, and journalists. It also may add to a string of troubling political violence in the U.S. that includes two assassination attempts on President Trump.
President Trump and the first lady are uninjured after a shooting incident at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner on Saturday in Washington, D.C.