Ligier richier biography of william shakespeare

          The book's premise is that the actor's impersonation of the dead body in early modern drama stands as a theatrical and ritualized point of.!

          Ligier Richier

          French sculptor

          Ligier Richier (c. 1500—1567) was a French sculptor active in Saint-Mihiel in Northeastern France.

          Richier primarily worked in the churches of his native Saint-Mihiel.

          The book's premise is that the actor's impersonation of the dead body in early modern drama stands as a theatrical and ritualized point of intersection between.

        1. The book's premise is that the actor's impersonation of the dead body in early modern drama stands as a theatrical and ritualized point of intersection between.
        2. Attributed to Ligier Richier, it was made c.
        3. The book's premise is that the actor's impersonation of the dead body in early modern drama stands as a theatrical and ritualized point of.
        4. Holding his dead daughter, old Lear suddenly believes he sees something given to none of this life to behold; “Look, her lips, / Look there, look there,” he.
        5. His widow commissioned sculptor Ligier Richier to represent him in the Cadaver This is an allusion to the play Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare.
        6. Starting in 1530, he enjoyed the patronage of Antoine, Duke of Lorraine, who commissioned his work. Whilst Richier did sometimes work in wood, he preferred the pale, soft limestone with its fine grain, and few veins, extracted at Saint Mihiel and Sorcy and when working in this medium he experimented with refined polishing techniques, with which he was able to give the stone a marble-like appearance.[1] One of his finest works is the "Groupe de la Passion", consisting of 13 life-size figures made in the local stone of the Meuse region.

          It can be found in the Church of St. Étienne.[2] It is also known as the "Pâmoison de la Vierge" (Swoon of the Virgin, the Virgin fainting, supported by St John).[3] Other works attributed to him are in the Ch