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The Human Alphabet
There is arguably nothing more human than the alphabet, given that language, and particularly written language, often tops the list of qualities which distinguish our dear species most distinctly from others. To form the letters of these alphabets using the human body is then, perhaps, not so strange a leap, and, in fact, seems to be rather appropriate. In their own varied ways artists and scribes have been doing it for centuries. Below we've collected some highlights of the many twists and turns of the human font.
Bourbonnoise Alphabet, unknown artist, 1789 — Source.
The Comical Hotch Potch, or The Alphabet turn'd Posture-Master (1782) — Source.
The Man of Letters or Pierrot's Alphabet (1794) — Source.
Page from a Tudor pattern book, (ca. 1520) — Source.
Peter Flötner's "Human Alphabet” (1534) — Source.
Pages from The Funny Alphabet (ca.1850) — Source.
Honoré Daumier's comic alphabet (1836) — Source.
Page from the Horae ad usum Parisiensem (1475-1500) — Source.
Attributed to Lampridio Giovanardi (1811-1878), Anthropomorphic or Posture Master Alphabet (ca. 1860)Source.
Detail from above.
Part of the painted alphabet of Giovannino de’ Grassi (d. 1398) — Source.
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Pages from Alfabeto in sogno (1683) by Giuseppe Maria Mitelli. The title translates as Dream Alphabet — Source.
Choreographic interpretation of the letter "K", photographed from the book Abeceda (1926) — Source.
Nov 3, 2016