GERMAINE RICHIER (1902-1959)
GERMAINE RICHIER (1902-1959)
GERMAINE RICHIER (1902-1959)
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GERMAINE RICHIER (1902-1959)

L'Ouragane (The Hurricane)

Details
GERMAINE RICHIER (1902-1959)
L'Ouragane (The Hurricane)
signed, numbered and with the foundry mark 'G. Richier 2⁄6 SUSSE FONDEUR PARIS 2⁄6' (on the base)
bronze with dark patina
70 ½ x 27 x 15 ¾in. (179 x 69.1 x 40cm.)
Conceived in 1948-1949, this work is number 2⁄6 from the original edition that comprises eleven copies, from 1⁄6 to 6⁄6 and HC1, HC2, HC3, EA, 0⁄6
Provenance
Galerie Henri Creuzevault, Paris.
Roger and Josette Vanthournout, Belgium and thence by descent.
Literature
R. de Solier, Germaine Richier’, in Les Cahiers d’art, no. 28, June 1953, p. 123-129.
A. Pieyre de Mandiargues, ‘Germaine Richier’, in Le Disque vert, July-August 1953, 1re année, no. 3, pp. 97-100.
C. S. T., ‘Germaine Richier, A Great Woman Sculptor’, in Harper’s Bazaar, October 1953, no. 2903, pp. 177-180.
J. Grenier, ‘Germaine Richier, sculpteur du terrible’, in L’Oeil, September 1955, no. 9, pp. 26-31.
D. Chevalier, ‘Un grand sculpteur : Germaine Richier’, in Prestige français et Mondanités, September 1956, no. 19, pp. 60-65.
D. Rolin, ‘Germaine Richier ou la main d’ombre’, in Carrefour, 10 October 1956.
B. Milleret, ‘Envoûtement de Germaine Richier’, in Les Nouvelles littéraires, 11 October 1956.
A. Chastel, ‘Au musée d’Art moderne : Germaine Richier, la puissance et la grâce’, in Le Monde, 13 October 1956.
D. Chevalier, ‘Sculpture : dans son atelier, vaste forêt de plâtres et de bronzes, Germaine Richier, chef d’école, sculpte les grands mythes sylvestres’, in Femme, October-November 1956, pp. 81-83.
P. Chatard, ‘Sculpture : Germaine Richier’, in Nouvelle gauche, 18 November-1 December 1956.
P. Schneider, ‘Art News from Paris’, in Art News, December 1956, no. 55, p. 48.
A. Pieyre de Mandiargues, ‘Art et humour au XXe siècle : l’humour cruel de Germaine Richier’, in XXe siècle, January 1957, no. 8.
M. Conil-Lacoste, ‘Chroniques : Germaine Richier ou la confusion des règnes’, in Cahiers du Sud, February 1957, pp. 307-311.
Y. Taillandier, "Germaine Richier" in Connaissance des arts, no. 77, July 1958 (another from the edition illustrated, p. 29).
C. Roger-Marx, ‘Cette héritière inspirée des grands maîtres: Germaine Richier’, in Le Figaro littéraire, 8 August 1959.
R. Couturier, ‘Adieu à Germaine Richier : La force de son œuvre’, in Tribune de Lausanne, 9 August 1959.
A. Giacometti, ‘Adieu à Germaine Richier : Assis parmi ses sculptures’, in Tribune de Lausanne, 9 August 1959, no. 7.
V. da Silva, ‘Adieu à Germaine Richier : Son atelier était plein d’une étrange musique’, in Tribune de Lausanne, 9 August 1959.
A. Pieyre de Mandiargues, Germaine Richier, Brussels, 1959, pp. 3-8.
F. Hellens, ‘Les beaux-arts à Paris : La première exposition posthume de Germaine Richier’, in Les Beaux-Arts, 22 April 1960, no. 894, p. 12.
P. Schneider, ‘Art News from Paris : To Germaine Richier’, in Art News, Summer 1960, vol. 59, no. 4, pp. 49-50 and 66.
J. Cassou, Modern Sculptors: Germaine Richier, Paris 1961, p. 18 (another cast illustrated, detail, p. 19).
G. Bazin, Le Monde de la Sculpture, Paris 1963, no. 1006 (titled ‘Orage’; another cast illustrated, p. 441).
G. Marchiori, Scultura francese moderna, Milan 1963, nos. LXII & LXIII (titled 'Orage').
H. Cingria, ‘Itinéraire provençal : Arles’, in Les Lettres françaises, 30 July-5 August 1964.
G. Marchiori, Modern French Sculpture, Milan 1964, p. 52.
Galerie Creuzevault, Germaine Richier 1904-1959, Paris 1966, p. 38 (another cast illustrated, detail, p. 37; illustrated, p. 39).
R. Lebel, L'Arte moderna, 35, Il dopoguerra II, Milan 1967 (another cast illustrated, p. 181).
R. Varia, ‘Un poète tragique’, in Secolul 20, Summer 1968, no. 3.
E. Crispolti, ‘Germaine Richier’, in I maestri della scultura, 1968, no. 65, pp. 50-52.
M. Conil-Lacoste, Nouveau dictionnaire de la sculpture moderne, Paris 1970, p. 262.
E. Goldschmidt (ed.), Depuis 45, L'Art de notre Temps II, La Connaissance, Brussels 1970, no. 35 (another cast illustrated, p. 42).
J. P. Hodin, Figurative Art since 1945, London 1971, p. 46, no. 35 (another cast illustrated, p. 42).
A. M. Hammacher, L'Evolution de la Sculpture moderne, Paris 1971, no. 263 (another cast illustrated, p. 263).
L’animal de Lascaux à Picasso, exh. cat., Paris, Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle, 1976-1977, pp. 13-14.
E. Lucie-Smith, ‘Richier, Germaine’, in L’Art d’aujourd’hui, 1977, p. 508.
R. Barotte, ‘À la rencontre de Germaine Richier (1904-1959), le sculpteur qui va... au-delà de’, in Vision sur les arts, November 1978.
P. Restany, ‘Germaine Richier: Le grand art de la statuaire’, in L'Oeil, no. 279, October 1978 (another cast illustrated, p. 57).
Lamarche-Vadel, ‘Germaine Richier’, in ‘Cimaise’, no. 138-9, October-November 1978.
Brassaï, Germaine Richier Les Artistes de ma vie, Paris 1982, p. 194.
I. Jianou, G. Xurigura and A. Lardera, ‘Richier Germaine’, in La Sculpture moderne, 1982, p. 178.
Saint-Paul-de-Vence, Fondation Maeght, Un Musée éphémère: Collections privées françaises 1945-1985, 1986, p. 161, no. 64 (another from the edition illustrated, p. 119).
J.-L. Daval, ‘Giacometti, Marini, Richier’, in L’Art en Europe: les années décisives 1945-1953, 1987, pp. 91-94.
J.-L. Ferrier and Y. Le Pichon, ‘Adieu à Germaine Richier : Sculpture 1959’, in L’Aventure de l’art au XXe siècle, 1988, p. 563.
G. Neret, 30 ans d'art moderne : peintres et sculpteurs, Paris 1988, pp. 114-134.
É. Lebovici, ‘Lieux: L’atelier de Germaine Richier vu par Pierre-Olivier Deschamps’, in Beaux-Arts Magazine, November 1989, no. 73, pp. 94-99.
F. Montreynaud, ‘Germaine Richier, l’Ouragane’, in Le XXe siècle des femmes,1989, pp. 366-367.
J. Beauffet, ‘Germaine Richier’, in L’Écriture griffée, 1993, pp. 163-171.
I. Goldberg, ‘Les bêtes humaines de Germaine Richier’ in Beaux-Arts Magazine,1996, pp. 64-68.
M. Gibson, ‘Germaine Richier, an original’, in International Herald Tribune, 1996.
J. Merkert, ‘Germaine Richier und die Moderne oder Bildhauerische Kühnheit aus dem Geiste der Tradition’ Berlin 1997, pp. 20-31.
H.H. Arnason and M.F. Prather, ‘Postwar European art ‘ in A History of Modern Art, London 1998, pp. 486 and 494-495F. Maurice, ‘Germaine Richier ou la marche élémentaire’, in Un siècle d'arpenteurs, les figures de la marche, 2000, pp. 160, 209-216 and 219-220.
C. Lévèque-Claudet, ‘L’équilibre instable’ in Giacometti, Marini, Richier, la figure tourmentée, Paris 2014, pp. 62-67 (another cast illustrated).
Germaine Richier, exh. cat., Paris, Centre Pompidou, 2023, pp.142-143 (another cast illustrated).
F. Guiter, Germaine Richier Life and work, Catalogue raisonné, vol.1, Paris 2024 pp. 42-44 (another cast illustrated).
Exhibited
Venice, XXVI Biennale internazionale d'arte, 1952, p. 279, no. 146 (titled ‘Il Temporale’; another cast exhibited).
Varèse, Villa Mirabello, 2a Rassegna Internazionale di Scultura all’Aperto, 1955, p. 30, no. 132 (another cast exhibited, illustrated, p. 60).
Basel, Kunsthalle Basel, Germaine Richier, Bissière, H. R. Schiess, Vieira da Silva, Raoul Ubac, 1954, p. 10, no. 6 (another cast exhibited).
Bienne, Collège des Prés Ritter, Exposition suisse de sculpture en plein air, 1954, no. 170 (another cast exhibited).
Amsterdam, Stedelijk Museum, Vieira da Silva, Germaine Richier, 1955, no. 30 (another cast exhibited, illustrated, p. 17).
Saint-Gall, Kunstmuseum, Das Bild im Wohnraum unserer Zeit, 1955, no. 47 (another cast exhibited).
Paris, Musée national d’Art moderne, Germaine Richier, 1956, p. 10, no. 11 (another cast exhibited, illustrated, p. 17).
Winterthur, Kunstmuseum, Sammlung Geschwister Bechtler, 1956 (another cast exhibited).Brussels, Palais international des Beaux-Arts, Exposition Universelle et Internationale de Bruxelles 50 Ans d’Art Moderne, 1958, no. 271 (another cast exhibited, illustrated, unpaged).
Dortmund, Museum am Ostwall, Französische Plastik des 20. Jahrhunderts, 1959, p. 22 no. 135 (another cast exhibited).
Antibes, Château Grimaldi, Germaine Richier, 1959, no. 74 (another cast exhibited).
Paris, Musée Rodin, II Exposition internationale de sculpture contemporaine, 1961, no. 142 (another cast exhibited, illustrated, p. 130).
Paris, Grand Palais, Art contemporain, 1963, p. 7 (another cast exhibited).
Zurich, Kunsthaus Zurich, Germaine Richier: 1904-1959, 1963, p. 19, no. 34 (another cast exhibited).
Paris, Musée Rodin, Formes humaines. Ire Biennale internationale de sculpture contemporaine, 1964, no. 26, p. 119 (another cast exhibited, illustrated, p. 136).
Arles, Musée Réattu, Germaine Richier 1904-1959, 1964, p. 18, no. 20 (another cast exhibited, illustrated, p. 9).
Kassel, Museum Fridericianum, Orangerie, Alte Galerie, Staatliche Werkkunstschule, documenta III. Malerei, Skulptur, 1964, Cologne, p. 172, no. 2 (titled ‘Ouragane’; another cast exhibited, illustrated, p. 173).
Paris, Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, 81 Salon de l’Union des femmes peintres, sculpteurs, graveurs, décorateurs, 1965 (another cast exhibited, illustrated, p. 30).
Athens, L’Office National du Tourisme Hellenique, Panathénées de la Sculpture Mondiale, 1965, p. 7 (another cast exhibited).
Saint-Paul, Fondation Maeght, Dix ans d’art vivant, 1945-1955, 1966, p. 33, no. 128 (another cast exhibited, installation view illustrated, p. 68).
Annecy, Château des Ducs de Nemours, Germaine Richier, 1967 (another cast exhibited).
Paris, Musée Rodin, Formes Humaines:Troisième Biennale internationale de Sculpture Contemporaine, 1968.
Brussels, Crédit communal, Exposition d’art – Formes et magie, 1971.
Paris, Galerie Hervé Odermatt, Hommage à Germaine Richier, 1973, p. 9, no. 7 (another cast exhibited, illustrated, p. 8).
London, Barbican Art Gallery, Aftermath: France 1945-1954, New Images of Man, 1982, no. 43 (another cast exhibited, illustrated, p. 69).
Humlebaek, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Paris after the War: New Images of Man, 1982 (another cast exhibited, illustrated, unpaged).
Saint-Paul, Fondation Maeght, Musée éphémère, 1986, no. 64 (another cast exhibited, illustrated, unpaged).
Saint-Étienne, Musée d’Art Moderne, L’art en Europe, les années décisives: 1945-1953, 1987-1988, p. 318 (another cast exhibited, illustrated, p. 93).
Humlebaek, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Germaine Richier, 1988, pp. 31 and 33, no. 11 (another cast illustrated, p. 30).
New-York, Marlborough Gallery, Modern sculpture, 1992, no. 26 b (another cast exhibited).Paris, Galerie Odermatt, Hommage à Germaine Richier, 1992, pp. 28 and 78 (another cast illustrated, p. 29).
Paris, Hôtel de la Monnaie, Regards sur la femme, 1993 (another cast exhibited, illustrated, unpaged).
London, Tate Gallery, Paris Post War: Art and Existentialism, 1945-1955, 1993, pp.162 and 226, no. 97 (another cast exhibited, illustrated in colour, p. 165).
Antibes, Musée Picasso, L’envolée, l’enfouissement, 1995-1996, pp. 88 and 135 (another cast exhibited illustrated, p. 89). This exhibition later travelled to Villeneuve-d’Ascq, Musée d’Art.
Paris, Musée d’Art moderne de la Ville de Paris, Passions privées, 1995-1996, p. 272, no. 9 (another cast illustrated, p. 276).
Paris, Foundation Maeght, Germaine Richier Retrospective, 1996, pp. 84, 86, 204, no. 33 (another cast illustrated in colour, p. 85).
Berlin, Akademie der Künste, Germaine Richier, 1997, pp. 29, 36, 44, 50, 96 and 191, no. 38 (another cast exhibited, studio view illustrated, pp. 15 and 156; illustrated, p. 94).
London, Tate Gallery, Opposing Forces: Germaine Richier and Art in Post-War Europe, 1998 (anothercast exhibited).Mannheim, Kunsthalle Mannhiem, Menschenbilder - Figur im Zeiten der Abstraktion (1945-1955), 1998 (another cast exhibited).Saint-Paul de Vence, Fondation Maeght, Le Nu au XXe siécle, 2000, pp. 170 and 274, no. 128 (another cast exhibited).
London, Tate Modern, The Upright Figure, 2002 (another cast exhibited).
Venice, Peggy Guggenheim Collection, Richier, 2006-2007, p. 41 (another cast exhibited, studio view with original plaster cast, p. 92; detail illustrated, p. 93).
Barcelona, Fundacio Joan Miro, Un Cos sense limits, 2007 (another cast exhibited).
Tel Aviv, Tel Aviv Museum of Art, The Return of the Real - A selection from the Daniel Hechter art collection, 2011 (another cast exhibited).
New York, Dominique Lévy Gallery and Galerie Perrotin, Germaine Richier - Sculptures 1934-1959, 2013, p. 159 (another cast exhibited, studio view illustrated, p. 48; illustrated in colour, p. 49)
Berne, Kunstmuseum Bern, Germaine Richier Rétrospective, 2013-2014, p. 178 (another cast exhibited, illustrated, p. 123). This exhibition later travelled to Mannheim, Kunsthalle Mannheim.
Lausanne, Musée Cantonal des Beaux Arts, Giacometti, Marini, Richier: La Figure Tourmentée, 2014, pp. 13-14, 124 and 147, no. 31 (another cast exhibited, illustrated in colour, p. 64).
Mont-Saint-Michel Abbey, Centre des Monuments Nationaux, Germaine Richier: L'Ouragane, Abbaye du Mont Saint Michel, 2017 (another cast exhibited, illustrated in colour, p. 111).
Paris, Musée Bourdelle, Transmission – Transgression, 2018-2019, p. 225, no. 150 (another cast exhibited, illustrated in colour, p. 190).
Paris, Galerie Christophe Gaillard, Maryan, Germaine Richier, 2019 (another cast exhibited).
Antibes, Musée Picasso, Germaine Richier. La Magician, 2019, pp. 34, 77, 83, 111 and 136, no. 79 (another cast exhibited, illustrated in colour, p. 79; studio view illustrated, p. 78; installation view at Antibes, Musée Picasso illustrated, pp. 106 and 110).
Paris, Centre National d’Art et de Culture Georges Pompidou, Germaine Richier, 2023, pp. 24, 26, 29-30, 57, 63-64, 136, 142, 146, 269 and 285 (another cast exhibited, studio view illustrated on the front cover, pp. 2, 7 and 31; installation view illustrated at Musée Fabre in 2023 illustrated, p. 8; installation view illustrated at Musée national d’Art moderne in 1956 illustrated, pp. 44, 46-47, 138 and 297; installation view at Château Grimaldi in 1959 illustrated, p. 138; illustrated, p. 143). This exhibition later travelled to Montpellier, Musée Fabre.

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Lot Essay

Germaine Richier’s L’Orage (Storm Man) and L’Ouragane (Hurricane Woman) are among the most iconic sculptures to emerge from the creative ferment of post-war Paris. Conceived as companions between 1947 and 1949, the life-sized bronze figures bear weathered, wounded surfaces that picture the shellshocked state of mankind. In tune with their titles, they can also be seen as embodiments of elemental force, charged with a tempestuous energy that suggests the human spirit’s strength and survival. Powerful and imposing, they are poised as if to step forward into a new era. Versions of L’Orage and L’Ouragane are in the collections of museums including Tate, London, the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, the Astrup Fearnley Museet, Oslo, and the Centre Pompidou, Paris.

Richier was born in 1904 and grew up in Montpellier. She studied there in the studio of Louis-Jacques Guigues before moving to Paris, where she trained under the sculptor Antoine Bourdelle from 1926 until 1929. Both men had worked with the founding father of modern sculpture, Auguste Rodin—Guigues as his assistant, Bourdelle as a student—and Richier herself would go on to extend Rodin’s legacy of expressive, turbulent and complex modelling in clay. To create L’Orage, she worked from the eighty-year-old life model Antonio Nardone, who had posed for Rodin some five decades earlier. This was at once an act of homage and a signal of a historical break. No longer the young man Rodin had captured in The Kiss (1882) and Monument to Balzac (1892-1897), Nardone’s aged physique was heavy with the ravages of time. Richier gouged and eroded the clay as she worked, creating an image of entropy and endurance.

The Second World War was a turning point in Richier’s work. After spending the years of the conflict in Provence and Switzerland she returned to Paris in 1946. She began to create hybrid figures such as La Mante (The Praying Mantis) (1947), incarnations of atrocity in frightening, semi-human form. They chimed with the works of Alberto Giacometti—another student of Bourdelle’s—whose own attenuated figures would become emblematic of the era’s philosophical malaise. Like Giacometti, Richier built her works in clay over wire armatures before casting them in bronze. She drew upon memories of a visceral encounter with the plaster-cast bodies in the ruins of Pompeii, which she had visited in 1935. L’Orage and L’Ouragane marked Richier’s return to working from life, and her arrival at the existential zeitgeist. They stand together like the Adam and Eve of a fallen world.

Richier reached a level of recognition rare for a woman artist at the time. She was championed by Giacometti and Jean Arp, and by poets including Francis Ponge, who wrote texts to accompany her first solo exhibition at the Galerie Maeght in 1948. She took part in that year’s Venice Biennale, returning in 1952 to show L’Orage and L’Ouragane. In England she inspired a new school of sculptors including Reg Butler and Lynn Chadwick, whose style came to be known as ‘the geometry of fear’: in 1955, the British critic David Sylvester wrote that ‘Nobody, perhaps, occupies so central, so crucial, a position in contemporary sculpture as Germaine Richier’ (D. Sylvester, ‘On Germaine Richier’, in Germaine Richier, exh. cat. Hanover Gallery, London 1955, n.p.). The following year, Richier became the first living woman to be given a retrospective at the Musée national d’Art Moderne in Paris. The museum’s director Jean Cassou called her ‘the most complete artist there is, both a master of her technique and gifted with a breathtaking, utterly convincing poetic imagination’ (J. Cassou, ‘Germaine Richier’, in Germaine Richier, exh. cat. Musée national d’Art Moderne, Paris 1956, p. 6).

Richier endowed L’Orage and L’Ouragane with a palpable humanity. She enjoyed posing for photographs with them in her studio—creating stage-like scenes among mirrors and figures of different sizes—and installed a cast of L’Ouragane in her garden, tangled in foliage, where she confronted visitors who walked down the path. ‘I had the impression of entering this strange world, after the ravages of the atomic deluge’, wrote the great photographer Brassaï of his visit to the studio. ‘... Two monumental, gaunt figures, with wild eyes and limp arms, still trembling with terror, two raw, flayed souls, miraculously escaped from some unknown catastrophe’ (Brassaï, Les artistes de ma vie, Paris 1982, p. 194). In 1956, just three years before her own death, Richier created a pair of abstract, geometric tombstones for L’Orage and L’Ouragane which are housed in the Musée Picasso, Antibes. She seems to have regarded the sculptures as living beings, as mortal as they were full of vitality.

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