Francisco Goya's Time and the Old Women (Las Viejas, c. 1810-1812) portrays aging, vanity, and the inescapable presence of time through the image of elaborately dressed elderly women overshadowed by the winged figure of Time. This editorial uses the painting as a lens through which to examine modern craniofacial and aesthetic practice. The face uniquely combines anatomy with identity, making age-related change both biologically visible and psychologically meaningful. Contemporary surgeons possess increasingly sophisticated tools to modify facial aging, yet technical intervention cannot eliminate the temporal processes of tissue change, healing, and mortality. Patient motivations range from functional impairment and restoration of dignity to unrealistic expectations rooted in body image distress or social comparison. Accordingly, the surgeon's role extends beyond operative skill to judgment, ethical discernment, and candid communication. Goya's painting reminds clinicians that every facial consultation occurs in the presence of time. Whether reconstructive or aesthetic, treatment of the face requires balancing anatomic possibility with psychological reality and human vulnerability.
Kun Hwang (Mon,) studied this question.