Le Coureur [The Runner]
About this artwork
This sculpture was originally conceived as a monument for a French sports stadium; there is also a much larger version. The scarring and pitting on the sculpture suggest decay and anxiety, sentiments which are also evident in the post-war work of sculptors such as Alberto Giacometti, Lynn Chadwick and Reg Butler. The emphasis on decomposition and on the solitary, anguished figure was shared with many other artists and writers working in post-war Paris. This distinctive, emaciated figure contrasts sharply with the full, ripe forms of Maillol's work, which typifies French sculpture of the 1920s and 1930s.
Updated before 2020
-
artist:Germaine RichierFrench (1902 - 1959)
-
title:Le Coureur [The Runner]
-
date created:1955
-
materials:Bronze
-
measurements:overall: 120 x 59 x 47 cm
-
object type:
-
credit line:Purchased 1974
-
accession number:GMA 1315
-
gallery:
-
subject:
Germaine Richier
Germaine Richier
Germaine Richier was born in Grans, near Arles. She studied carving in Montpellier from 1922 to 1925 and then was taught privately by Emile-Antoine Bourdelle in Paris until 1929. During the early-1940s, when she was living in Zurich, Richier began to blend aspects of the human form with those of...