Tête qui regarde [tɛt ki ʁə.ɡaʁd], also known as Gazing Head, is a 1928–29 sculpture by Alberto Giacometti.
The head is flattened into an irregular quadrilateral plaque with slightly curving sides, which rests on an integral pedestal and base.
Giacometti had been working on portraits of his father Giovanni in 1927 before moving on to Tête qui regarde.
Early examples were made in 1928, and the sculpture was first exhibited beside works of Massimo Campigli at the Jeanne Bucher [fr; de] Gallery in Paris in 1929.
A plaster copy was bought by Charles de Noailles, bringing Giacometti into a circle of Surrealists that included André Masson, André Breton, Jacques Prévert, Yves Tanguy, Robert Desnos, Raymond Queneau, Michel Leiris, and Georges Bataille.