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The art of aesthetics

Dr Sana Sadiq looks at the importance of an aesthetic practitioner having an artistic eye

Aesthetic Medicine: Tell us about yourcareerroute into aesthetics.

Dr Sana Sadiq (SS): My career route was not the most typical by any means. In school, I battled between my love for fine art and the sciences. I applied for dentistry on a whim, after collaborating on research with dental universities, and started the accelerated graduate entry four-year dentistry programme at King’s College London while I was still finishing my MSc in Quantum Chemistry – this was a taxing time! I graduated on a high, winning the University of London Gold Medal, and started my foundation training in Central London. It was during a study day in my 1st year of training that I was introduced to the concept of facial aesthetics, and I was immediately set on it. It was the absolute perfect blend of my skills and interests. I arranged to do my first foundation training course for the last month of my foundation year in August 2018, and have never looked back. Since then, I have continued to work in both private dentistry and facial aesthetics, so that I may combine my full skillset to provide comprehensive aesthetic treatments. In this way, I can address both the hard and soft tissue causes of their presentations using multimodal treatment approaches e.g., combining orthodontics, oral bone and gum contouring, restorative dentistry, dermal fillers and toxin.

AM: You come from an artistic background - tell us more about your passion for art, and which artists and styles inspire you.

SS: My maternal side is full of creatives – artists, poets, writers, and designers. I have been encouraged to paint, sketch and craft throughout my whole life. Early in life, I was a huge Salvador Dali fan. His work was morbidly interesting and creative, but not without the skill and eye of a classical painter. I would not say Dali inspires my aesthetics work though – my patients may breathe a sigh of relief!

Botticelli’s Birth of Venus floored me when I first saw it as a child. The central figure of Venus still represents so much of what I see as female beauty. The softness of her features is something I value more and more as trends for ‘snatched’ jaw lines and ‘Russian lips’ come and go. I feel Renaissance figures epitomise gentle, natural beauty rather than glaring harsh angles and caricature-like features.

Tamara de Lempicka’s ‘Self-portrait in a green Bugatti’ oozes self-confidence to me, and her gaze is bewitching. Despite the drama of the flowing fabrics and flashy vehicle, the viewer is fixed on her nonchalant expression. I would love my patients to feel like the main character in their life, effortlessly fantastic!

AM: Why do you think it is important for aesthetic practitioners to be artistic?

SS: Safety is a crucial theme which must underpin all treatments as medical practitioners, but in our efforts to avoid complications, we are perhaps approaching aesthetics with a formulaic, ‘painting by numbers’ method. Our concept of proportions, ratios and beautification points may be inadvertently standardising and ‘normalising’ our patients’ unique faces. Some of the most beautiful faces in history and celebrity culture are technically not balanced. Would we try to balance Vermeer’s ‘Girl with a pearl earring’s retrognathic mandible and augment her shadowed temple, or was she perfect as she was? Should Sophia Loren have narrowed the width of her chin and softened her chin cleft to adhere to standardised ratios of female beauty? I don’t think so.

AM: As we move away from obvious results to a preference for a more natural outcome, how do you think being creative can be a benefit to practitioners?

SS: My biggest piece of advice is to find out what your patient likes about their face. This discussion will give you the parameters for your artistry. Remember your patients are coming to you with concerns. These concerns can be reduced to emphasise certain facial areas over others. Artists understand that light and shadow are key aspects of beauty and practitioners can use this concept to improve the way light reflects and shadows fall on a face, thereby enhancing the emphasis on one feature and softening emphasis on another. With this approach, you will be able to create transformative yet soft, natural-looking results.

AM: For practitioners who like to follow the rules, what tips do you have on how they can develop a more creative mindset?

SS: Explore the faces you find attractive – what makes them attractive to you? Rather than seeing the face as thirds and angles, assess the face as areas of shadow and light. Most faces regardless of type, look more beautiful when we create flowing transitions between facial areas, rather than a segmented appearance. Now it comes down to your technique, product selection and anatomical knowledge to enhance these areas safely and beautifully. Continually reassess the light and shadows on their face during treatment. This way you can measure your improvement in real time.

AM: Do you agree that great art can come from ‘unlearning’ the fundamentals, or adapting them to achieve a goal?

SS: Leonardo Da Vinci is a classic example of this. He studied human form and function in such detail that he produced extensive artworks and notes on human anatomy relating to dynamism and function, and not just the static post-mortem appearance. He was able to produce his iconic Vitruvian Man, detailing his ideals of male physical proportions, but also soft and evocative pieces like Mona Lisa and Salvator Mundi, where his archetypal ideals are not responsible for the beauty of his figures.

AM: How do you think creativity, as opposed to scientific developments, will alter the field going forward?

SS: We forget that the field of medical aesthetics is still in its relative infancy. It follows that the early period of any new field requires some level of standardisation and general rules to help the industry maintain consistency and a basic level of care. Our early filler products served the purpose of general augmentation and definition of features but did not necessarily allow for the nuanced enhancements that make a face beautiful in dynamism as well as static form. Now that dynamic fillers and bio-stimulators are becoming commonplace, we are starting to see evermore impressive results by industry leaders with an artistic eye, achieving subtle enhancements that integrate seamlessly into facial expressions, rather than dramatic before and afters of static faces. Patients have become savvier to these treatments and the demand for natural enhancements and bio-stimulating treatments has risen massively. I don’t remember the last time someone asked me for strong facial contouring!

AM: How important do you think creativity is to well-being?

SS: I think this comes down to your personality type. If you are naturally creative and love to try new things, feeling tied to a ‘lather, rinse, repeat’ treatment approach will inevitably numb you. On the other hand, there could be nothing more stressful than forcing yourself to be creative when you find comfort and peace in operating within your known parameters and routine. I don’t think everyone should feel pressure to force creativity, but rather you should equip yourself with the skills to operate safely and creatively. This way you get immense satisfaction out of your work, whilst also knowing you’re doing your best for your patients.

This article appears in September 2023

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This article appears in...
September 2023
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WELCOME TO THE SEPTEMBER ISSUE OF AESTHETIC MEDICINE MAGAZINE
This issue, we focus on education within the field of aesthetics
Meet the experts
Meet our editorial advisory board
Hot off the press
The latest industry news
EVOLVING YOUR POTENTIAL
Introducing the Evolus Service Platform
Wake-up call
The largest UK study into botulinum toxin adverse reactions highlights the challenges faced by patients
Trend Spotlight: Lip Flips
Lip flips – the perfect alternative to lip filler?
Using Teoxane Teosyal RHA ®1 to treat the tricky perioral area
Dr Jeremy Isaac, medical director of Wish Skin Clinic and Teoxane UK educational faculty member, explains how the high stretch capabilities of Teosyal RHA ® 1 can help treat barcode and smoker’s lines
Out and about
Highlights from the industry social calendar
Fractional radiofrequency
Inspired by laser technology
What to expect at Aesthetic Medicine North
Find out what’s happening at AM North this month
Clinical education
What can you learn from AM North’s education stages?
Innovations up North
We explore a selection of the launches, products, and offers available at AM North
Redefining natural beauty
Visiting Dr Joshua Van der Aa’s Harley Street clinic
Unlocking enhanced results
Introducing Neauvia’s smart combination therapy
Restoring facial symmetry after nerve palsy
Our columnist describes his innovative technique to correct facial droop
Renew your microneedling
Renew Clinic’s Dr Ryan Hamdy looks at what sets the Agnes RF system apart
Tear trough fillers
Ms Caroline Wilde and Professor Daniel Ezra discuss the ‘Three-Point Tangent Technique’
PrabotulinumtoxinA Vs OnabotulinumtoxinA
As an early UK adopter of prabotulinumtoxin A, Dr Raj Thethi compares the innovative injectable with the long-established onabotulinumtoxinA
Age-related volume loss
How the structural differences between males and females affect ageing
The good, the bad, and the caffeine
Food entrepreneur Jennifer Irvine asks if a daily coffee habit is affecting your patients’ skin
The art of aesthetics
Dr Sana Sadiq looks at the importance of an aesthetic practitioner having an artistic eye
Barbie: the first woman in aesthetic medicine?
Dr Anna Hemming discusses Barbie’s impact on aesthetics
The individuals who inspired us
Six aesthetic practitioners speak about the people who have inspired them in their careers
Hydration relaxation
Editorial assistant Erin Leybourne visits ACHAesthetics clinic in Mill Lane
High-tech facials: Bespoke treatment with LPG endermologie
Kezia Parkins visits LPG’s Hammersmith training centre
Product news
The latest product launches
The move to non-verbal communication
Gilly Dickons looks at how technological advances are affecting aesthetic businesses
Using AI for copywriting: a copywriter's perspective
Vicky Eldridge gives her perspective on how you can use AI for your business
Turning back time
Dr Aamer Khan looks at the current boom in cellular regeneration
10 ways to keep your online promotion ethical
Ways to elevate your social media activity without breaking the rules
Malpractice allegations
Colin Kirkpatrick considers the most frequent types of medical claim
Ask Alex
‘To blue tick or not to blue tick?’
Looking for back issues?
Browse the Archive >

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