The LION & the CARDINAL
« November 2011 »
S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30
Blog Tools
Edit your Blog
Build a Blog
RSS Feed
View Profile

E-mail me:
danmitsui@
hotmail.com


Please visit
the following
web pages
to see my
work as an
artist:


My home page


Religious art


Biological art


Bookplates &c


Supported
Sites:


Durandus
of Mende

Adam of
St. Victor

Michelle
Mitsui


Donations to
support the
maintenance of
this web site
and web log
are gratefully
received.

If you e-mail
me your postal
address after
making a
donation, I
will send you
a small pack-
age with ten
printed
samples of my
work (mostly
bookplates)
as a token
of gratitude.

You may also
use the button
below to make
payments for
artwork.

29 November 2011 ~ The Lion & the Cardinal by Daniel Mitsui



TOMB of RENE of CHALON



James Snyder:
The tomb figures in Late Gothic sculpture were usually presented in one of two ways: as recumbent images of the deceased as they appeared alive - representacion au vif - or as decaying corpses - representacion de la mort....

An exceptional example of such funerary statuary is found in the tomb of René de Châlon in the Church of Saint Peter in Bar-le-Duc, attributed to Ligier Richier of Lorraine. The standing image is that of death and not an actual portrait of René after his death, but the meaning is the same. The grotesque skeleton statue stands firmly and proudly, carrying his shield and gazing upward at the bony hand holding his heart. The decomposition of the body is nearly complete. But this is death activated, and in the context of a tomb it is not to be viewed as the gruesome death that reaps death as in Bruegel's painting or in the Dance of Death by Holbein. This is the dead René de Châlon, and after the flesh of his body has rotted away, his soul still holds up his heart in love - caritas - to God.
[Northern Renaissance Art by James Snyder. Harry N. Abrams. 1985]

Newer | Latest | Older