![]() These patient portraits were seen as objective, while also paradoxically providing an alternative to mechanical media such as the photograph and the cast by permitting the doctor’s intervention in not only controlling and animating the sitter, but also emphasizing the patient’s symptoms. His ‘series of figural representations of the principal types of nervous pathology’ included busts of patients suffering from labioglosso-laryngeal paralysis and myopathy, as well as sculptures depicting individuals suffering from Parkinson’s Disease and juvenile hypothyroidism. Under the aegis of Doctor Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893), one of the founders of modern neurology, Richer was the head of the hospital’s museum of pathological anatomy, as well as the Salpêtrière’s resident artist. ![]() This article examines the little-known sculptures of pathology created by Doctor Paul Richer (1849-1933) in the 1890s for the so-called Musée Charcot at the Hôpital de la Salpêtrière in Paris. ![]()
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