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Sculptures by Ligier Richier

Ligier Richier was a 16th-century religious sculptor working in Lorraine, France and known in particular for his depictions of scenes from the "Passion of Christ". The various episodes of the Passion, between the arrest and the crucifixion of Christ, as recounted in the Gospels (Matthew 27, Luke 22, Mark 15, John 19), were increasingly subject to representation in the Arts towards the end of the Middle Ages, in tandem with the growing popularity of the staging of theatrical mystery plays.

Ligier Richier's "Mise au Tombeau" in the church of Saint-Étienne, Saint-Mihiel, France. depicts Christ before he is placed in the tomb.

Little is known of Ligier Richier's personal life[1] as a consequence of the scarcity of records available. Thus attribution of works to him faces the same constraints and often relies on the scholarship of people such as Denis Paul, particularly his thesis "l’artiste et son œuvre" published in Paris and Nancy in 1911.[2] A good example of the scarcity of information available is the extent to which researchers have relied on the writing of the Troyes pilgrim Chatourop, recorded through the writings of dom Calmet, for information on the works at Hunch back of Notre Dame in Bar-le-Duc and Saint Pierre in Saint Mihiel. Paul Denis rejects the idea that Richier travelled to Italy and had contact with Michelangelo.[3]

Altarpiece of the Ancienne Collégiale de Saint-Maur edit

 
Veronica looks in amazement at the image of Christ on her veil. Photograph shown courtesy Clément Guillaume, all rights reserved

This work by Ligier Richier is located in the Église collégiale de Saint-Maur (St Martin) and is generally thought to have been carved in 1523. It is the earliest work that has been attributed to Ligier Richier. Hattonchâtel is a village in the canton of Vigneulles, 18 kilometres from Saint-Mihiel and is situated at the top of one of the range of hills which run from Verdun to Toul and separate the valley of the Meuse from the Woëvre plain. The village took its name from a castle built in the 9th century by Hatton, the Bishop of Verdun at the time.

Richier's retable or altarpiece is divided into three distinct sections or niches which are separated by four upright pillars. The central section is constructed to form an arch and is higher than the sections to the right and left. Within each of these three niches, Richier has carved compositions in high relief whilst the pillars, arch and the rest of the retable feature elaborate carvings and embellishments which include the tools of the architect and the sculptor; a ruler and a compass and a hammer and chisel. The three high reliefs depict three episodes from the Passion.[3]

The first of these episodes is a scene showing Christ carrying the Cross on his way to Calvary or Golgotha.[4] Christ is shown in the centre of the composition dressed in a long flowing robe and weakened by the flogging from one of the "executioners", whose task was to perform the crucifixion, and the suffering of the previous hours with the flagellation he had endured, he is unable to bear the heavy weight of the cross and has fallen to the ground. His face is etched with anxiety and "une intraduisible expression de souffrance résignée".[3] In the scene and just behind Christ, Richier depicts the figure of Simon the Cyrenian, who will soon be coerced into helping Jesus to support the Cross. Three women are shown on the left of the scene, including Veronica who looks adoringly at Christ's image on her veil.[5] Two executioners complete the scene, one of whom is raising a stick and is about to beat Jesus with it, urging him to stand up and move forward, whilst the other appears to partially support the Cross but is no doubt telling Jesus to get on his feet.

In the central niche is a depiction of the crucifixion itself and to the left of his composition, Richier includes a scene much favoured at the time by gothic "imagiers"; the Virgin Mary having a fainting fit, overcome by emotion, and needing physical support from St John (the "Pâmoison" or "Spasimo"). Elsewhere in what is a complex composition, Richier includes three men on horseback, Mary Magdalene and a man holding a pole at the end of which is a sponge. One of the horsemen has just pierced Jesus' side with his lance and Jesus' blood has splashed onto him and another holds a banner on which is written "Vere hic homo filius Dei erat" ("here is a man who is truly the son of God").

 
The central part of the Hattonchâtel altarpiece

In the third scene we see Jesus being attended to by various people after he has been taken down from the Cross. He is shown lying on the ground and supported by the Virgin Mary and St. John. Mary Magdalene and another woman are present, and to the rear Richier includes a bishop who holds a heavy cross in his left hand whilst a priest kneels at his feet (see below for the probable identity of the bishop and priest),

The dimensions of the piece are 2.60 metres in length and 1.60 metres in height. The central niche is 0.88 metres wide by 1.20 metres in height and the other niches measure 0.64 metres by 0.70 metres. Along the base of the altarpiece is the inscription taken from St Peter.

"XPS (Christus) PASSUS EST PRO NOBIS. OBIS RELINQUENS EXEMPLUM VT SEQUAMINI VESTIGIA EIVS"

At the base of each pillar is the date "L'AN. 1000. 500. 23".[3]

During the 1914-1918 war, the German Army transferred the retable to the "Chapelle des Templiers" in Metz. This was after a bomb had fallen on the church although the retable was not damaged. No doubt the Germans were anxious to avoid the retable being damaged should the church have been hit again.[6]

Casts of this work can be seen in the Musée de sculpture comparée in the Palais du Trocadero in Paris and the Musée Ligier-Richier in Saint-Mihiel.

The Calvary at Génicourt edit

This is considered to be Richier's first Calvary and Paul Denis wrote that "Parmi le groupe assez important des calvaires pouvant être rattachés à l'atelier, celui de Génicourt nous paraît devoir être regardé comme le premier en date. La très intéressante église de ce village, situé à mi-chemin entre Saint-Mihiel et Verdun, renferme en effet un Christ en croix et deux statues de bois polychrome, la Vierge et saint Jean".[3]

The Génicourt work is thought to have been executed shortly after the retable at Hattonchâtel. The work is in polychromed wood and comprises a depiction of Jesus Christ on the Cross with the two robbers on either side and depictions of the Virgin Mary and St John. Originally all the works were located by the church's sanctuary but are not currently kept together but located in various positions around the church.[3] Interesting to read Paul Denis on the subject of the location of such a work in relation to liturgical rules-

"Ces statues, placées sur le tref, pièce de bois horizontale posée en travers et à peu près à mi-hautcur de la grande arcade du sanctuaire ('), formaient jadis un groupe complet, dont les régies liturgiques prescrivaient l'érection à cet endroit. Il offrait aux méditations des fidèles, sous une forme sensible et matérielle, l'image du sacrifice sanglant du Calvaire, dont le sacrifice de la messe, célébré sous leurs yeux, n'est, d'après le dogme catholique, que le renouvellement et la continuation journalière. Chaque église autrefois avait un tref de ce genre"

[3] Génicourt is located in the canton and arrondissement of Verdun in the Meuse. The brochure issued by the Meuse Tourist Office on the Génicourt work is interesting and concentrates on the statue of the Virgin Mary. They write

"Everything in the beautiful church in Génicourt-sur-Meuse, the architecture, the furnishings, the stained glass, and all the painted decor.....give a very accurate idea of a rich parish church at the time of Ligier Richier"

They also add that "For many years considered to be a work by the young Richier, the Génicourt Calvary is now attributed to a "Master of Génicourt", probably close to Richier, a sculptor of his generation and possibly familiar with the work of his workshop, but with lesser skills and aesthetic mastery."

Despite the Tourist Board's comments the consensus of researcher's opinions seems to be that this is a Richier work. The brochure continues "...it is perhaps more significant to note the sense of tension and pathos, the way in which the Virgin's tapering fingers are intertwined making them as expressive as Her face; this is no longer popular art. Her mouth suggests a gentle movement similar to that to be seen on the Holy Woman in Clermont-en-Argonne and Mary Magdalene in Briey."[7] The brochure also includes a quotation from Bernard Noël; "The Lady of Génicourt does not play a role defined by convention. She is just an ordinary woman who is deeply distressed."

When dealing with the depiction of Christ, Paul Denis draws attention to the similarities with the works at Hattonchâtel, Briey and Bar-le-Duc.[3]{"Il offre des affinités incontestables avec celui que nous avons vu au centre de la scène principale du retable d'Hattonchâtel et ceux que nous rencontrerons par la suite à Bar-le-Duc,à Briey et ailleurs encore." Denis also notes that Jesus' Cross in the Génicourt Calvary has a large "titulus" attached to it and that the inclusion of this "titulus" was unusual for Richier's work.[8]

Calvary at Saint-Gengoult edit

 
Head of Jesus. Part of the Calvary in St.Gengoult Church in Briey. Photograph shown courtesy "groenling"

The Romanesque church of Saint-Gengoult in Briey dates back to the beginning of the 12th century and holds a Ligier Richier calvary with life size depictions of Christ on the Cross, with the two robbers on either side.[9] The Briey composition features Jesus on the central cross with the good sinner on one side and the bad sinner on the other. Richier adds to his composition the figures of the Virgin Mary, Mary Magdalene and St John. The work is thought to date to 1534 and was originally made by Richier for the Oratory of Jean Milet which was located in the old Briey cemetery. Jean Milet was a native of Briey and the vicar of La Chaussée. The oratory was destroyed in 1868 and the Calvary finally moved to the church in 1947 after a period when it was kept in a chapel in the new Briey cemetery. This chapel in the new cemetery was where the priests of the parish were buried.[3][10]

Some photographs of the Briey Calvary can be seen in the Bridgeman Art Library website and a close-up of the head of Jesus, shown courtesy of Groening. appears above.[11]

As was the case with the Calvary at Bar-le-Duc, the good and bad robbers hang from T-shaped structures and are tied rather than nailed to these structures and again both are shown in contorted positions.

The Calvary in the church of Notre-Dame in Bar-le-Duc edit

 
The head of Christ. Crucifix in Notre Dame church Bar-le-Duc. Photograph courtesy of Clément Guillaume

There is evidence that there was at one time a sculptured group by Richier in the church, this group comprising not only Jesus on the Cross but also the Virgin Mary, St John and St.Longinus but only the figure of Jesus on the Cross remains today. In 1532 Nicolas Chatourop, a citizen of Troyes, made a pilgrimage to the famous Lorraine sanctuary called "Saint-Nicolas-de-Port" and on his return to Troyes he wrote an account of his journey and his observations of some of the religious works which he saw and these writings are a valuable resource for those studying the works of Richier and his contemporaries. Chatourop's observations were used by dom Calmet in his Richier biography and two hundred years later were to be used by the Troyes scholar Grosley in his writings.

While travelling from Troyes to Saint-Nicolas, Chatourop visited Bar-le-Duc and one of the churches there, Notre-Dame. This church had been the only parish church in Bar-le-Duc until 1688 and it was linked to a benédictine priory founded in 1088 by Princess Sophie and given by her to the Saint-Mihiel Abbey. Chatourop wrote about a work which had caught his attention and he considered of great beauty by "M.Légier, tailleur d'images, le plus expert et meilleur ouvrier en dict art que l'on vit jamais" and wrote of the beautiful crucifix which he had seen in the parish of Notre-Dame in Bar-le-Duc this accompanied by St John supporting the Virgin Mary and Saint Longinus[12] as well as four angels depicted receiving into chalices the Saviour's blood which flowed from his four wounds. [13][14]

The Swooning Virgin, Saint Mihiel edit

 
The Swooning Virgin or La Pâmoison de La Vierge, in the Abbey Church of St Michel in Saint Mihiel

The Swooning Virgin' (La Pâmoison de La Vierge) is also in Saint-Mihiel and in the Abbey Church there (the abbaye de bénédictins Saint-Michel). As we see in the photograph of the work shown above, St John is shown supporting the Virgin Mary who appears to have passed out, overwhelmed by grief. Scholars consider this to be what is left of a Calvary group of nine figures which was executed in the 1530s. It seems that Chatourop, the Troyes merchant mentioned in the section on Bar-le-Duc, passed by Saint-Mihiel after leaving Bar-le-Duc and paid a visit to the Abbey Church. Here he wrote of having seen several works of sculpture by Ligier but he did not give a full description of these works.

In the vastness of the Saint-Mihiel Abbey Paul Denis writes how ones attention is drawn to the composition of what is known as the "swooning virgin" ("La Pâmoison" in French).

Records show that until 1720 the entire group remained in the chapels of the Abbey Church at which time the resident monks decided to transform the chapels and the statues were dispersed or lost with the exception of the depiction of Christ on His Cross which was kept in the refractory and the "swooning Virgin Mary" which remained on the church premises.

Events took a dramatic turn during the French Revolution in 1792, when the crucifix was taken from the church by the mob and burnt along with other works of art. It seems that the next morning a local woman passed the embers of the fire and found in the ashes the head of Jesus which had survived the fire and was more or less intact. She took it home where it stayed for many years. It was subsequently discovered in a granary and came to the notice of a Vaucoulers sculptor called Pierson who made a model of it and produced several replicas one of which was acquired by the Musée de Nancy.

Thus all that remains of what Chatourop had so admired when visiting Saint Mihiel, is the "Pâmoison" and Pierson's models of Jesus' head plus the actual head retrieved from the fire.

The carving is made from walnut and would originally have had a polychrome finish but this has worn away.[15] |- |}

Crucifix in Nancy Cathedral edit

There is a large crucifix carved from wood in the Cathédrale Notre-Dame-de-l’Annonciation et Saint-Sigisbert in Nancy which has been attributed to Richier. It is located on the north side of the cathedral in a side chapel by the apse. It has a height of 2.10 metres. This crucifix came to the cathedral from the Convent of the Clarisses in Pont-à-Mousson. It was thought to have been erected at her own cost by Philippe de Gueldres in the garden of the Clarisses convent. See "Miscellaneous notes" for some information on this convent.[3][16]

The Calvary, St Ėtienne, Bar-le-Duc edit

 
Christ and the two robbers being crucified in St Ėtienne's church in Bar-le-Duc. Photograph courtesy of Clément Guillaume

|There are two works in the church of St Ėtienne in Bar-le-Duc which are attributed to Richier. One is a Calvary depicting the crucifixion of Jesus Christ and the two robbers. The Calvary is thought to have been carved in about 1532. The robbers have agonized facial expression while their contorted bodies contrast with the calmness which seems to emanate from Christ himself.

Saint Ėtienne's church was the former Collegiate Church of St Pierre. The church has stained-glass by Maréchal de Metz and Champigneulle. In France of course St Ėtienne equates to St Stephen[17]

 
Detail from calvary in church of Saint-Étienne in Bar-le-Duc.Photograph shown courtesy Clément Guillaume, all rights reserved

The church of Saint-Étienne, also known as the church of Saint-Pierre, is located in a part of Bar-le-Duc known as "Ville-Haute". Describing Richier's composition, Paul Denis expresses the view that the "good robber", which follows convention and is placed to the right of Jesus Christ, shows a certain hope as though he has accepted Christ's pardon ("il rend en paix son denier soupir") whereas the "bad robber" exudes sadness and despair and his body is contorted into an almost impossible shape. It seems unlikely that he will find peace in death.

This work is carved from walnut which was then painted over. Denis believes the depiction of Christ and the two robbers are what remains of a much larger work, perhaps including the Virgin Mary, St John and Mary Magdalene but these have not been traced and Paul suspects that they went missing during the chaotic times of the French Revolution.[3][18][19]

Paul also notes that the crosses of the good and bad robber were of a "T" shape and that the robbers were fixed to the crosses by rope rather than their being nailed. Paul states that this was the way the robbers were portrayed in ancient Christian art.[3]

The "Chapelle des Princes" in Bar-le-Duc edit

Although this chapel and the Saint Maxe Collegiate Church of which this was a part, were demolished many years ago, the pieces of Richier sculpture that were in the chapel are currently either in the library of the Société de L'histoire du Protestantisme Finançais or the Louvre.

The Collegiate Church of Saint-Maxe in Bar-le-Duc edit

Not far from the Church of St Ḗtienne, in the so-called "Haut Ville" district of Bar-le-Duc, there was an even older church, dedicated to Saint Maxe and this served the old feudal fortress which stood in Bar-le-Duc and was the residence of the Counts of Bar. This church's structure was changed on many occasions and it was Gilles de Trêves who built a sumptuous chapel in the church and called it the "Chapelle des Princes".[3][20]

Several reliable sources have written that the "Chapelle des Princes" contained a retable by Ligier Richier. Nicolas Luton Durival, for example, the Lorraine historian, wrote stating that the chapel included work by Richier

"La Chapelle collatérale des Princes ou de Gilles, de Trêves doyen de Saint-Maxe, est très ornée de sculpture et d'architecture. Le plafond en voûte est enrichi de compartiments, de couronnes et de roses en culs-de-lampe dorés; les fonds peints d'azur.Le dessous des arcades que forment les deux entrées de la chapelle, est aussi décore de roses et de mascarons. Le retable d'autel est d'ordre dorique : ce qui en fliit la beauté est une Annonciation en relief attachée à un fond d'architecture de bas-relief: sur le piédestal, l'année et le nom de l'artiste: Ligier Richihr 1554. Sur la corniche du retable deux figures debout représentant des prophètes, et sur le frontispice, Christ, la Vierge et saint Jean aux côtés. Huit figures, représentant les huit Pères de l'Église, grecque et latine, sont sur la première corniche qui règne autour de cette chapelle. L'artiste a représenté la Naissance de Jésus-Christ sur la croisée rès de l'auteL Sur l'autre croisée est la figure de Gilles de Trêves, à genoux devant un prie-dieu. Toutes ces figures paraissent de même main et dignes de Ligier Richier. Elles sont de pierre, polie et luisante comme le marbre". Nicolas-Luton Durival

.[3] The retable included a bas-relief depicting the "Annunciation" and this had "Ligier Richier 1554" inscribed. There were also carvings of two of the prophets as well as Jesus Christ, the Virgin Mary and St John. There were also depictions of the "Fathers of the Church", Greek and Latin and a "Nativity" as well as a depiction of Gilles de Treves ("a genoux devant un prie-dieu"). Durival wrote "Toutes les figures paraissent de meme main et dignes de Ligier Richier."

It was by a Royal ordnance issued in March 1782 that the announcement was made that the Chapter of Saint-Maxe was to be united with that of Saint-Pierre and by the end of August the collegiate was completely abandoned. The remains of the princes of the House of Lorraine buried in the Saint-Maxe nave were moved to Saint-Pierre as were several works of funereal statuary. On 31 December 1790 Saint-Maxe was officially announced as closed by a decree issued by the authorities in Bar-le-Duc and on 2 August 1792 another decree ordered that it be sold and demolished. The various works of art were lodged in a local warehouse "pour être utilisés plus tard". There is evidence that these works of art were not looked after properly, especially in the chaotic days of the revolution.

Durival wrote that as part of the Saint Maxe altarpiece or retable, Richier had included a carving of Christ on the Cross together with the Virgin Mary and St John and that all that was left of this was a rather mutilated head which was now kept by the "Bibliothèque de la Société de l'histoire du protestantisme finançais".[21] Paul Denis inspected this head, known as the "Christ mourant" at the library involved- "34, rue des Saints-Pères, Paris. Nous sommes heureux de remercier ici M. N. Weiss, conservateur de cet établissement, à l'obligeance duquel nous devons d'avoir pu étudier et photographier ce débris d'une des plus belles oeuvres de Richier",[3] This work is 0.13 metres in height.

Experts have also concluded that the sculpture of the head of Saint Jérôme and the composition "L'Enfant à la crèche", now in the Louvre, were also originally in Saint-Maxe. See section on the Louvre below.

Paul Denis identifies one final Richier work which came from Saint Maxe and that was the remains of a stone plinth just 0.35 metres long. This included an inscription in clear roman letters reading "LIGIER RICHIER F". The lettering was broken off at the letter "F" but Denis thinks this would have read "Fecit". This is just further evidence of Richier having completed works for Saint Maxe. This fragment is in the collection of the Musée de Bar-le-Duc and there is a model of it in the Musée de Saint Mihiel. [3]

Musée du Louvre edit

  • "Tête de saint Jérôme". This stone carving was acquired by the Louvre in 1929, and as stated above, came from the "Chapel of the Princes" in the collegiate church of Saint-Maxe in Bar-le-Duc. It is thought to date from 1548–1555. This work is 0.15 metres high. Until acquired by the Louvre it was kept by a Madame Brincourt who resided in Nancy.[22]
  • "Tête de Christ couronné". This work in polychromed wood was acquired by the Louvre in 1928. The piece is attributed to the Saint-Mihiel Abbey and considered as dating to 1532.[23]
  • "L'Enfant Jésus couché dans la crèche". Acquired by the Louvre in 1852. This is thought to have been part of a "Nativity" scene, dated 1548–1555, and to have been housed originally in the "Chapelle des Princes" in the collegiate church of Saint-Maxe in Bar-le-Duc. The work is 0.50 metres high. Copies are held in the Musée du Trocadéro and in the Musées of Bar-le-Duc and Saint Mihiel.[24]

Christ carrying the Cross, Église de Saint-Laurente edit

 
Christ carrying the Cross. Carving by Ligier Richier in Pont à Mousson

This work depicting Christ carrying the Cross is located in the chapel of Notre-Dame de Pitié in the église Saint-Laurent in Pont à Mousson. It was carved from wood and then polychromed. It is thought to have come from the chapel of "Mount Olive" erected by Philippe de Gueldres in the garden of the Clarisses monastery in Pont-à-Mousson.[3][25]

Miscellaneous works edit

Plafond à caissons edit

The "Plafond à caissons" (English: "Coffers or ornamental sunken ceiling panels") were traced to a house inhabited at one time by Richier at 7 rue Haute-des-Fosses in Saint Mihiel.[3]

Lintel for a mantelpiece edit

This Lintel originally came from the house in Saint Mihiel in which Richier had at one time lived. The carving from two pieces of stone, recreates across the top of the fireplace, a rich damask curtain complete with folds and decorations. It is a masterpiece and made a great impression on dom Calmet when he saw it.[3]

The work is 2 metres in length and 50 centimetres high. It was purchased in 1761 by Monsieur Baudelaire who was the prior of the Abbey of Saint-Mihiel and subsequently moved to the presbytery at Han sur Meuse. During the Great War, 1914–1918, the village and presbytery were badly damaged by German artillery fire but Richier's mantelpiece fitting survived undamaged and was later installed above a fireplace in the local Mairie. It was classified as an historic monument in 1915.[26]

Statue of Holy Woman in a peasant's bonnet edit

 
Holy Woman in a peasant's bonnet (L'église Saint-Didier, Clermont-en-Argonne)

The church of Saint-Didier dates to the 16th century. Building commenced in 1530 and the church was finally consecrated on 16 June 1577 by the Bishop of Verdun, Nicolas Bousmard. It has been touched by history on many occasions; in the 1654 siege it was transformed into a fortress, after the "Fronde" it took 20 years to repair the damage and was desecrated during the French Revolution. Finally on 5 September 1914, it was set ablaze by German soldiers from Würtenburg and had no roof for the duration of the Great War. Rebuilding took place between 1919 and 1939.

The building has many interesting fittings and furnishings and in the chapel of "Saint Roch" there is a "mise au tombeau". This includes depictions of six people but they are all from different periods and by different carvers. They came from St Anne's Chapel in Clermont Castle where they had been for many years. One of the statues is attributed to Richier and this is known as "The Holy Woman in a Peasant's Bonnet".[27][28]

In their brochure "La Route Ligier Richier", the Meuse Tourist Board write "The outstanding recumbent figure of Christ is pre-16th century and the two kneeling angels in wood are 17th century. The Holy Woman in a Peasant's Bonnet is clearly superior to the other figures in the quality of its execution and in its significantly more expressive plasticity."

Funerary works (Oeuvres Funéraires) edit

Tomb of Philippe de Gueldres edit

Richier executed the carving on the tomb of Philippe de Gueldres in this church. This work in limestone and shows how Richier was able to polish stone to produce a marble effect. Philippe de Gueldres was born in Grave in Brabant on 9 November 1467 and died at Pont-à-Mousson in the Clarisses convent on 28 February 1547. She was the daughter of Adolphe de Gueldres and Catherine de Bourbon and the second wife of René II of Lorraine, who died in 1547. When Rene II died retired to the Clarrises convent. In Richier's work he depicts Philippe in the dress of a Clarrises nun.

 
Tomb of Philippe de Gueldres

At the feet of Phillipe, Richier adds a small figurine of another Clarrises nun who is depicted on her knees and also dressed in the Clarisses habit. She holds the "ducal crown" in her hands. The work is 1.92 metres long. It came originally from the chapel of the monastery of the Clarisses in Pont-à-Mousson and is now held in the "des Cordeliers" church. There is a replica in the Musée du Trocadero.[3]

The monastery of the Clarisses in Pont-à-Mousson was seized in the 1792 revolution and then sold and most of it demolished. The tomb of Philippe de Gueldres was violated and the bones dispersed. Other works from the monastery were despatched to Nancy and some ended up in the parish church of Saint-Laurent. The Philippe de Gueldres work is said to have been hidden in the monastery garden.

After the tomb was rediscovered and passed through various hands, none of whom realized its value. In 1822 it was discovered by a Doctor Lamoureux who recognized its importance and taken to Nancy and is now located in the old church of the Cordeliers monastery there.[3]

Cadaver Tomb of René of Chalon edit

 
"Death as a skeleton", St Ėtienne Church Bar-le-Duc

The "Transi" in Bar-le-Duc church is a macabre work and an example of écorché.[29] This sculpture was originally housed in the collegiate church of Saint-Maxe in Bar-le-Duc, which was abandoned in 1782. The work is also known as the "Death as a skeleton" or the "Squelette de Bar" and was commissioned as a memorial to Renė de Chalon, the brother-in-law of Duke Antoine of Lorraine. There is a cast of the work in the Musée barrois in Bar-le-Duc. The Meuse tourist office have produced a brochure covering the two works which opens with words by Bernard Noël, the French writer and poet asked "The spectator today, who so frequently hears of people being tortured to death and of death without salvation, can see this "Death as a skeleton" as a ghost that may well come back to haunt us, but what symbolism should be attributed to the heart?”

The brochure then explains that Gilles de Trèves, the Dean of Saint-Maxe’s Collegiate Church, had invited Ligier Richier to visit Bar in around 1540-1549 and to undertake extensive decorative work in the Chapel of the Princes. The work was completed in 1554. The brochure explains that Michel de Montaigne, who stayed in Bar in 1580, much admired the architecture and sculpture in polished stone and terra cotta, which must have been impressive at the time, but of which only a few fragments remain. Saint-Maxe’s Collegiate Church was demolished during the French Revolution and what was left of Ligier’s work is now in Saint Etienne’s Church. Around 1550, Richier sculpted one of the most famous funerary monuments of the French Renaissance, "Death of a Skeleton".

 
Interment of nobles of the Duchy of Bar

The brochure explains that the work is a memorial to the heart of René de Chalon, the Duke Antoine of Lorraine's brother-in-law. The figure holds de Chalon's heart up to heaven whilst the other hand rests on its chest. On the Calvary the brochure reads "Prior to Ligier Richier, many of Lorraine sculptors' workshops had already produced versions of the bloodier aspects of Christ’s Passion, a popular religious theme in Lorraine at the time". The work is 1.75 metres high. [30][31]

The work was originally located in the collegiate church of St Maxe and was placed over a burial vault which held the hearts of Duke Antoine de Lorraine, René de Chalon and other family members.[3] According to Paul Denis the work was moved from St Maxe in June 1790.[32]

In 1810 the vicar of Saint-Étienne, Claude Rollet, issued a paper giving a full description of the work and in 1894 a model was made for the Musée de sculpture du Trocadéro. In 1898 the statue was classified as a "monument historique". Interesting to note that during the Great War 1914–1918, the "Squelette" was moved to Paris for its protection and deposited in the cellars of the Panthéon until the end of the war. It was returned to the church in 1920. It was restored in 1969 by Maxime Chiquet d’Alliancelles. In 1993 the retable and the tomb itself were also classified as historic monuments and were also restored.[33]

There is a replica of this work in the Musée barrois[34]

Recumbent effigies for René de Beauvau and Claude de Baudoche edit

These works by Richier were originally in the old parish church of Noviant-aux-Prés in the canton of Domêvre-en-Haye in the arrondissement of Toul. In 1866 they were taken to the Musée Lorraine in Nancy and are now held in the Église des Cordeliers.[3]

Richier follows the traditions of the Middle Ages in his composition with the two recumbent effigies lying side by side, hands clasped together in prayer with their heads resting on a pillow. They are dressed in the sumptuous clothing of the day. See Paul Denis' work for a full description.[35]

The entombment edit

"Mise au Tombeau", St Ėtienne edit

 
Jesus Christ in the St Ḗtienne "Mise au Tombeau"

Saint Mihiel is located by the Meuse and gave its name to a monastery which the mayor of Austrasie had had built on a hill near the town. This was later moved nearer Saint Mihiel which was originally called Saint-Michel but was corrupted over the years to Saint-Mihiel.[36] The church of St Ėtienne in St Mihiel is a very old one, was destroyed and rebuilt several times and in one of the various excavations necessary when the church was being rebuilt the thirteen statues which make up the St Ėtienne "Mise au Tombeau" or "Sépulcre" were discovered. These thirteen statues are the depictions of those who placed Jesus Christ in his tomb after the body had been brought down from the Cross. Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus are shown "portent avec precaution leur precieux fardeau" (carefully carrying their precious package").

They are assisted by Martha and Salomé who have prepared the linen cover for the inside of the tomb. In describing the work, LePage writes

"Madeleine, à genoux aux pieds du Christ, attire prinicipalement l'attention du visiteur; c'est, je crois, le morceau capital de l'oeuvre. Sous la femme convertie on devine la courtisane. Sa toilette est riche, sa poitrine opulente, et sous ces grands yeux qui pleurent la mort du Maître on sent une vague reminiscence de la femme d'autrefois; cependant une douleur immense est peinte sur sa figure, L'artiste a admirablement saisi cette physionomie de Madeleine, qui a toujours tenté les peintres de toutes les époques"[36]

 
Detail from Richier's St Mihiel mise au tombeau. Photograph supplied courtesy J.M.Kinet

In Richier's YEO composition Sainte Monique is shown holding the crown of thorns which Jesus' persecutors had placed on his head. John and Mary Cleophas are shown supporting the Virgin Mary who is clearly distraught and overcome with grief. An angel carrying the Cross looks on, as does the centurion who "contemple d'un oeil étonné cette scène de douleur"[36] and two soldiers who roll dice on the top of a drum.

It is said that the winner would have won Jesus' tunic. Scholars believe this to be Richier's final work and it was completed between 1554 and 1564 the year Richier left France to travel to Geneva. He is thought to have left it to his son Gerard to carry out the installation in the chapel of Saint-Ėtienne church and possibly add some finishing touches to the work. It stands in the south side-aisle. The figures involved are more than life-size and carved from a fine-grained Meuse limestone.[37]

The Piétà edit

The pietà at Étain Bon Dieu de Pitié edit

 
Ligier Richier work in Étain. Photograph courtesy of Clément Guillaume

This composition located near the Sacrė-Coeur altar in the Étain parish church is regarded as his first pietà.[38] Denis Paul points to the influence of Rhenish artists on artists in Lorraine in the way they depicted the pietà and how this would have been taken up by Richier. He gives as examples, Tilman Riemensschneider's group at the University of Wurzbourg and the compositions by unknown artists at Saint-Jacques in Nuremberg and Notre Dame in Zwickau. As examples, Paul refers to the work in the church at Varangéville attributed to the workshop of Mansuy Gauvain, that at Saint-Nicolas-de-Port and that at the basilica Saint-Epvre in Nancy.[3] Instead of the conventional depiction of the Virgin Mary being seated with the body of Christ lying across her knees, Richier's Virgin Mary is shown kneeling in front of the body and tenderly lifting His left hand as though to draw attention to the wound in his side. This was to become known as the style of the "Notre-Dame de Pitié". Christ is no longer shown in a horizontal position but gradually the position changes to a vertical one.[3]

The work at Étain measures 1.30 metres in length and is 1.10 metres high. It is thought that the limestone used came from a quarry near to Saint-Mihiel known as "de la Justice". This stone had a tendency to yellow with age and lent itself to work with the sculptor's chisel[3]

The work was originally carved for a tomb in a chapel in the Étain cemetery and was subsequently moved into the church probably around 1773. See section below dealing with the two terra cotta figures in Clermont-en-Argonne which are thought to have some link to the Étain work. It is certainly in the style of what had become known as "Notre-Dame de Pitié". Mary kneels in front of Jesus's body which she is propping up with her right hand. His left hand is held in her right hand. The date 1530 is inscribed at the base of the work (this puts the work as having been executed 2 years after that at Étain suggesting that it was a maquette for another Richier work, perhaps an attempt to improve on the Étain composition. It was restored by the sculptor Pierson from Vaucouleurs)[3]

Maquette, Clermont-en-Argonne edit

There are two small terra cotta figures in this church with a height of around 0.35 metres which seem to be a study for a larger piece rather than a piece in its own right. In all probability therefore they were intended as a "maquette" for a second work since lost or never completed. Paul Denis expresses the view that these two pieces have all the hallmarks of Richier and could have been an early study for the Étain work or a maquette for a new study where Richier wanted to correct any imperfections he saw in the Étain work. However the dated inscribed of 1530 does suggest an association with a second work. Denis states that these two figures came from the old church of Clemont-en-Argonne ( Église de la citadelle).

Lost works edit

According to Paul Denis, Richier executed carvings depicting Duke Antoine and his wife as well as several of their entourage, with maquettes being prepared in 1533. Denis bases this on papers left by Humbert Pierrot in the Meurthe and Moselle archives under reference B.7613. Sadly these works have been lost.[3]

He also attributes to Richier, two carvings for the tomb of Claude de Lorraine, the Duke of Guise and Antoinette de Bourbon, which were placed in the collegiate church of Saint-Laurent in Joinville in Haute-Marne. These works have also been lost.[3]

Monument to Ligier Richier and associated sculptors edit

 
Statue to Ligier Richier in Saint Mihiel

There is a statue erected in the place Ligier Richier in Saint Mihiel dedicated to the work of Ligier Richier and his fellow Saint Mihiel sculptors, as shown in the photograph above. It involves a bronze depicting a young man who stands next to a half-pillar on which sits a model of the head of a baby. In his right hand he holds a sculptor's mallet. The entire composition stands on a pedestal.

It was following a public subscription launched in 1900 that the monument was erected in 1908. The sculptural work on the pedestal was competed by L.Gallant of Saint-Mihiel and the bronze was completed by the foundry of A.Salin in Dammarie sur Saulx based on a model sculpted by Léon Vadel. The bronze was taken by the Germans during the 1914-1918 war and melted down for use in munitions manufacture. It was replaced in 1933. This time the foundry of Durenne in Val d'Osne were used but still based the bronze on Vadel's model. The 1900 monument had incidentally replaced one erected in 1836 on the occasion of the three hundredth anniversary of the completion of the Saint Mihiel "mise au tombeau" of which the people of Saint-Mihiel have always been fiercely proud.[39][40]

Convent of Clarisses edit

The Convent of Clarisses in Pont-à-Mousson was one of 18 such convents established by St Colette of Corbie. Colette joined the Third Order of St. Francis and became a hermit, living in a hut near the parish church, under the spiritual direction of the abbot of the local Benedictine abbey. In 1406, after four years of this ascetic way of life and as a result of a number of dreams and visions, Colette came to believe that she was being called to reform the Poor Clares, the Second Order of the Franciscan movement, and return that Order to its original Franciscan ideals of absolute poverty and austerity. In October of that year, she travelled to Nice to seek the blessing of the Antipope Benedict XIII, who was recognized in France at that time as the rightful pope. Benedict received her and allowed her to take vows as a Poor Clare nun, giving her mission his blessing through several papal bulls, which authorized her both to reform existing monasteries and to found new ones according to her ideals. She then spent several years in Beaune in the Duchy of Burgundy, under the guidance of the Blessed Henry of Beaume and in 1408, she established the first successful community of Poor Clare nuns under her inspired way of life in a semi-derelict monastery of the Order in Besançon. From there, her reform spread to Auxonne (1412), to Poligny (1415) and to Amiens. It began to spread outside France with foundations in Ghent in Flanders (1442) and Heidelberg, Germany (1444), and from there to other communities of Poor Clares around Europe. In total, 18 monasteries were founded before her death in March 1447. One of these was that at Pont-à-Mousson.

L'Imagier edit

Sculptors of Ligier Richier's era were known as "Imagiers".[36] In medieval French this was written as "yimagier".

Materials used edit

Champagne and Lorraine were rich in the raw materials used by the artists of the period who would carve from stone, wood, bronze or terra cotta. There were many quarries in the region and those who favoured limestone had several quarries at their disposal which offered limestone of the highest quality. Often works would be painted in polychrome, basic paints made from pigment and colour powders. Very often these colours have now worn away and are certainly not as rich as they would have been when first applied but in some cases the polychroming has been maintained especially where works were not overexposed to the elements.

Richier for example used limestone from the quarries at St Mihiel and the surrounding region and developed a way of polishing the limestone to produce a marble like effect, a process known as "l'encaustiquage".[41] One such limestone was that taken from the quarries at Sorcy, a form of Euville stone. This was the stone used for the "mise-au-tombeau" at St Etienne.[42]

Gallery edit

References edit

  1. ^ Ligier Richier (c.1500-1567) Richier's move to Geneva www.museeprotestant.org. Retrieved 29 March 2013
  2. ^ Paul Denis' book . www.archive.org. Retrieved 28 March 2013
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac "Ligier Richier L'Artiste et Son Oeuvre" by Paul Denis. Published in Paris in 1911
  4. ^ In Hebrew-"place of a skull"
  5. ^ when Veronica encountered Jesus struggling to carry the Cross she paused to wipe the blood and sweat (Latin suda) off his face with her veil and then found his image had become imprinted on the cloth. The event is commemorated by the Sixth Station of the Stations of the Cross
  6. ^ Base Palissy: Altar-piece in Vigneulles-lès-Hattonchâtel, Ministère français de la Culture. (in French)
  7. ^ la Route Ligier Richier la Route Ligier Richier. Meuse Tourist Office. Retrieved 15 March 2013
  8. ^ The "titulus" is a plaque attached to the top of the Cross and upon which were engraved the letters "I.N.R.I".
  9. ^ Briey Briey's website. Retrieved 17 March 2013
  10. ^ Base Palissy: Calvary at Briey, Ministère français de la Culture. (in French)
  11. ^ Part Briey Calvary Bridgeman. Retrieved 17 March 2013
  12. ^ Saint Longinus is the centurion who pierced the side of Our Lord while He was hanging on the Cross. Saint Longinus, who was nearly blind, was healed when some of the blood and water from Jesus fell into his eyes. It was then he exclaimed "Indeed, this was the Son of God!" [Mark 15:39]. St. Longinus then converted, left the army, took instruction from the apostles and became a monk in Cappadocia. There he was arrested for his faith, his teeth forced out and tongue cut off. However, St. Longinus miraculously continued to speak clearly and managed to destroy several idols in the presence of the governor. The governor, who was made blind by the demons that came from the idols, had his sight restored when St. Longinus was being beheaded, because his blood came in contact with the governors' eyes. St. Longinus' relics are now in the church of St Augustine, in Rome. His lance is contained in one of the four pillars over the altar in the Basilica of St Peter's in Rome. Quotation from "Catholic Online" [1]
  13. ^ Jesus on the Cross in Notre-Dame, Bar-le-Duc Le Patrimoine Mobilier du Département de la Meuse.Retrieved 21 March 2013
  14. ^ Jesus on the Cross in Notre-Dame, Bar-le-Duc Catholic Website, Retrieved 21 March 2013
  15. ^ Base Palissy: Pâmoison de la Vierge, Ministère français de la Culture. (in French)
  16. ^ Base Palissy: Christ on the Cross in Nancy Cathedral, Ministère français de la Culture. (in French)
  17. ^ Calvary at St Stephen's Church in Bar-le-Duc Website of Museum of French Protestantism. Retrieved 11 March 2013
  18. ^ Mémoire sur ce que la France a de plus curieux by Brouilly
  19. ^ Pouillc du diocèse de Verdun by l'abbé Cillant
  20. ^ Michel de Montaigne visited the chapel in 1580 and wrote of "La plus somptueuse chapelle de marbre, de peintures et d'ornements qui soit en France; de la plus belle structure, la mieux composée, étoffée, et la plus labourée d'ouvrages et d'enrichissements et la plus logeable"- Michel de Montaigne, Voyage en France. Paris, Le Jay, 1774, cité par Cournault p. 30.
  21. ^ Bibliothèque de la Société de l'histoire du protestantisme finançais Protestant Museum website. Retrieved 22 March 2013
  22. ^ "Tête de saint Jérôme" Louvre website. retrieved 22 March 2013
  23. ^ "Tête de Christ couronné" Louvre website. retrieved 22 March 2013
  24. ^ "L'Enfant Jésus couché dans la crèche" Louvre website. Retrieved 22 March 2013
  25. ^ Base Palissy: Christ carrying the Cross, Ministère français de la Culture. (in French)
  26. ^ Mantelpiece fitting Retrieved 26 March 2013
  27. ^ Eglise St Didier - Clermont en Argonne Argonne Tourist Board. Retrieved 15 March 2013
  28. ^ The Holy Woman in a Peasant's Bonnet Catholic Website. Retrieved 15 March 2013
  29. ^ An écorché is a figure drawn, painted, or sculpted showing the muscles of the body without skin. The term écorché, meaning literally "flayed", came into usage via the French Academies (such as the École des Beaux Arts) in the 19th century.
  30. ^ Saint Ėtienne's Church in Bar-le-Duc Meuse Tourist Board. Retrieved 14 March 2013
  31. ^ Squelette Retrieved 14 March 2013
  32. ^ "Longtemps après la fusion des deux collégiales, au mois de juin 1790, le monument fut transporté dans l'église Saint-Pierre, riche déjà du Christ et des deux larrons attribués également à notre sculpteur".Paul Denis.
  33. ^ Details of restoration of Le Squelette Retrieved 26 March 2013
  34. ^ Replica of the "Squelette" Website of Musée barrois. Retrieved 26 March 2013
  35. ^ René de Beauvau and Claude de Baudoche JOURNAL DE LA SOCIÉTÉ D'ARCHÉOLOGIE ET DU JOURNAL DE LA SOCIÉTÉ D'ARCHÉOLOGIE ET DU COMITÉ DU MUSÉE LORRAIN. Website describing tomb when in the Musée Lorraine. Retrieved 24 March 2013
  36. ^ a b c d "Ligier Richier" by Auguste Lepage. Published in 1868 by Academies des Bibliophiles. Paris.
  37. ^ Entombment Saint Mihiel French Cultural website. Retrieved 26 March 2013
  38. ^ It was Saint Bonaventure in his work "Méditations " on the life of Jesus Christ who described in detail the events after Christ had been taken down from the Cross and wrote that the Virgin Mary had taken the body of her son onto her knees looking down on him with love and remorse.
  39. ^ Base Palissy: Statue of Richier, Ministère français de la Culture. (in French)
  40. ^ Statue of Ligier Richier in Saint Mihiel www.e-monumen.net. Retrieved 26 March 2013
  41. ^ "La Sculpture flamboyante en Champagne et Lorraine" by Jacques Baudoin. Page 54. Book published by Cree. Retrieved 13 March 2013
  42. ^ Sorcy Quarry Commercy website. Retrieved 12 March 2013

Further reading edit

  • Michèle Beaulieu, Ligier Richier (vers 1500-1567): Chronologies et attributions, Bulletin de la Société de l’histoire de l’art français, 1986, p. 7-23
  • Catherine Bourdieu; Paulette Choné, Ligier Richier : sculpteur lorrain, préf. de Paulette Choné, 1998, 48 p., (ISBN 9782911920080)
  • Paul Denis, Le Maître de Saint-Mihiel : recherches sur la vie et l’œuvre de Ligier Richier, Thèse : Lettres : Nancy, 1905–1906, 325 p.
  • Paul Denis, Ligier Richier : l’artiste et son œuvre, Berger-Levrault, Paris-Nancy, 1911
  • Ligier Richier et la sculpture en Lorraine au XVIe siècle : catalogue d’exposition, Musée de Bar-le-Duc, 11 octobre – 31 décembre 1985, 104 p.
  • Bernard Noël, Paulette Choné, Ligier Richier : La Mise au Tombeau de Saint-Mihiel, photographie Jean-Luc Tartarin, Metz, S. Domini Éd., 1999, 63 p., (ISBN 9782912645173)
  • Henri Zerner. "L'art de la Renaissance en France, l'invention du classicisme". Flammarion. Paris

External links edit

  • Ligier Richier in Joconde database
  • Ligier Richier in Artcyclopedia
  • French Ministry of Culture – Celebration of the birth of Ligier Richier
  • Protestant Museum - Notice Ligier Richier
  • Restoration of the "Squelette"
  • Website of Clement Guillaume many of whose photographs are featured above

sculptures, ligier, richier, ligier, richier, 16th, century, religious, sculptor, working, lorraine, france, known, particular, depictions, scenes, from, passion, christ, various, episodes, passion, between, arrest, crucifixion, christ, recounted, gospels, mat. Ligier Richier was a 16th century religious sculptor working in Lorraine France and known in particular for his depictions of scenes from the Passion of Christ The various episodes of the Passion between the arrest and the crucifixion of Christ as recounted in the Gospels Matthew 27 Luke 22 Mark 15 John 19 were increasingly subject to representation in the Arts towards the end of the Middle Ages in tandem with the growing popularity of the staging of theatrical mystery plays Ligier Richier s Mise au Tombeau in the church of Saint Etienne Saint Mihiel France depicts Christ before he is placed in the tomb Little is known of Ligier Richier s personal life 1 as a consequence of the scarcity of records available Thus attribution of works to him faces the same constraints and often relies on the scholarship of people such as Denis Paul particularly his thesis l artiste et son œuvre published in Paris and Nancy in 1911 2 A good example of the scarcity of information available is the extent to which researchers have relied on the writing of the Troyes pilgrim Chatourop recorded through the writings of dom Calmet for information on the works at Hunch back of Notre Dame in Bar le Duc and Saint Pierre in Saint Mihiel Paul Denis rejects the idea that Richier travelled to Italy and had contact with Michelangelo 3 Contents 1 Altarpiece of the Ancienne Collegiale de Saint Maur 2 The Calvary at Genicourt 2 1 Calvary at Saint Gengoult 2 2 The Calvary in the church of Notre Dame in Bar le Duc 2 3 The Swooning Virgin Saint Mihiel 2 4 Crucifix in Nancy Cathedral 2 5 The Calvary St Ėtienne Bar le Duc 3 The Chapelle des Princes in Bar le Duc 3 1 The Collegiate Church of Saint Maxe in Bar le Duc 3 2 Musee du Louvre 4 Christ carrying the Cross Eglise de Saint Laurente 5 Miscellaneous works 5 1 Plafond a caissons 5 2 Lintel for a mantelpiece 5 3 Statue of Holy Woman in a peasant s bonnet 6 Funerary works Oeuvres Funeraires 6 1 Tomb of Philippe de Gueldres 6 2 Cadaver Tomb of Rene of Chalon 6 3 Recumbent effigies for Rene de Beauvau and Claude de Baudoche 7 The entombment 7 1 Mise au Tombeau St Ėtienne 8 The Pieta 8 1 The pieta at Etain Bon Dieu de Pitie 8 2 Maquette Clermont en Argonne 9 Lost works 10 Monument to Ligier Richier and associated sculptors 10 1 Convent of Clarisses 10 2 L Imagier 10 3 Materials used 11 Gallery 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksAltarpiece of the Ancienne Collegiale de Saint Maur edit nbsp Veronica looks in amazement at the image of Christ on her veil Photograph shown courtesy Clement Guillaume all rights reservedThis work by Ligier Richier is located in the Eglise collegiale de Saint Maur St Martin and is generally thought to have been carved in 1523 It is the earliest work that has been attributed to Ligier Richier Hattonchatel is a village in the canton of Vigneulles 18 kilometres from Saint Mihiel and is situated at the top of one of the range of hills which run from Verdun to Toul and separate the valley of the Meuse from the Woevre plain The village took its name from a castle built in the 9th century by Hatton the Bishop of Verdun at the time Richier s retable or altarpiece is divided into three distinct sections or niches which are separated by four upright pillars The central section is constructed to form an arch and is higher than the sections to the right and left Within each of these three niches Richier has carved compositions in high relief whilst the pillars arch and the rest of the retable feature elaborate carvings and embellishments which include the tools of the architect and the sculptor a ruler and a compass and a hammer and chisel The three high reliefs depict three episodes from the Passion 3 The first of these episodes is a scene showing Christ carrying the Cross on his way to Calvary or Golgotha 4 Christ is shown in the centre of the composition dressed in a long flowing robe and weakened by the flogging from one of the executioners whose task was to perform the crucifixion and the suffering of the previous hours with the flagellation he had endured he is unable to bear the heavy weight of the cross and has fallen to the ground His face is etched with anxiety and une intraduisible expression de souffrance resignee 3 In the scene and just behind Christ Richier depicts the figure of Simon the Cyrenian who will soon be coerced into helping Jesus to support the Cross Three women are shown on the left of the scene including Veronica who looks adoringly at Christ s image on her veil 5 Two executioners complete the scene one of whom is raising a stick and is about to beat Jesus with it urging him to stand up and move forward whilst the other appears to partially support the Cross but is no doubt telling Jesus to get on his feet In the central niche is a depiction of the crucifixion itself and to the left of his composition Richier includes a scene much favoured at the time by gothic imagiers the Virgin Mary having a fainting fit overcome by emotion and needing physical support from St John the Pamoison or Spasimo Elsewhere in what is a complex composition Richier includes three men on horseback Mary Magdalene and a man holding a pole at the end of which is a sponge One of the horsemen has just pierced Jesus side with his lance and Jesus blood has splashed onto him and another holds a banner on which is written Vere hic homo filius Dei erat here is a man who is truly the son of God nbsp The central part of the Hattonchatel altarpieceIn the third scene we see Jesus being attended to by various people after he has been taken down from the Cross He is shown lying on the ground and supported by the Virgin Mary and St John Mary Magdalene and another woman are present and to the rear Richier includes a bishop who holds a heavy cross in his left hand whilst a priest kneels at his feet see below for the probable identity of the bishop and priest The dimensions of the piece are 2 60 metres in length and 1 60 metres in height The central niche is 0 88 metres wide by 1 20 metres in height and the other niches measure 0 64 metres by 0 70 metres Along the base of the altarpiece is the inscription taken from St Peter XPS Christus PASSUS EST PRO NOBIS OBIS RELINQUENS EXEMPLUM VT SEQUAMINI VESTIGIA EIVS At the base of each pillar is the date L AN 1000 500 23 3 During the 1914 1918 war the German Army transferred the retable to the Chapelle des Templiers in Metz This was after a bomb had fallen on the church although the retable was not damaged No doubt the Germans were anxious to avoid the retable being damaged should the church have been hit again 6 Casts of this work can be seen in the Musee de sculpture comparee in the Palais du Trocadero in Paris and the Musee Ligier Richier in Saint Mihiel The Calvary at Genicourt editThis is considered to be Richier s first Calvary and Paul Denis wrote that Parmi le groupe assez important des calvaires pouvant etre rattaches a l atelier celui de Genicourt nous parait devoir etre regarde comme le premier en date La tres interessante eglise de ce village situe a mi chemin entre Saint Mihiel et Verdun renferme en effet un Christ en croix et deux statues de bois polychrome la Vierge et saint Jean 3 The Genicourt work is thought to have been executed shortly after the retable at Hattonchatel The work is in polychromed wood and comprises a depiction of Jesus Christ on the Cross with the two robbers on either side and depictions of the Virgin Mary and St John Originally all the works were located by the church s sanctuary but are not currently kept together but located in various positions around the church 3 Interesting to read Paul Denis on the subject of the location of such a work in relation to liturgical rules Ces statues placees sur le tref piece de bois horizontale posee en travers et a peu pres a mi hautcur de la grande arcade du sanctuaire formaient jadis un groupe complet dont les regies liturgiques prescrivaient l erection a cet endroit Il offrait aux meditations des fideles sous une forme sensible et materielle l image du sacrifice sanglant du Calvaire dont le sacrifice de la messe celebre sous leurs yeux n est d apres le dogme catholique que le renouvellement et la continuation journaliere Chaque eglise autrefois avait un tref de ce genre 3 Genicourt is located in the canton and arrondissement of Verdun in the Meuse The brochure issued by the Meuse Tourist Office on the Genicourt work is interesting and concentrates on the statue of the Virgin Mary They write Everything in the beautiful church in Genicourt sur Meuse the architecture the furnishings the stained glass and all the painted decor give a very accurate idea of a rich parish church at the time of Ligier Richier They also add that For many years considered to be a work by the young Richier the Genicourt Calvary is now attributed to a Master of Genicourt probably close to Richier a sculptor of his generation and possibly familiar with the work of his workshop but with lesser skills and aesthetic mastery Despite the Tourist Board s comments the consensus of researcher s opinions seems to be that this is a Richier work The brochure continues it is perhaps more significant to note the sense of tension and pathos the way in which the Virgin s tapering fingers are intertwined making them as expressive as Her face this is no longer popular art Her mouth suggests a gentle movement similar to that to be seen on the Holy Woman in Clermont en Argonne and Mary Magdalene in Briey 7 The brochure also includes a quotation from Bernard Noel The Lady of Genicourt does not play a role defined by convention She is just an ordinary woman who is deeply distressed When dealing with the depiction of Christ Paul Denis draws attention to the similarities with the works at Hattonchatel Briey and Bar le Duc 3 Il offre des affinites incontestables avec celui que nous avons vu au centre de la scene principale du retable d Hattonchatel et ceux que nous rencontrerons par la suite a Bar le Duc a Briey et ailleurs encore Denis also notes that Jesus Cross in the Genicourt Calvary has a large titulus attached to it and that the inclusion of this titulus was unusual for Richier s work 8 Calvary at Saint Gengoult edit nbsp Head of Jesus Part of the Calvary in St Gengoult Church in Briey Photograph shown courtesy groenling The Romanesque church of Saint Gengoult in Briey dates back to the beginning of the 12th century and holds a Ligier Richier calvary with life size depictions of Christ on the Cross with the two robbers on either side 9 The Briey composition features Jesus on the central cross with the good sinner on one side and the bad sinner on the other Richier adds to his composition the figures of the Virgin Mary Mary Magdalene and St John The work is thought to date to 1534 and was originally made by Richier for the Oratory of Jean Milet which was located in the old Briey cemetery Jean Milet was a native of Briey and the vicar of La Chaussee The oratory was destroyed in 1868 and the Calvary finally moved to the church in 1947 after a period when it was kept in a chapel in the new Briey cemetery This chapel in the new cemetery was where the priests of the parish were buried 3 10 Some photographs of the Briey Calvary can be seen in the Bridgeman Art Library website and a close up of the head of Jesus shown courtesy of Groening appears above 11 As was the case with the Calvary at Bar le Duc the good and bad robbers hang from T shaped structures and are tied rather than nailed to these structures and again both are shown in contorted positions The Calvary in the church of Notre Dame in Bar le Duc edit nbsp The head of Christ Crucifix in Notre Dame church Bar le Duc Photograph courtesy of Clement GuillaumeThere is evidence that there was at one time a sculptured group by Richier in the church this group comprising not only Jesus on the Cross but also the Virgin Mary St John and St Longinus but only the figure of Jesus on the Cross remains today In 1532 Nicolas Chatourop a citizen of Troyes made a pilgrimage to the famous Lorraine sanctuary called Saint Nicolas de Port and on his return to Troyes he wrote an account of his journey and his observations of some of the religious works which he saw and these writings are a valuable resource for those studying the works of Richier and his contemporaries Chatourop s observations were used by dom Calmet in his Richier biography and two hundred years later were to be used by the Troyes scholar Grosley in his writings While travelling from Troyes to Saint Nicolas Chatourop visited Bar le Duc and one of the churches there Notre Dame This church had been the only parish church in Bar le Duc until 1688 and it was linked to a benedictine priory founded in 1088 by Princess Sophie and given by her to the Saint Mihiel Abbey Chatourop wrote about a work which had caught his attention and he considered of great beauty by M Legier tailleur d images le plus expert et meilleur ouvrier en dict art que l on vit jamais and wrote of the beautiful crucifix which he had seen in the parish of Notre Dame in Bar le Duc this accompanied by St John supporting the Virgin Mary and Saint Longinus 12 as well as four angels depicted receiving into chalices the Saviour s blood which flowed from his four wounds 13 14 The Swooning Virgin Saint Mihiel edit nbsp The Swooning Virgin or La Pamoison de La Vierge in the Abbey Church of St Michel in Saint MihielThe Swooning Virgin La Pamoison de La Vierge is also in Saint Mihiel and in the Abbey Church there the abbaye de benedictins Saint Michel As we see in the photograph of the work shown above St John is shown supporting the Virgin Mary who appears to have passed out overwhelmed by grief Scholars consider this to be what is left of a Calvary group of nine figures which was executed in the 1530s It seems that Chatourop the Troyes merchant mentioned in the section on Bar le Duc passed by Saint Mihiel after leaving Bar le Duc and paid a visit to the Abbey Church Here he wrote of having seen several works of sculpture by Ligier but he did not give a full description of these works In the vastness of the Saint Mihiel Abbey Paul Denis writes how ones attention is drawn to the composition of what is known as the swooning virgin La Pamoison in French Records show that until 1720 the entire group remained in the chapels of the Abbey Church at which time the resident monks decided to transform the chapels and the statues were dispersed or lost with the exception of the depiction of Christ on His Cross which was kept in the refractory and the swooning Virgin Mary which remained on the church premises Events took a dramatic turn during the French Revolution in 1792 when the crucifix was taken from the church by the mob and burnt along with other works of art It seems that the next morning a local woman passed the embers of the fire and found in the ashes the head of Jesus which had survived the fire and was more or less intact She took it home where it stayed for many years It was subsequently discovered in a granary and came to the notice of a Vaucoulers sculptor called Pierson who made a model of it and produced several replicas one of which was acquired by the Musee de Nancy Thus all that remains of what Chatourop had so admired when visiting Saint Mihiel is the Pamoison and Pierson s models of Jesus head plus the actual head retrieved from the fire The carving is made from walnut and would originally have had a polychrome finish but this has worn away 15 Crucifix in Nancy Cathedral edit There is a large crucifix carved from wood in the Cathedrale Notre Dame de l Annonciation et Saint Sigisbert in Nancy which has been attributed to Richier It is located on the north side of the cathedral in a side chapel by the apse It has a height of 2 10 metres This crucifix came to the cathedral from the Convent of the Clarisses in Pont a Mousson It was thought to have been erected at her own cost by Philippe de Gueldres in the garden of the Clarisses convent See Miscellaneous notes for some information on this convent 3 16 The Calvary St Ėtienne Bar le Duc edit nbsp Christ and the two robbers being crucified in St Ėtienne s church in Bar le Duc Photograph courtesy of Clement Guillaume There are two works in the church of St Ėtienne in Bar le Duc which are attributed to Richier One is a Calvary depicting the crucifixion of Jesus Christ and the two robbers The Calvary is thought to have been carved in about 1532 The robbers have agonized facial expression while their contorted bodies contrast with the calmness which seems to emanate from Christ himself Saint Ėtienne s church was the former Collegiate Church of St Pierre The church has stained glass by Marechal de Metz and Champigneulle In France of course St Ėtienne equates to St Stephen 17 nbsp Detail from calvary in church of Saint Etienne in Bar le Duc Photograph shown courtesy Clement Guillaume all rights reservedThe church of Saint Etienne also known as the church of Saint Pierre is located in a part of Bar le Duc known as Ville Haute Describing Richier s composition Paul Denis expresses the view that the good robber which follows convention and is placed to the right of Jesus Christ shows a certain hope as though he has accepted Christ s pardon il rend en paix son denier soupir whereas the bad robber exudes sadness and despair and his body is contorted into an almost impossible shape It seems unlikely that he will find peace in death This work is carved from walnut which was then painted over Denis believes the depiction of Christ and the two robbers are what remains of a much larger work perhaps including the Virgin Mary St John and Mary Magdalene but these have not been traced and Paul suspects that they went missing during the chaotic times of the French Revolution 3 18 19 Paul also notes that the crosses of the good and bad robber were of a T shape and that the robbers were fixed to the crosses by rope rather than their being nailed Paul states that this was the way the robbers were portrayed in ancient Christian art 3 The Chapelle des Princes in Bar le Duc editAlthough this chapel and the Saint Maxe Collegiate Church of which this was a part were demolished many years ago the pieces of Richier sculpture that were in the chapel are currently either in the library of the Societe de L histoire du Protestantisme Financais or the Louvre The Collegiate Church of Saint Maxe in Bar le Duc edit Not far from the Church of St Ḗtienne in the so called Haut Ville district of Bar le Duc there was an even older church dedicated to Saint Maxe and this served the old feudal fortress which stood in Bar le Duc and was the residence of the Counts of Bar This church s structure was changed on many occasions and it was Gilles de Treves who built a sumptuous chapel in the church and called it the Chapelle des Princes 3 20 Several reliable sources have written that the Chapelle des Princes contained a retable by Ligier Richier Nicolas Luton Durival for example the Lorraine historian wrote stating that the chapel included work by Richier La Chapelle collaterale des Princes ou de Gilles de Treves doyen de Saint Maxe est tres ornee de sculpture et d architecture Le plafond en voute est enrichi de compartiments de couronnes et de roses en culs de lampe dores les fonds peints d azur Le dessous des arcades que forment les deux entrees de la chapelle est aussi decore de roses et de mascarons Le retable d autel est d ordre dorique ce qui en fliit la beaute est une Annonciation en relief attachee a un fond d architecture de bas relief sur le piedestal l annee et le nom de l artiste Ligier Richihr 1554 Sur la corniche du retable deux figures debout representant des prophetes et sur le frontispice Christ la Vierge et saint Jean aux cotes Huit figures representant les huit Peres de l Eglise grecque et latine sont sur la premiere corniche qui regne autour de cette chapelle L artiste a represente la Naissance de Jesus Christ sur la croisee res de l auteL Sur l autre croisee est la figure de Gilles de Treves a genoux devant un prie dieu Toutes ces figures paraissent de meme main et dignes de Ligier Richier Elles sont de pierre polie et luisante comme le marbre Nicolas Luton Durival 3 The retable included a bas relief depicting the Annunciation and this had Ligier Richier 1554 inscribed There were also carvings of two of the prophets as well as Jesus Christ the Virgin Mary and St John There were also depictions of the Fathers of the Church Greek and Latin and a Nativity as well as a depiction of Gilles de Treves a genoux devant un prie dieu Durival wrote Toutes les figures paraissent de meme main et dignes de Ligier Richier It was by a Royal ordnance issued in March 1782 that the announcement was made that the Chapter of Saint Maxe was to be united with that of Saint Pierre and by the end of August the collegiate was completely abandoned The remains of the princes of the House of Lorraine buried in the Saint Maxe nave were moved to Saint Pierre as were several works of funereal statuary On 31 December 1790 Saint Maxe was officially announced as closed by a decree issued by the authorities in Bar le Duc and on 2 August 1792 another decree ordered that it be sold and demolished The various works of art were lodged in a local warehouse pour etre utilises plus tard There is evidence that these works of art were not looked after properly especially in the chaotic days of the revolution Durival wrote that as part of the Saint Maxe altarpiece or retable Richier had included a carving of Christ on the Cross together with the Virgin Mary and St John and that all that was left of this was a rather mutilated head which was now kept by the Bibliotheque de la Societe de l histoire du protestantisme financais 21 Paul Denis inspected this head known as the Christ mourant at the library involved 34 rue des Saints Peres Paris Nous sommes heureux de remercier ici M N Weiss conservateur de cet etablissement a l obligeance duquel nous devons d avoir pu etudier et photographier ce debris d une des plus belles oeuvres de Richier 3 This work is 0 13 metres in height Experts have also concluded that the sculpture of the head of Saint Jerome and the composition L Enfant a la creche now in the Louvre were also originally in Saint Maxe See section on the Louvre below Paul Denis identifies one final Richier work which came from Saint Maxe and that was the remains of a stone plinth just 0 35 metres long This included an inscription in clear roman letters reading LIGIER RICHIER F The lettering was broken off at the letter F but Denis thinks this would have read Fecit This is just further evidence of Richier having completed works for Saint Maxe This fragment is in the collection of the Musee de Bar le Duc and there is a model of it in the Musee de Saint Mihiel 3 Musee du Louvre edit Tete de saint Jerome This stone carving was acquired by the Louvre in 1929 and as stated above came from the Chapel of the Princes in the collegiate church of Saint Maxe in Bar le Duc It is thought to date from 1548 1555 This work is 0 15 metres high Until acquired by the Louvre it was kept by a Madame Brincourt who resided in Nancy 22 Tete de Christ couronne This work in polychromed wood was acquired by the Louvre in 1928 The piece is attributed to the Saint Mihiel Abbey and considered as dating to 1532 23 L Enfant Jesus couche dans la creche Acquired by the Louvre in 1852 This is thought to have been part of a Nativity scene dated 1548 1555 and to have been housed originally in the Chapelle des Princes in the collegiate church of Saint Maxe in Bar le Duc The work is 0 50 metres high Copies are held in the Musee du Trocadero and in the Musees of Bar le Duc and Saint Mihiel 24 Christ carrying the Cross Eglise de Saint Laurente edit nbsp Christ carrying the Cross Carving by Ligier Richier in Pont a MoussonThis work depicting Christ carrying the Cross is located in the chapel of Notre Dame de Pitie in the eglise Saint Laurent in Pont a Mousson It was carved from wood and then polychromed It is thought to have come from the chapel of Mount Olive erected by Philippe de Gueldres in the garden of the Clarisses monastery in Pont a Mousson 3 25 Miscellaneous works editPlafond a caissons edit The Plafond a caissons English Coffers or ornamental sunken ceiling panels were traced to a house inhabited at one time by Richier at 7 rue Haute des Fosses in Saint Mihiel 3 Lintel for a mantelpiece edit This Lintel originally came from the house in Saint Mihiel in which Richier had at one time lived The carving from two pieces of stone recreates across the top of the fireplace a rich damask curtain complete with folds and decorations It is a masterpiece and made a great impression on dom Calmet when he saw it 3 The work is 2 metres in length and 50 centimetres high It was purchased in 1761 by Monsieur Baudelaire who was the prior of the Abbey of Saint Mihiel and subsequently moved to the presbytery at Han sur Meuse During the Great War 1914 1918 the village and presbytery were badly damaged by German artillery fire but Richier s mantelpiece fitting survived undamaged and was later installed above a fireplace in the local Mairie It was classified as an historic monument in 1915 26 Statue of Holy Woman in a peasant s bonnet edit nbsp Holy Woman in a peasant s bonnet L eglise Saint Didier Clermont en Argonne The church of Saint Didier dates to the 16th century Building commenced in 1530 and the church was finally consecrated on 16 June 1577 by the Bishop of Verdun Nicolas Bousmard It has been touched by history on many occasions in the 1654 siege it was transformed into a fortress after the Fronde it took 20 years to repair the damage and was desecrated during the French Revolution Finally on 5 September 1914 it was set ablaze by German soldiers from Wurtenburg and had no roof for the duration of the Great War Rebuilding took place between 1919 and 1939 The building has many interesting fittings and furnishings and in the chapel of Saint Roch there is a mise au tombeau This includes depictions of six people but they are all from different periods and by different carvers They came from St Anne s Chapel in Clermont Castle where they had been for many years One of the statues is attributed to Richier and this is known as The Holy Woman in a Peasant s Bonnet 27 28 In their brochure La Route Ligier Richier the Meuse Tourist Board write The outstanding recumbent figure of Christ is pre 16th century and the two kneeling angels in wood are 17th century The Holy Woman in a Peasant s Bonnet is clearly superior to the other figures in the quality of its execution and in its significantly more expressive plasticity Funerary works Oeuvres Funeraires editTomb of Philippe de Gueldres edit Richier executed the carving on the tomb of Philippe de Gueldres in this church This work in limestone and shows how Richier was able to polish stone to produce a marble effect Philippe de Gueldres was born in Grave in Brabant on 9 November 1467 and died at Pont a Mousson in the Clarisses convent on 28 February 1547 She was the daughter of Adolphe de Gueldres and Catherine de Bourbon and the second wife of Rene II of Lorraine who died in 1547 When Rene II died retired to the Clarrises convent In Richier s work he depicts Philippe in the dress of a Clarrises nun nbsp Tomb of Philippe de GueldresAt the feet of Phillipe Richier adds a small figurine of another Clarrises nun who is depicted on her knees and also dressed in the Clarisses habit She holds the ducal crown in her hands The work is 1 92 metres long It came originally from the chapel of the monastery of the Clarisses in Pont a Mousson and is now held in the des Cordeliers church There is a replica in the Musee du Trocadero 3 The monastery of the Clarisses in Pont a Mousson was seized in the 1792 revolution and then sold and most of it demolished The tomb of Philippe de Gueldres was violated and the bones dispersed Other works from the monastery were despatched to Nancy and some ended up in the parish church of Saint Laurent The Philippe de Gueldres work is said to have been hidden in the monastery garden After the tomb was rediscovered and passed through various hands none of whom realized its value In 1822 it was discovered by a Doctor Lamoureux who recognized its importance and taken to Nancy and is now located in the old church of the Cordeliers monastery there 3 Cadaver Tomb of Rene of Chalon edit Main article Cadaver Tomb of Rene of Chalon nbsp Death as a skeleton St Ėtienne Church Bar le DucThe Transi in Bar le Duc church is a macabre work and an example of ecorche 29 This sculpture was originally housed in the collegiate church of Saint Maxe in Bar le Duc which was abandoned in 1782 The work is also known as the Death as a skeleton or the Squelette de Bar and was commissioned as a memorial to Rene de Chalon the brother in law of Duke Antoine of Lorraine There is a cast of the work in the Musee barrois in Bar le Duc The Meuse tourist office have produced a brochure covering the two works which opens with words by Bernard Noel the French writer and poet asked The spectator today who so frequently hears of people being tortured to death and of death without salvation can see this Death as a skeleton as a ghost that may well come back to haunt us but what symbolism should be attributed to the heart The brochure then explains that Gilles de Treves the Dean of Saint Maxe s Collegiate Church had invited Ligier Richier to visit Bar in around 1540 1549 and to undertake extensive decorative work in the Chapel of the Princes The work was completed in 1554 The brochure explains that Michel de Montaigne who stayed in Bar in 1580 much admired the architecture and sculpture in polished stone and terra cotta which must have been impressive at the time but of which only a few fragments remain Saint Maxe s Collegiate Church was demolished during the French Revolution and what was left of Ligier s work is now in Saint Etienne s Church Around 1550 Richier sculpted one of the most famous funerary monuments of the French Renaissance Death of a Skeleton nbsp Interment of nobles of the Duchy of BarThe brochure explains that the work is a memorial to the heart of Rene de Chalon the Duke Antoine of Lorraine s brother in law The figure holds de Chalon s heart up to heaven whilst the other hand rests on its chest On the Calvary the brochure reads Prior to Ligier Richier many of Lorraine sculptors workshops had already produced versions of the bloodier aspects of Christ s Passion a popular religious theme in Lorraine at the time The work is 1 75 metres high 30 31 The work was originally located in the collegiate church of St Maxe and was placed over a burial vault which held the hearts of Duke Antoine de Lorraine Rene de Chalon and other family members 3 According to Paul Denis the work was moved from St Maxe in June 1790 32 In 1810 the vicar of Saint Etienne Claude Rollet issued a paper giving a full description of the work and in 1894 a model was made for the Musee de sculpture du Trocadero In 1898 the statue was classified as a monument historique Interesting to note that during the Great War 1914 1918 the Squelette was moved to Paris for its protection and deposited in the cellars of the Pantheon until the end of the war It was returned to the church in 1920 It was restored in 1969 by Maxime Chiquet d Alliancelles In 1993 the retable and the tomb itself were also classified as historic monuments and were also restored 33 There is a replica of this work in the Musee barrois 34 Recumbent effigies for Rene de Beauvau and Claude de Baudoche edit These works by Richier were originally in the old parish church of Noviant aux Pres in the canton of Domevre en Haye in the arrondissement of Toul In 1866 they were taken to the Musee Lorraine in Nancy and are now held in the Eglise des Cordeliers 3 Richier follows the traditions of the Middle Ages in his composition with the two recumbent effigies lying side by side hands clasped together in prayer with their heads resting on a pillow They are dressed in the sumptuous clothing of the day See Paul Denis work for a full description 35 The entombment edit Mise au Tombeau St Ėtienne edit nbsp Jesus Christ in the St Ḗtienne Mise au Tombeau Saint Mihiel is located by the Meuse and gave its name to a monastery which the mayor of Austrasie had had built on a hill near the town This was later moved nearer Saint Mihiel which was originally called Saint Michel but was corrupted over the years to Saint Mihiel 36 The church of St Ėtienne in St Mihiel is a very old one was destroyed and rebuilt several times and in one of the various excavations necessary when the church was being rebuilt the thirteen statues which make up the St Ėtienne Mise au Tombeau or Sepulcre were discovered These thirteen statues are the depictions of those who placed Jesus Christ in his tomb after the body had been brought down from the Cross Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus are shown portent avec precaution leur precieux fardeau carefully carrying their precious package They are assisted by Martha and Salome who have prepared the linen cover for the inside of the tomb In describing the work LePage writes Madeleine a genoux aux pieds du Christ attire prinicipalement l attention du visiteur c est je crois le morceau capital de l oeuvre Sous la femme convertie on devine la courtisane Sa toilette est riche sa poitrine opulente et sous ces grands yeux qui pleurent la mort du Maitre on sent une vague reminiscence de la femme d autrefois cependant une douleur immense est peinte sur sa figure L artiste a admirablement saisi cette physionomie de Madeleine qui a toujours tente les peintres de toutes les epoques 36 nbsp Detail from Richier s St Mihiel mise au tombeau Photograph supplied courtesy J M KinetIn Richier s YEO composition Sainte Monique is shown holding the crown of thorns which Jesus persecutors had placed on his head John and Mary Cleophas are shown supporting the Virgin Mary who is clearly distraught and overcome with grief An angel carrying the Cross looks on as does the centurion who contemple d un oeil etonne cette scene de douleur 36 and two soldiers who roll dice on the top of a drum It is said that the winner would have won Jesus tunic Scholars believe this to be Richier s final work and it was completed between 1554 and 1564 the year Richier left France to travel to Geneva He is thought to have left it to his son Gerard to carry out the installation in the chapel of Saint Ėtienne church and possibly add some finishing touches to the work It stands in the south side aisle The figures involved are more than life size and carved from a fine grained Meuse limestone 37 The Pieta editThe pieta at Etain Bon Dieu de Pitie edit nbsp Ligier Richier work in Etain Photograph courtesy of Clement GuillaumeThis composition located near the Sacre Coeur altar in the Etain parish church is regarded as his first pieta 38 Denis Paul points to the influence of Rhenish artists on artists in Lorraine in the way they depicted the pieta and how this would have been taken up by Richier He gives as examples Tilman Riemensschneider s group at the University of Wurzbourg and the compositions by unknown artists at Saint Jacques in Nuremberg and Notre Dame in Zwickau As examples Paul refers to the work in the church at Varangeville attributed to the workshop of Mansuy Gauvain that at Saint Nicolas de Port and that at the basilica Saint Epvre in Nancy 3 Instead of the conventional depiction of the Virgin Mary being seated with the body of Christ lying across her knees Richier s Virgin Mary is shown kneeling in front of the body and tenderly lifting His left hand as though to draw attention to the wound in his side This was to become known as the style of the Notre Dame de Pitie Christ is no longer shown in a horizontal position but gradually the position changes to a vertical one 3 The work at Etain measures 1 30 metres in length and is 1 10 metres high It is thought that the limestone used came from a quarry near to Saint Mihiel known as de la Justice This stone had a tendency to yellow with age and lent itself to work with the sculptor s chisel 3 The work was originally carved for a tomb in a chapel in the Etain cemetery and was subsequently moved into the church probably around 1773 See section below dealing with the two terra cotta figures in Clermont en Argonne which are thought to have some link to the Etain work It is certainly in the style of what had become known as Notre Dame de Pitie Mary kneels in front of Jesus s body which she is propping up with her right hand His left hand is held in her right hand The date 1530 is inscribed at the base of the work this puts the work as having been executed 2 years after that at Etain suggesting that it was a maquette for another Richier work perhaps an attempt to improve on the Etain composition It was restored by the sculptor Pierson from Vaucouleurs 3 Maquette Clermont en Argonne edit There are two small terra cotta figures in this church with a height of around 0 35 metres which seem to be a study for a larger piece rather than a piece in its own right In all probability therefore they were intended as a maquette for a second work since lost or never completed Paul Denis expresses the view that these two pieces have all the hallmarks of Richier and could have been an early study for the Etain work or a maquette for a new study where Richier wanted to correct any imperfections he saw in the Etain work However the dated inscribed of 1530 does suggest an association with a second work Denis states that these two figures came from the old church of Clemont en Argonne Eglise de la citadelle Lost works editAccording to Paul Denis Richier executed carvings depicting Duke Antoine and his wife as well as several of their entourage with maquettes being prepared in 1533 Denis bases this on papers left by Humbert Pierrot in the Meurthe and Moselle archives under reference B 7613 Sadly these works have been lost 3 He also attributes to Richier two carvings for the tomb of Claude de Lorraine the Duke of Guise and Antoinette de Bourbon which were placed in the collegiate church of Saint Laurent in Joinville in Haute Marne These works have also been lost 3 Monument to Ligier Richier and associated sculptors edit nbsp Statue to Ligier Richier in Saint MihielThere is a statue erected in the place Ligier Richier in Saint Mihiel dedicated to the work of Ligier Richier and his fellow Saint Mihiel sculptors as shown in the photograph above It involves a bronze depicting a young man who stands next to a half pillar on which sits a model of the head of a baby In his right hand he holds a sculptor s mallet The entire composition stands on a pedestal It was following a public subscription launched in 1900 that the monument was erected in 1908 The sculptural work on the pedestal was competed by L Gallant of Saint Mihiel and the bronze was completed by the foundry of A Salin in Dammarie sur Saulx based on a model sculpted by Leon Vadel The bronze was taken by the Germans during the 1914 1918 war and melted down for use in munitions manufacture It was replaced in 1933 This time the foundry of Durenne in Val d Osne were used but still based the bronze on Vadel s model The 1900 monument had incidentally replaced one erected in 1836 on the occasion of the three hundredth anniversary of the completion of the Saint Mihiel mise au tombeau of which the people of Saint Mihiel have always been fiercely proud 39 40 Convent of Clarisses edit The Convent of Clarisses in Pont a Mousson was one of 18 such convents established by St Colette of Corbie Colette joined the Third Order of St Francis and became a hermit living in a hut near the parish church under the spiritual direction of the abbot of the local Benedictine abbey In 1406 after four years of this ascetic way of life and as a result of a number of dreams and visions Colette came to believe that she was being called to reform the Poor Clares the Second Order of the Franciscan movement and return that Order to its original Franciscan ideals of absolute poverty and austerity In October of that year she travelled to Nice to seek the blessing of the Antipope Benedict XIII who was recognized in France at that time as the rightful pope Benedict received her and allowed her to take vows as a Poor Clare nun giving her mission his blessing through several papal bulls which authorized her both to reform existing monasteries and to found new ones according to her ideals She then spent several years in Beaune in the Duchy of Burgundy under the guidance of the Blessed Henry of Beaume and in 1408 she established the first successful community of Poor Clare nuns under her inspired way of life in a semi derelict monastery of the Order in Besancon From there her reform spread to Auxonne 1412 to Poligny 1415 and to Amiens It began to spread outside France with foundations in Ghent in Flanders 1442 and Heidelberg Germany 1444 and from there to other communities of Poor Clares around Europe In total 18 monasteries were founded before her death in March 1447 One of these was that at Pont a Mousson L Imagier edit Sculptors of Ligier Richier s era were known as Imagiers 36 In medieval French this was written as yimagier Materials used edit Champagne and Lorraine were rich in the raw materials used by the artists of the period who would carve from stone wood bronze or terra cotta There were many quarries in the region and those who favoured limestone had several quarries at their disposal which offered limestone of the highest quality Often works would be painted in polychrome basic paints made from pigment and colour powders Very often these colours have now worn away and are certainly not as rich as they would have been when first applied but in some cases the polychroming has been maintained especially where works were not overexposed to the elements Richier for example used limestone from the quarries at St Mihiel and the surrounding region and developed a way of polishing the limestone to produce a marble like effect a process known as l encaustiquage 41 One such limestone was that taken from the quarries at Sorcy a form of Euville stone This was the stone used for the mise au tombeau at St Etienne 42 Gallery edit nbsp Clermont en Argonne nbsp Ligier Richier work Clermont en Argonne nbsp Part of Hattonchatel altarpiece nbsp Soldiers roll dice to win Jesus tunic nbsp Part of mise au tombeau St Mihiel nbsp The Transi nbsp Part of Hattonchatel altarpiece nbsp Part of Hattonchatel altarpiece nbsp Part of Hattonchatel altarpiece nbsp Part of Hattonchatel altarpiece nbsp The Virgin Mary fainting Carving in walnut dating to 1531 and in the Abbey of Saint Michel in Saint Mihiel nbsp Part of the Saint Mihiel mise au tombeau nbsp Two soldiers play dice Part of the Saint Mihiel mise au tombeau nbsp Part of the Saint Mihiel mise au tombeau nbsp The centurion Part of the Saint Mihiel mise au tombeau nbsp An angel with cross Part of the Saint Mihiel mise au tombeau nbsp Salome prepares Jesus tomb Part of the Saint Mihiel mise au tombeau nbsp Mary Magdalene about to kiss Jesus Christ s feet Part of the Saint Mihiel mise au tombeau nbsp A distraught Virgin Mary is supported by St John and Marie Cleophee Part of the Saint Mihiel mise au tombeau References edit Ligier Richier c 1500 1567 Richier s move to Geneva www museeprotestant org Retrieved 29 March 2013 Paul Denis book www archive org Retrieved 28 March 2013 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Ligier Richier L Artiste et Son Oeuvre by Paul Denis Published in Paris in 1911 In Hebrew place of a skull when Veronica encountered Jesus struggling to carry the Cross she paused to wipe the blood and sweat Latin suda off his face with her veil and then found his image had become imprinted on the cloth The event is commemorated by the Sixth Station of the Stations of the Cross Base Palissy Altar piece in Vigneulles les Hattonchatel Ministere francais de la Culture in French la Route Ligier Richier la Route Ligier Richier Meuse Tourist Office Retrieved 15 March 2013 The titulus is a plaque attached to the top of the Cross and upon which were engraved the letters I N R I Briey Briey s website Retrieved 17 March 2013 Base Palissy Calvary at Briey Ministere francais de la Culture in French Part Briey Calvary Bridgeman Retrieved 17 March 2013 Saint Longinus is the centurion who pierced the side of Our Lord while He was hanging on the Cross Saint Longinus who was nearly blind was healed when some of the blood and water from Jesus fell into his eyes It was then he exclaimed Indeed this was the Son of God Mark 15 39 St Longinus then converted left the army took instruction from the apostles and became a monk in Cappadocia There he was arrested for his faith his teeth forced out and tongue cut off However St Longinus miraculously continued to speak clearly and managed to destroy several idols in the presence of the governor The governor who was made blind by the demons that came from the idols had his sight restored when St Longinus was being beheaded because his blood came in contact with the governors eyes St Longinus relics are now in the church of St Augustine in Rome His lance is contained in one of the four pillars over the altar in the Basilica of St Peter s in Rome Quotation from Catholic Online 1 Jesus on the Cross in Notre Dame Bar le Duc Le Patrimoine Mobilier du Departement de la Meuse Retrieved 21 March 2013 Jesus on the Cross in Notre Dame Bar le Duc Catholic Website Retrieved 21 March 2013 Base Palissy Pamoison de la Vierge Ministere francais de la Culture in French Base Palissy Christ on the Cross in Nancy Cathedral Ministere francais de la Culture in French Calvary at St Stephen s Church in Bar le Duc Website of Museum of French Protestantism Retrieved 11 March 2013 Memoire sur ce que la France a de plus curieux by Brouilly Pouillc du diocese de Verdun by l abbe Cillant Michel de Montaigne visited the chapel in 1580 and wrote of La plus somptueuse chapelle de marbre de peintures et d ornements qui soit en France de la plus belle structure la mieux composee etoffee et la plus labouree d ouvrages et d enrichissements et la plus logeable Michel de Montaigne Voyage en France Paris Le Jay 1774 cite par Cournault p 30 Bibliotheque de la Societe de l histoire du protestantisme financais Protestant Museum website Retrieved 22 March 2013 Tete de saint Jerome Louvre website retrieved 22 March 2013 Tete de Christ couronne Louvre website retrieved 22 March 2013 L Enfant Jesus couche dans la creche Louvre website Retrieved 22 March 2013 Base Palissy Christ carrying the Cross Ministere francais de la Culture in French Mantelpiece fitting Retrieved 26 March 2013 Eglise St Didier Clermont en Argonne Argonne Tourist Board Retrieved 15 March 2013 The Holy Woman in a Peasant s Bonnet Catholic Website Retrieved 15 March 2013 An ecorche is a figure drawn painted or sculpted showing the muscles of the body without skin The term ecorche meaning literally flayed came into usage via the French Academies such as the Ecole des Beaux Arts in the 19th century Saint Ėtienne s Church in Bar le Duc Meuse Tourist Board Retrieved 14 March 2013 Squelette Retrieved 14 March 2013 Longtemps apres la fusion des deux collegiales au mois de juin 1790 le monument fut transporte dans l eglise Saint Pierre riche deja du Christ et des deux larrons attribues egalement a notre sculpteur Paul Denis Details of restoration of Le Squelette Retrieved 26 March 2013 Replica of the Squelette Website of Musee barrois Retrieved 26 March 2013 Rene de Beauvau and Claude de Baudoche JOURNAL DE LA SOCIETE D ARCHEOLOGIE ET DU JOURNAL DE LA SOCIETE D ARCHEOLOGIE ET DU COMITE DU MUSEE LORRAIN Website describing tomb when in the Musee Lorraine Retrieved 24 March 2013 a b c d Ligier Richier by Auguste Lepage Published in 1868 by Academies des Bibliophiles Paris Entombment Saint Mihiel French Cultural website Retrieved 26 March 2013 It was Saint Bonaventure in his work Meditations on the life of Jesus Christ who described in detail the events after Christ had been taken down from the Cross and wrote that the Virgin Mary had taken the body of her son onto her knees looking down on him with love and remorse Base Palissy Statue of Richier Ministere francais de la Culture in French Statue of Ligier Richier in Saint Mihiel www e monumen net Retrieved 26 March 2013 La Sculpture flamboyante en Champagne et Lorraine by Jacques Baudoin Page 54 Book published by Cree Retrieved 13 March 2013 Sorcy Quarry Commercy website Retrieved 12 March 2013Further reading editMichele Beaulieu Ligier Richier vers 1500 1567 Chronologies et attributions Bulletin de la Societe de l histoire de l art francais 1986 p 7 23 Catherine Bourdieu Paulette Chone Ligier Richier sculpteur lorrain pref de Paulette Chone 1998 48 p ISBN 9782911920080 Paul Denis Le Maitre de Saint Mihiel recherches sur la vie et l œuvre de Ligier Richier These Lettres Nancy 1905 1906 325 p Paul Denis Ligier Richier l artiste et son œuvre Berger Levrault Paris Nancy 1911 Ligier Richier et la sculpture en Lorraine au XVIe siecle catalogue d exposition Musee de Bar le Duc 11 octobre 31 decembre 1985 104 p Bernard Noel Paulette Chone Ligier Richier La Mise au Tombeau de Saint Mihiel photographie Jean Luc Tartarin Metz S Domini Ed 1999 63 p ISBN 9782912645173 Henri Zerner L art de la Renaissance en France l invention du classicisme Flammarion ParisExternal links editLigier Richier in Joconde database Ligier Richier in Artcyclopedia French Ministry of Culture Celebration of the birth of Ligier Richier Protestant Museum Notice Ligier Richier Restoration of the Squelette Website of Clement Guillaume many of whose photographs are featured above Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sculptures by Ligier Richier amp oldid 1194346314, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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