- Richier, Germaine
-
▪ French sculptorborn Sept. 16, 1904, Grans, near Arles, Fr.died July 31, 1959, MontpellierFrench sculptor of provocative, biomorphic figures.Richier studied in Montpellier and then in Paris (1925–29) under Antoine Bourdelle. In 1934 she began exhibiting classical busts, torsos, and figures, but by the 1940s her figures had become hybridized and allegorical, as in the “bat-men” and “tree-men.” Her fascination with insect forms and night creatures is exemplified in “Praying Mantis” (1946).Though she worked also in ceramics, mosaic, and printmaking, Richier's unique personal imagery is strongest in her sculptures of seemingly battered and tortured human forms. In the early 1950s she produced primeval figures with large hollow spaces or the mere suggestion of parts—e.g., “Water” (1953–54; bronze). Later, Richier experimented with coloured glass and lead figures and sculptures set against abstract backgrounds created by painters Maria Elena Vieira da Silva, Hans Hartung, and Zao Wou-ki. An important exhibition of her work was held at the National Museum of Modern Art in Paris in 1956.
* * *
Universalium. 2010.