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Auguste Rodin

François Auguste René Rodin (12 November 1840 – 17 November 1917) was a French sculptor,[1] generally considered the founder of modern sculpture.[2] He was schooled traditionally and took a craftsman-like approach to his work. Rodin possessed a unique ability to model a complex, turbulent, and deeply pocketed surface in clay. He is known for such sculptures as The Thinker, Monument to Balzac, The Kiss, The Burghers of Calais, and The Gates of Hell.

Auguste Rodin
Photograph by Beresford, 1902
Born
François Auguste René Rodin

(1840-11-12)12 November 1840
Died17 November 1917(1917-11-17) (aged 77)
Known forList of sculptures
Notable work
AwardsLégion d'Honneur

Many of Rodin's most notable sculptures were criticized, as they clashed with predominant figurative sculpture traditions in which works were decorative, formulaic, or highly thematic. Rodin's most original work departed from traditional themes of mythology and allegory. He modeled the human body with naturalism, and his sculptures celebrate individual character and physicality. Although Rodin was sensitive to the controversy surrounding his work, he refused to change his style, and his continued output brought increasing favor from the government and the artistic community.

From the unexpected naturalism of Rodin's first major figure – inspired by his 1875 trip to Italy – to the unconventional memorials whose commissions he later sought, his reputation grew, and Rodin became the preeminent French sculptor of his time. By 1900, he was a world-renowned artist. Wealthy private clients sought Rodin's work after his World's Fair exhibit, and he kept company with a variety of high-profile intellectuals and artists. His student, Camille Claudel, became his associate, lover, and creative rival. Rodin's other students included Antoine Bourdelle, Constantin Brâncuși, and Charles Despiau. He married his lifelong companion, Rose Beuret, in the last year of both their lives. His sculptures suffered a decline in popularity after his death in 1917, but within a few decades his legacy solidified. Rodin remains one of the few sculptors widely known outside the visual arts community.

Biography

Formative years

Rodin was born in 1840 into a working-class family in Paris, the second child of Marie Cheffer and Jean-Baptiste Rodin, who was a police department clerk.[3] He was largely self-educated,[4] and began to draw at age 10. Between ages 14 and 17, he attended the Petite École, a school specializing in art and mathematics where he studied drawing and painting. His drawing teacher Horace Lecoq de Boisbaudran believed in first developing the personality of his students so that they observed with their own eyes and drew from their recollections, and Rodin expressed appreciation for his teacher much later in life.[5] It was at Petite École that he met Jules Dalou and Alphonse Legros.

 
Rodin circa 1862

In 1857, Rodin submitted a clay model of a companion to the École des Beaux-Arts in an attempt to win entrance; he did not succeed, and two further applications were also denied.[6] Entrance requirements were not particularly high at the Grande École,[7] so the rejections were considerable setbacks. Rodin's inability to gain entrance may have been due to the judges' Neoclassical tastes, while Rodin had been schooled in light, 18th-century sculpture. He left the Petite École in 1857 and earned a living as a craftsman and ornamenter for most of the next two decades, producing decorative objects and architectural embellishments.

Rodin's sister Maria, two years his senior, died of peritonitis in a convent in 1862, and Rodin was anguished with guilt because he had introduced her to an unfaithful suitor. He turned away from art and joined the Catholic order of the Congregation of the Blessed Sacrament. Saint Peter Julian Eymard, founder and head of the congregation, recognized Rodin's talent and sensed his lack of suitability for the order, so he encouraged Rodin to continue with his sculpture. Rodin returned to work as a decorator while taking classes with animal sculptor Antoine-Louis Barye. The teacher's attention to detail and his finely rendered musculature of animals in motion significantly influenced Rodin.[8]

In 1864, Rodin began to live with a young seamstress named Rose Beuret (born in June 1844),[9] with whom he stayed for the rest of his life, with varying commitment. The couple had a son named Auguste-Eugène Beuret (1866–1934).[10] That year, Rodin offered his first sculpture for exhibition and entered the studio of Albert-Ernest Carrier-Belleuse, a successful mass producer of objets d'art. Rodin worked as Carrier-Belleuse' chief assistant until 1870, designing roof decorations and staircase and doorway embellishments. With the arrival of the Franco-Prussian War, Rodin was called to serve in the French National Guard, but his service was brief due to his near-sightedness.[11] Decorators' work had dwindled because of the war, yet Rodin needed to support his family, as poverty was a continual difficulty for him until about the age of 30.[12] Carrier-Belleuse soon asked him to join him in Belgium, where they worked on ornamentation for the Brussels Stock Exchange.

Rodin planned to stay in Belgium a few months, but he spent the next six years outside of France. It was a pivotal time in his life.[12] He had acquired skill and experience as a craftsman, but no one had yet seen his art, which sat in his workshop since he could not afford castings. His relationship with Carrier-Belleuse had deteriorated, but he found other employment in Brussels, displaying some works at salons, and his companion Rose soon joined him there. Having saved enough money to travel, Rodin visited Italy for two months in 1875, where he was drawn to the work of Donatello and Michelangelo. Their work had a profound effect on his artistic direction.[13] Rodin said, "It is Michelangelo who has freed me from academic sculpture."[14] Returning to Belgium, he began work on The Age of Bronze, a life-size male figure whose naturalism brought Rodin attention but led to accusations of sculptural cheating – its naturalism and scale was such that critics alleged he had cast the work from a living model. Much of Rodin's later work was explicitly larger or smaller than life, in part to demonstrate the folly of such accusations.

Artistic independence

 
Auguste Rodin, John Singer Sargent, 1884

Rose Beuret and Rodin returned to Paris in 1877, moving into a small flat on the Left Bank. Misfortune surrounded Rodin: his mother, who had wanted to see her son marry, was dead, and his father was blind and senile, cared for by Rodin's sister-in-law, Aunt Thérèse. Rodin's eleven-year-old son Auguste, possibly developmentally delayed, was also in the ever-helpful Thérèse's care. Rodin had essentially abandoned his son for six years,[15] and would have a very limited relationship with him throughout his life. Father and son joined the couple in their flat, with Rose as caretaker. Charges of fakery surrounding The Age of Bronze continued. Rodin increasingly sought soothing female companionship in Paris, and Rose stayed in the background.

Rodin earned his living collaborating with more established sculptors on public commissions, primarily memorials and neo-baroque architectural pieces in the style of Carpeaux.[16] In competitions for commissions he submitted models of Denis Diderot, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, and Lazare Carnot, all to no avail. On his own time, he worked on studies leading to the creation of his next important work, St. John the Baptist Preaching.

In 1880, Carrier-Belleuse – then art director of the Sèvres national porcelain factory – offered Rodin a part-time position as a designer. The offer was in part a gesture of reconciliation, and Rodin accepted. That part of Rodin which appreciated 18th-century tastes was aroused, and he immersed himself in designs for vases and table ornaments that brought the factory renown across Europe.[17]

The artistic community appreciated his work in this vein, and Rodin was invited to Paris Salons by such friends as writer Léon Cladel. During his early appearances at these social events, Rodin seemed shy;[18] in his later years, as his fame grew, he displayed the loquaciousness and temperament for which he is better known. French statesman Leon Gambetta expressed a desire to meet Rodin, and the sculptor impressed him when they met at a salon. Gambetta spoke of Rodin in turn to several government ministers, likely including Edmund Turquet [fr], the Undersecretary of the Ministry of Fine Arts, whom Rodin eventually met.[18]

Rodin's relationship with Turquet was rewarding: through him, he won the 1880 commission to create a portal for a planned museum of decorative arts. Rodin dedicated much of the next four decades to his elaborate Gates of Hell, an unfinished portal for a museum that was never built. Many of the portal's figures became sculptures in themselves, including Rodin's most famous, The Thinker and The Kiss. With the museum commission came a free studio, granting Rodin a new level of artistic freedom. Soon, he stopped working at the porcelain factory; his income came from private commissions.[citation needed]

In 1883, Rodin agreed to supervise a course for sculptor Alfred Boucher in his absence, where he met the 18-year-old Camille Claudel. The two formed a passionate but stormy relationship and influenced each other artistically. Claudel inspired Rodin as a model for many of his figures, and she was a talented sculptor, assisting him on commissions as well as creating her own works.[19][20][21][22] Her Bust of Rodin was displayed to critical acclaim at the 1892 Salon.[23]

Although busy with The Gates of Hell, Rodin won other commissions. He pursued an opportunity to create a historical monument for the town of Calais. For a monument to French author Honoré de Balzac, Rodin was chosen in 1891. His execution of both sculptures clashed with traditional tastes, and met with varying degrees of disapproval from the organizations that sponsored the commissions. Still, Rodin was gaining support from diverse sources that propelled him toward fame.[24]

In 1889, the Paris Salon invited Rodin to be a judge on its artistic jury. Though Rodin's career was on the rise, Claudel and Beuret were becoming increasingly impatient with Rodin's "double life". Claudel and Rodin shared an atelier at a small old castle (the Château de l'Islette in the Loire), but Rodin refused to relinquish his ties to Beuret, his loyal companion during the lean years, and mother of his son. During one absence, Rodin wrote to Beuret, "I think of how much you must have loved me to put up with my caprices...I remain, in all tenderness, your Rodin."[25]

 
A photograph of Rodin in 1891 by Nadar

Claudel and Rodin parted in 1898.[26] Claudel suffered an alleged nervous breakdown several years later and was confined to an institution for 30 years by her family, until her death in 1943, despite numerous attempts by doctors to explain to her mother and brother that she was sane.[27]

In 1904 Rodin, was introduced to the Welsh artist, Gwen John who modelled for him and became his lover after being introduced by Hilda Flodin.[28] John had a fervent attachment to Rodin and would write to him thousands of times over the next ten years.[29] As their relationship came to a close, despite his genuine feeling for her, Rodin eventually resorted to the use of concièrges and secretaries to keep her at a distance.[29]

Works

In 1864, Rodin submitted his first sculpture for exhibition, The Man with the Broken Nose, to the Paris Salon. The subject was an elderly neighborhood street porter. The unconventional bronze piece was not a traditional bust, but instead the head was "broken off" at the neck, the nose was flattened and crooked, and the back of the head was absent, having fallen off the clay model in an accident. The work emphasized texture and the emotional state of the subject; it illustrated the "unfinishedness" that would characterize many of Rodin's later sculptures.[30] The Salon rejected the piece.

Early figures: the inspiration of Italy

In Brussels, Rodin created his first full-scale work, The Age of Bronze, having returned from Italy. Modeled after a Belgian soldier, the figure drew inspiration from Michelangelo's Dying Slave, which Rodin had observed at the Louvre. Attempting to combine Michelangelo's mastery of the human form with his own sense of human nature, Rodin studied his model from all angles, at rest and in motion; he mounted a ladder for additional perspective, and made clay models, which he studied by candlelight. The result was a life-size, well-proportioned nude figure, posed unconventionally with his right hand atop his head, and his left arm held out at his side, forearm parallel to the body.

In 1877, the work debuted in Brussels and then was shown at the Paris Salon. The statue's apparent lack of a theme was troubling to critics – commemorating neither mythology nor a noble historical event – and it is not clear whether Rodin intended a theme.[31] He first titled the work The Vanquished, in which form the left hand held a spear, but he removed the spear because it obstructed the torso from certain angles. After two more intermediary titles, Rodin settled on The Age of Bronze, suggesting the Bronze Age, and in Rodin's words, "man arising from nature".[32] Later, however, Rodin said that he had had in mind "just a simple piece of sculpture without reference to subject".[32]

Its mastery of form, light, and shadow made the work look so naturalistic that Rodin was accused of surmoulage – having taken a cast from a living model. Rodin vigorously denied the charges, writing to newspapers and having photographs taken of the model to prove how the sculpture differed. He demanded an inquiry and was eventually exonerated by a committee of sculptors. Leaving aside the false charges, the piece polarized critics. It had barely won acceptance for display at the Paris Salon, and criticism likened it to "a statue of a sleepwalker" and called it "an astonishingly accurate copy of a low type".[32] Others rallied to defend the piece and Rodin's integrity. The government minister Turquet admired the piece, and The Age of Bronze was purchased by the state for 2,200 francs – what it had cost Rodin to have it cast in bronze.[32]

 
St. John the Baptist Preaching (1878)

A second male nude, St. John the Baptist Preaching, was completed in 1878. Rodin sought to avoid another charge of surmoulage by making the statue larger than life: St. John stands almost 6 feet 7 inches (2.01 m). While The Age of Bronze is statically posed, St. John gestures and seems to move toward the viewer. The effect of walking is achieved despite the figure having both feet firmly on the ground – a technical achievement that was lost on most contemporary critics.[33] Rodin chose this contradictory position to, in his words, "display simultaneously...views of an object which in fact can be seen only successively".[34]

Despite the title, St. John the Baptist Preaching did not have an obviously religious theme. The model, an Italian peasant who presented himself at Rodin's studio, possessed an idiosyncratic sense of movement that Rodin felt compelled to capture. Rodin thought of John the Baptist, and carried that association into the title of the work.[34] In 1880, Rodin submitted the sculpture to the Paris Salon. Critics were still mostly dismissive of his work, but the piece finished third in the Salon's sculpture category.[34]

Regardless of the immediate receptions of St. John and The Age of Bronze, Rodin had achieved a new degree of fame. Students sought him at his studio, praising his work and scorning the charges of surmoulage. The artistic community knew his name.

The Gates of Hell

A commission to create a portal for Paris' planned Museum of Decorative Arts was awarded to Rodin in 1880.[16] Although the museum was never built, Rodin worked throughout his life on The Gates of Hell, a monumental sculptural group depicting scenes from Dante's Inferno in high relief. Often lacking a clear conception of his major works, Rodin compensated with hard work and a striving for perfection.[35]

He conceived The Gates with the surmoulage controversy still in mind: "...I had made the St. John to refute [the charges of casting from a model], but it only partially succeeded. To prove completely that I could model from life as well as other sculptors, I determined...to make the sculpture on the door of figures smaller than life."[35] Laws of composition gave way to the Gates' disordered and untamed depiction of Hell. The figures and groups in this, Rodin's meditation on the condition of man, are physically and morally isolated in their torment.[36]

The Gates of Hell comprised 186 figures in its final form.[36] Many of Rodin's best-known sculptures started as designs of figures for this composition,[8] such as The Thinker, The Three Shades, and The Kiss, and were only later presented as separate and independent works. Other well-known works derived from The Gates are Ugolino, Fallen Caryatid Carrying her Stone, Fugit Amor, She Who Was Once the Helmet-Maker's Beautiful Wife, The Falling Man, and The Prodigal Son.

The Thinker

 
Rodin's The Thinker (1879–1889) is among the most recognized works in all of sculpture.

The Thinker (originally titled The Poet, after Dante) was to become one of the best-known sculptures in the world. The original was a 27.5-inch (700 mm) high bronze piece created between 1879 and 1889, designed for the Gates' lintel, from which the figure would gaze down upon Hell. While The Thinker most obviously characterizes Dante, aspects of the Biblical Adam, the mythological Prometheus,[16] and Rodin himself have been ascribed to him.[37][38] Other observers de-emphasize the apparent intellectual theme of The Thinker, stressing the figure's rough physicality and the emotional tension emanating from it.[39]

The Burghers of Calais

 
The Burghers of Calais (1884–ca. 1889) in Victoria Tower Gardens, London, England

The town of Calais had contemplated a historical monument for decades when Rodin learned of the project. He pursued the commission, interested in the medieval motif and patriotic theme. The mayor of Calais was tempted to hire Rodin on the spot upon visiting his studio, and soon the memorial was approved, with Rodin as its architect. It would commemorate the six townspeople of Calais who offered their lives to save their fellow citizens.[citation needed]

During the Hundred Years' War, the army of King Edward III besieged Calais, and Edward ordered that the town's population be killed en masse. He agreed to spare them if six of the principal citizens would come to him prepared to die, bareheaded and barefooted and with ropes around their necks. When they came, he ordered that they be executed, but pardoned them when his queen, Philippa of Hainault, begged him to spare their lives. The Burghers of Calais depicts the men as they are leaving for the king's camp, carrying keys to the town's gates and citadel.[citation needed]

Rodin began the project in 1884, inspired by the chronicles of the siege by Jean Froissart.[40] Though the town envisioned an allegorical, heroic piece centered on Eustache de Saint-Pierre, the eldest of the six men, Rodin conceived the sculpture as a study in the varied and complex emotions under which all six men were laboring. One year into the commission, the Calais committee was not impressed with Rodin's progress. Rodin indicated his willingness to end the project rather than change his design to meet the committee's conservative expectations, but Calais said to continue.[citation needed]

In 1889, The Burghers of Calais was first displayed to general acclaim. It is a bronze sculpture weighing two short tons (1,814 kg), and its figures are 6.6 ft (2.0 m) tall.[40] The six men portrayed do not display a united, heroic front;[41] rather, each is isolated from his brothers, individually deliberating and struggling with his expected fate. Rodin soon proposed that the monument's high pedestal be eliminated, wanting to move the sculpture to ground level so that viewers could "penetrate to the heart of the subject".[42] At ground level, the figures' positions lead the viewer around the work, and subtly suggest their common movement forward.[43]

The committee was incensed by the untraditional proposal, but Rodin would not yield. In 1895, Calais succeeded in having Burghers displayed in their preferred form: the work was placed in front of a public garden on a high platform, surrounded by a cast-iron railing. Rodin had wanted it located near the town hall, where it would engage the public. Only after damage during the First World War, subsequent storage, and Rodin's death was the sculpture displayed as he had intended. It is one of Rodin's best-known and most acclaimed works.[40]

Commissions and controversy

 
Rodin in mid-career

Commissioned to create a monument to French writer Victor Hugo in 1889, Rodin dealt extensively with the subject of artist and muse. Like many of Rodin's public commissions, Monument to Victor Hugo was met with resistance because it did not fit conventional expectations. Commenting on Rodin's monument to Victor Hugo, The Times in 1909 expressed that "there is some show of reason in the complaint that [Rodin's] conceptions are sometimes unsuited to his medium, and that in such cases they overstrain his vast technical powers".[44] The 1897 plaster model was not cast in bronze until 1964.

The Société des Gens des Lettres, a Parisian organization of writers, planned a monument to French novelist Honoré de Balzac immediately after his death in 1850. The society commissioned Rodin to create the memorial in 1891, and Rodin spent years developing the concept for his sculpture. Challenged in finding an appropriate representation of Balzac given the author's rotund physique, Rodin produced many studies: portraits, full-length figures in the nude, wearing a frock coat, or in a robe – a replica of which Rodin had requested. The realized sculpture displays Balzac cloaked in the drapery, looking forcefully into the distance with deeply gouged features. Rodin's intent had been to show Balzac at the moment of conceiving a work[45] – to express courage, labor, and struggle.[46]

 
Rodin observing work on the monument to Victor Hugo at the studio of his assistant Henri Lebossé in 1896

When Monument to Balzac was exhibited in 1898, the negative reaction was not surprising.[37] The Société rejected the work, and the press ran parodies. Criticizing the work, Morey (1918) reflected, "there may come a time, and doubtless will come a time, when it will not seem outre to represent a great novelist as a huge comic mask crowning a bathrobe, but even at the present day this statue impresses one as slang."[8] A modern critic, indeed, claims that Balzac is one of Rodin's masterpieces.[47]

The monument had its supporters in Rodin's day; a manifesto defending him was signed by Monet, Debussy, and future Premier Georges Clemenceau, among many others.[48] In the BBC series Civilisation, art historian Kenneth Clark praised the monument as "the greatest piece of sculpture of the 19th Century, perhaps, indeed, the greatest since Michelangelo."[49] Rather than try to convince skeptics of the merit of the monument, Rodin repaid the Société his commission and moved the figure to his garden. After this experience, Rodin did not complete another public commission. Only in 1939 was Monument to Balzac cast in bronze and placed on the Boulevard du Montparnasse at the intersection with Boulevard Raspail.

Other works

 
Reclining Woman (1890s) in the National Museum, Warsaw

The popularity of Rodin's most famous sculptures tends to obscure his total creative output. A prolific artist, he created thousands of busts, figures, and sculptural fragments over more than five decades. He painted in oils (especially in his thirties) and in watercolors. The Musée Rodin holds 7,000 of his drawings and prints, in chalk and charcoal, and thirteen vigorous drypoints.[50][51] He also produced a single lithograph.

Portraiture was an important component of Rodin's oeuvre, helping him to win acceptance and financial independence.[52] His first sculpture was a bust of his father in 1860, and he produced at least 56 portraits between 1877 and his death in 1917.[53] Early subjects included fellow sculptor Jules Dalou (1883) and companion Camille Claudel (1884).

Later, with his reputation established, Rodin made busts of prominent contemporaries such as English politician George Wyndham (1905), Irish playwright George Bernard Shaw (1906), socialist (and former mistress of the Prince of Wales who became King Edward VII) Countess of Warwick (1908),[54] Austrian composer Gustav Mahler (1909), former Argentine president Domingo Faustino Sarmiento and French statesman Georges Clemenceau (1911).

His undated drawing Study of a Woman Nude, Standing, Arms Raised, Hands Crossed Above Head is one of the works seized in 2012 from the collection of Cornelius Gurlitt.[55]

Aesthetic

 
A famous "fragment": The Walking Man (1877–78)

Rodin was a naturalist, less concerned with monumental expression than with character and emotion.[56] Departing with centuries of tradition, he turned away from the idealism of the Greeks, and the decorative beauty of the Baroque and neo-Baroque movements. His sculpture emphasized the individual and the concreteness of flesh, and suggested emotion through detailed, textured surfaces, and the interplay of light and shadow. To a greater degree than his contemporaries, Rodin believed that an individual's character was revealed by his physical features.[57]

Rodin's talent for surface modeling allowed him to let every part of the body speak for the whole. The male's passion in The Thinker is suggested by the grip of his toes on the rock, the rigidness of his back, and the differentiation of his hands.[8] Speaking of The Thinker, Rodin illuminated his aesthetic: "What makes my Thinker think is that he thinks not only with his brain, with his knitted brow, his distended nostrils and compressed lips, but with every muscle of his arms, back, and legs, with his clenched fist and gripping toes."[58]

Sculptural fragments to Rodin were autonomous works, and he considered them the essence of his artistic statement. His fragments – perhaps lacking arms, legs, or a head – took sculpture further from its traditional role of portraying likenesses, and into a realm where forms existed for their own sake.[59] Notable examples are The Walking Man, Meditation without Arms, and Iris, Messenger of the Gods.

Rodin saw suffering and conflict as hallmarks of modern art. "Nothing, really, is more moving than the maddened beast, dying from unfulfilled desire and asking in vain for grace to quell its passion."[38] Charles Baudelaire echoed those themes, and was among Rodin's favorite poets. Rodin enjoyed music, especially the opera composer Gluck, and wrote a book about French cathedrals. He owned a work by the as-yet-unrecognized Van Gogh, and admired the forgotten El Greco.[60]

Method

Instead of copying traditional academic postures, Rodin preferred his models to move naturally around his studio (despite their nakedness).[8] The sculptor often made quick sketches in clay that were later fine-tuned, cast in plaster, and cast in bronze or carved from marble. Rodin's focus was on the handling of clay.[61]

George Bernard Shaw sat for a portrait and gave an idea of Rodin's technique: "While he worked, he achieved a number of miracles. At the end of the first fifteen minutes, after having given a simple idea of the human form to the block of clay, he produced by the action of his thumb a bust so living that I would have taken it away with me to relieve the sculptor of any further work."[61]

He described the evolution of his bust over a month, passing through "all the stages of art's evolution": first, a "Byzantine masterpiece", then "Bernini intermingled", then an elegant Houdon. "The hand of Rodin worked not as the hand of a sculptor works, but as the work of Elan Vital. The Hand of God is his own hand."[61]

After he completed his work in clay, he employed highly skilled assistants to re-sculpt his compositions at larger sizes (including any of his large-scale monuments such as The Thinker), to cast the clay compositions into plaster or bronze, and to carve his marbles. Rodin's major innovation was to capitalize on such multi-staged processes of 19th century sculpture and their reliance on plaster casting.[citation needed]

Since clay deteriorates rapidly if not kept wet or fired into a terra-cotta, sculptors used plaster casts as a means of securing the composition they would make from the fugitive material that is clay. This was common practice amongst Rodin's contemporaries, and sculptors would exhibit plaster casts with the hopes that they would be commissioned to have the works made in a more permanent material. Rodin, however, would have multiple plasters made and treat them as the raw material of sculpture, recombining their parts and figures into new compositions, and new names.[citation needed]

As Rodin's practice developed into the 1890s, he became more and more radical in his pursuit of fragmentation, the combination of figures at different scales, and the making of new compositions from his earlier work. A prime example of this is the bold The Walking Man (1899–1900), which was exhibited at his major one-person show in 1900. This is composed of two sculptures from the 1870s that Rodin found in his studio – a broken and damaged torso that had fallen into neglect and the lower extremities of a statuette version of his 1878 St. John the Baptist Preaching he was having re-sculpted at a reduced scale.[citation needed]

Without finessing the join between upper and lower, between torso and legs, Rodin created a work that many sculptors at the time and subsequently have seen as one of his strongest and most singular works. This is despite the fact that the object conveys two different styles, exhibits two different attitudes toward finish, and lacks any attempt to hide the arbitrary fusion of these two components. It was the freedom and creativity with which Rodin used these practices – along with his activation surfaces of sculptures through traces of his own touch and with his more open attitude toward bodily pose, sensual subject matter, and non-naturalistic surface – that marked Rodin's re-making of traditional 19th century sculptural techniques into the prototype for modern sculpture.[citation needed]

Later years (1900–1917)

 
A portrait of Rodin by his friend Alphonse Legros

By 1900, Rodin's artistic reputation was entrenched. Gaining exposure from a pavilion of his artwork set up near the 1900 World's Fair (Exposition Universelle) in Paris, he received requests to make busts of prominent people internationally,[37] while his assistants at the atelier produced duplicates of his works. His income from portrait commissions alone totaled probably 200,000 francs a year.[62] As Rodin's fame grew, he attracted many followers, including the German poet Rainer Maria Rilke, and authors Octave Mirbeau, Joris-Karl Huysmans, and Oscar Wilde.[41]

Rilke stayed with Rodin in 1905 and 1906, and did administrative work for him; he would later write a laudatory monograph on the sculptor. Rodin and Beuret's modest country estate in Meudon, purchased in 1897, was a host to such guests as King Edward, dancer Isadora Duncan, and harpsichordist Wanda Landowska. A British journalist who visited the property noted in 1902 that in its complete isolation, there was "a striking analogy between its situation and the personality of the man who lives in it".[63] Rodin moved to the city in 1908, renting the main floor of the Hôtel Biron, an 18th-century townhouse. He left Beuret in Meudon, and began an affair with the American-born Duchesse de Choiseul.[64] From 1910, he mentored the Russian sculptor, Moissey Kogan.[65]

United States

 
Ève au rocher, 1881 – c. 1899 bronze, Jardin des Tuileries, Paris

While Rodin was beginning to be accepted in France by the time of The Burghers of Calais, he had not yet conquered the American market. Because of his technique and the frankness of some of his work, he did not have an easy time selling his work to American industrialists. However, he came to know Sarah Tyson Hallowell (1846–1924), a curator from Chicago who visited Paris to arrange exhibitions at the large Interstate Expositions of the 1870s and 1880s. Hallowell was not only a curator but an adviser and a facilitator who was trusted by a number of prominent American collectors to suggest works for their collections, the most prominent of these being the Chicago hotelier Potter Palmer and his wife, Bertha Palmer (1849–1918).[citation needed]

The next opportunity for Rodin in America was the 1893 Chicago World's Fair.[66] Hallowell wanted to help promote Rodin's work and he suggested a solo exhibition, which she wrote him was beaucoup moins beau que l'original but impossible, outside the rules. Instead, she suggested he send a number of works for her loan exhibition of French art from American collections and she told him she would list them as being part of an American collection.[67] Rodin sent Hallowell three works, Cupid and Psyche, Sphinx and Andromeda. All nudes, these works provoked great controversy and were ultimately hidden behind a drape with special permission given for viewers to see them.[68]

Bust of Dalou and Burgher of Calais were on display in the official French pavilion at the fair and so between the works that were on display and those that were not, he was noticed. However, the works he gave Hallowell to sell found no takers, but she soon brought the controversial Quaker-born financier Charles Yerkes (1837–1905) into the fold and he purchased two large marbles for his Chicago manse;[68] Yerkes was likely the first American to own a Rodin sculpture.[69]

Other collectors soon followed including the tastemaking Potter Palmers of Chicago and Isabella Stewart Gardner (1840–1924) of Boston, all arranged by Sarah Hallowell. In appreciation for her efforts at unlocking the American market, Rodin eventually presented Hallowell with a bronze, a marble and a terra cotta. When Hallowell moved to Paris in 1893, she and Rodin continued their warm friendship and correspondence, which lasted to the end of the sculptor's life.[70] After Hallowell's death, her niece, the painter Harriet Hallowell, inherited the Rodins and after her death, the American heirs could not manage to match their value in order to export them, so they became the property of the French state.[71]

Great Britain

After the start of the 20th century, Rodin was a regular visitor to Great Britain, where he developed a loyal following by the beginning of the First World War. He first visited England in 1881, where his friend, the artist Alphonse Legros, had introduced him to the poet William Ernest Henley. With his personal connections and enthusiasm for Rodin's art, Henley was most responsible for Rodin's reception in Britain.[72] (Rodin later returned the favor by sculpting a bust of Henley that was used as the frontispiece to Henley's collected works and, after his death, on his monument in London.)[73]

Through Henley, Rodin met Robert Louis Stevenson and Robert Browning, in whom he found further support.[74] Encouraged by the enthusiasm of British artists, students, and high society for his art, Rodin donated a significant selection of his works to the nation in 1914.

After the revitalization of the Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts in 1890, Rodin served as the body's vice-president.[75] In 1903, Rodin was elected president of the International Society of Painters, Sculptors, and Engravers. He replaced its former president, James Abbott McNeill Whistler, upon Whistler's death. His election to the prestigious position was largely due to the efforts of Albert Ludovici, father of English philosopher Anthony Ludovici, who was private secretary to Rodin for several months in 1906, but the two men parted company after Christmas, "to their mutual relief."[76]

During his later creative years, Rodin's work turned increasingly toward the female form, and themes of more overt masculinity and femininity.[37] He concentrated on small dance studies, and produced numerous erotic drawings, sketched in a loose way, without taking his pencil from the paper or his eyes from the model. Rodin met American dancer Isadora Duncan in 1900, attempted to seduce her,[77] and the next year sketched studies of her and her students. In July 1906, Rodin was also enchanted by dancers from the Royal Ballet of Cambodia, and produced some of his most famous drawings from the experience.[78]

Fifty-three years into their relationship, Rodin married Rose Beuret. They married on 29 January 1917, and Beuret died two weeks later, on 16 February.[79] Rodin was ill that year; in January, he suffered weakness from influenza,[80] and on 16 November his physician announced that "congestion of the lungs has caused great weakness. The patient's condition is grave."[79] Rodin died the next day, age 77, at his villa[81] in Meudon, Île-de-France, on the outskirts of Paris.[6]

A cast of The Thinker was placed next to his tomb in Meudon; it was Rodin's wish that the figure served as his headstone and epitaph.[82] In 1923, Marcell Tirel, Rodin's secretary, published a book alleging that Rodin's death was largely due to cold, and the fact that he had no heat at Meudon. Rodin requested permission to stay in the Hotel Biron, a museum of his works, but the director of the museum refused to let him stay there.[83][84]

Legacy

Rodin willed to the French state his studio and the right to make casts from his plasters. Because he encouraged the edition of his sculpted work, Rodin's sculptures are represented in many public and private collections. The Musée Rodin was founded in 1916 and opened in 1919 at the Hôtel Biron, where Rodin had lived, and it holds the largest Rodin collection, with more than 6,000 sculptures and 7,000 works on paper. The French order Légion d'honneur made him a Commander,[85] and he received an honorary doctorate from the University of Oxford.

During his lifetime, Rodin was compared to Michelangelo,[38] and was widely recognized as the greatest artist of the era.[86] In the three decades following his death, his popularity waned with changing aesthetic values.[86] Since the 1950s, Rodin's reputation has re-ascended;[60] he is recognized as the most important sculptor of the modern era, and has been the subject of much scholarly work.[86][87] The sense of incompletion offered by some of his sculpture, such as The Walking Man, influenced the increasingly abstract sculptural forms of the 20th century.[88]

Rodin restored an ancient role of sculpture – to capture the physical and intellectual force of the human subject[87] – and he freed sculpture from the repetition of traditional patterns, providing the foundation for greater experimentation in the 20th century. His popularity is ascribed to his emotion-laden representations of ordinary men and women – to his ability to find the beauty and pathos in the human animal. His most popular works, such as The Kiss and The Thinker, are widely used outside the fine arts as symbols of human emotion and character.[89] To honor Rodin's artistic legacy, the Google search engine homepage displayed a Google Doodle featuring The Thinker to celebrate his 172nd birthday on 12 November 2012.

Rodin had enormous artistic influence. A whole generation of sculptors studied in his workshop. These include Gutzon Borglum, Antoine Bourdelle, Constantin Brâncuși, Camille Claudel, Charles Despiau, Malvina Hoffman, Carl Milles, François Pompon, Rodo, Gustav Vigeland, Clara Westhoff and Margaret Winser,[90] even though Brancusi later rejected his legacy. Rodin also promoted the work of other sculptors, including Aristide Maillol[91] and Ivan Meštrović whom Rodin once called "the greatest phenomenon amongst sculptors."[92] Other sculptors whose work has been described as owing to Rodin include Joseph Csaky,[93][94] Alexander Archipenko, Joseph Bernard, Henri Gaudier-Brzeska, Georg Kolbe,[95] Wilhelm Lehmbruck, Jacques Lipchitz, Pablo Picasso, Adolfo Wildt,[96] and Ossip Zadkine.[97][98] Henry Moore acknowledged Rodin's seminal influence on his work.[99]

Several films have been made featuring Rodin as a prominent character or presence. These include Camille Claudel, a 1988 film in which Gérard Depardieu portrays Rodin, Camille Claudel 1915 from 2013, and Rodin, a 2017 film starring Vincent Lindon as Rodin.[100] Furthermore, the Rodin Studios artists' cooperative housing in New York City, completed in 1917 to designs by Cass Gilbert, was named after Rodin.[101]

Forgeries

The relative ease of making reproductions has also encouraged many forgeries: a survey of expert opinion placed Rodin in the top ten most-faked artists.[102] Rodin fought against forgeries of his works as early as 1901, and since his death, many cases of organized, large-scale forgeries have been revealed. A massive forgery was discovered by French authorities in the early 1990s and led to the conviction of art dealer Guy Hain.[103]

To deal with the complexity of bronze reproduction, France has promulgated several laws since 1956 which limit reproduction to twelve casts – the maximum number that can be made from an artist's plasters and still be considered his work. As a result of this limit, The Burghers of Calais, for example, is found in fourteen cities.[40]

In the market for sculpture, plagued by fakes, the value of a piece increases significantly when its provenance can be established. A Rodin work with a verified history sold for US$4.8 million in 1999,[104] and Rodin's bronze Ève, grand modele – version sans rocher sold for $18.9 million at a 2008 Christie's auction in New York.[105] Art critics concerned about authenticity have argued that taking a cast does not equal reproducing a Rodin sculpture – especially given the importance of surface treatment in Rodin's work.[106]

A number of drawings previously attributed to Rodin are now known to have been forged by Ernest Durig.[107]

Citations

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  2. ^ William Tucker, Early Modern Sculpture: Rodin, Degas, Matisse, Brancusi, Picasso, Gonzalez, 16.
  3. ^ Schjeldahl, Peter. "The Stubborn Genius of Auguste Rodin". The New Yorker. Retrieved 7 October 2017. Rodin was a child of the working class. (His father was a police clerk.)
  4. ^ "(François) Auguste (René) Rodin." International Dictionary of Art and Artists. St. James Press, 1990. Reproduced in Biography Resource Center. Farmington Hills, Mich.: Thomson Gale. 2006.
  5. ^ Jianou & Goldscheider, 31.
  6. ^ a b "Rodin, Famous Sculptor, Dead". The New York Times. 18 November 1917. p. E3.
  7. ^ Hale, 40.
  8. ^ a b c d e Morey, C. R. (1918). "The Art of Auguste Rodin". The Bulletin of the College Art Association of America. 1 (4): 145–54. doi:10.2307/3046338. JSTOR 3046338.
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  10. ^ Date of death from Elsen, 206.
  11. ^ Jianou & Goldscheider, 34.
  12. ^ a b Jianou & Goldscheider, 35.
  13. ^ Hale, 49–50.
  14. ^ Taillandier, 91.
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  16. ^ a b c Janson, 638.
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  20. ^ "Camille Claudel | National Museum of Women in the Arts". nmwa.org. Retrieved 16 April 2020.
  21. ^ "Young Girl with a Sheaf | National Museum of Women in the Arts". nmwa.org. Retrieved 16 April 2020.
  22. ^ "Camille Claudel | artnet". www.artnet.com. Retrieved 16 April 2020.
  23. ^ Ayral-Clause, Odile (2002). Camille Claudel: A Life. New York: Harry N. Abrams. pp. 98–99. ISBN 0810940779.
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  26. ^ Ward-Jackson, Philip. "Camille Claudel". Grove Art Online, Oxford University Press. Retrieved 19 December 2006.
  27. ^ Kerri Mahon, Elizabeth (2011). Scandalous Women: The Lives and Loves of History's Most Notorious Women. New York: Penguin Group. p. 279. ISBN 978-0399536458.
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  34. ^ a b c Hale, 68.
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  37. ^ a b c d Bell, Millicent (Spring 2005). "Auguste Rodin". Raritan. 14: 1–31.
  38. ^ a b c Alhadeff, Albert (1966). "Rodin: A Self-Portrait in the Gates of Hell". The Art Bulletin. 48 (3/4): 393–95. doi:10.2307/3048395. JSTOR 3048395.
  39. ^ Taillandier, 42, 46, 48.
  40. ^ a b c d Swedberg, Richard (2005). "Auguste Rodin's The Burghers of Calais: The Career of a Sculpture and its Appeal to Civic Heroism". Theory, Culture & Society. 22 (2): 45–67. doi:10.1177/0263276405051665. S2CID 145116141.
  41. ^ a b Stocker, Mark (November 2006). "A simple sculptor or an apostle of perversion?". Apollo. 164 (537): 94–97.
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  43. ^ Hale, 115
  44. ^ "M. Rodin and French Sculpture". The Times. 4 October 1909. p. 12.
  45. ^ "Auguste Rodin. His Sculpture And Its Aims". The Times. 19 November 1917. p. 11.
  46. ^ Hale, 136.
  47. ^ Schor, Naomi (2001). "Pensive Texts and Thinking Statues: Balzac with Rodin". Critical Inquiry. 27 (2): 239–64. doi:10.1086/449007. S2CID 161863627.
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  49. ^ Civilisation, BBC, Episode 12
  50. ^ Hale, 12.
  51. ^ Varnedoe, Kirk (April 1974). "Early Drawings by Auguste Rodin". The Burlington Magazine. 116 (853): 197–204.
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  54. ^ David, Buttery (1988). Portraits of a lady. Studley, Warwickshire: Brewin Books. ISBN 0947731431. OCLC 26723104.
  55. ^ "Photo Gallery: Munich Nazi Art Stash Revealed". Spiegel. 17 November 2013. Retrieved 17 November 2013.
  56. ^ "Art Exhibitions: Auguste Rodin". The Times. 14 July 1931. p. 12.
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  60. ^ a b Werner, Alfred (1960). "The Return of Auguste Rodin". Criticism. 2 (1): 48–54.
  61. ^ a b c Quoted in Jianou & Goldscheider, 62.
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  63. ^ Anderson, Alder (1902). "Auguste Rodin at Home". The Pall Mall Magazine. Vol. 27, no. 1 (No. 93). pp. 325–338.
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  65. ^ "Moissey Kogan". DGM. Retrieved 30 March 2017.
  66. ^ The Indefatigable Miss Hallowell, p. 6
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  69. ^ Franch, John (2006). Robber Baron: The Life of Charles Tyson Yerkes. Urbana: University of Illinois Press; p. 209.
  70. ^ Extensive correspondence in Musee Rodin
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  72. ^ Newton, Joy (1994). "Rodin Is a British Institution". The Burlington Magazine. 136 (1101): 822–28.
  73. ^ Lee, Sidney, ed. (1912). "Henley, William Ernest" . Dictionary of National Biography (2nd supplement). Vol. 2. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 244, 246.
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  76. ^ Ludovici, Anthony M. (1923). "Personal Reminiscences of Auguste Rodin," Cornhill Magazine, Vol. LV, Nos. 325–26, New Series.
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  78. ^ Kinetz, Erica (27 December 2006). "Rodin Show Visits Home Of Artist's Muses". The New York Times. p. E1.
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  83. ^ . Time. 24 March 1923. Archived from the original on 6 November 2007.
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  89. ^ Lampert, Catherine. "Rodin, (François-) Auguste (-René)". Grove Art Online, Oxford University Press. Retrieved 19 December 2006.
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  100. ^ Bradshaw, Peter (23 May 2017). "Rodin review – Jacques Doillon sculpts an excruciatingly bad film". The Guardian. Retrieved 28 December 2020.
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  102. ^ Esterow, Milton (June 2005). "The 10 Most Faked Artists". ARTnews. Retrieved 5 February 2007.
  103. ^ Procès Guy Hain, une décision qui fera jurisprudence. Le Journal des Arts. n° 126. 27 April 2001. Artclair.com. Retrieved on 2 November 2011.
  104. ^ Winship, Frederick M. (16 September 2002). "Bogus bronzes flood market: an estimated 4,000 fake castings have put the market for 19th- and 20th-century bronze sculpture in jeopardy". Insight on the News. 26 (1).
  105. ^ . AFP. Archived from the original on 12 May 2008. Retrieved 8 May 2008.
  106. ^ Gibson, Eric (2005). "The real Rodin". New Criterion. 24 (4): 37–40.
  107. ^ "Rodin". Fake or Fortune?. Series 5. Episode 3. 31 July 2016. BBC Television. Retrieved 31 July 2016.

General sources

  • Crone, Rainer; Salzmann, Siegfried, eds. (1992). Rodin: Eros and Creativity. Munich: Prestel. ISBN 3-7913-1809-8.
  • Elsen, Albert E. (1963). Rodin. New York: The Museum of Modern Art. LCCN 63014847.
  • Getsy, David (2010). Rodin: Sex and the Making of Modern Sculpture. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-16725-2.
  • Hale, William Harlan (1973) [1969]. World of Rodin, 1840–1917 (Time-Life Library of Art ed.). New York: Time-Life Books. LCCN 70105511.
  • Janson, H.W. (1986). History of Art (3rd ed.). New York: Harry N. Abrams. ISBN 0-8109-1094-2.
  • Jianou, Ionel & Goldscheider, C. (1967). Rodin. Paris: Arted, Editions d'Art. LCCN 68084071.
  • Lampert, Catherine (1986). Rodin: Sculpture and Drawings. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-7287-0504-4.
  • Le Normand-Romain, Antoinette (2007). The Bronzes of Rodin. Paris: Editions de la Réunion des Musées Nationaux.
  • Ludovici, Anthony (1926). Personal Reminiscences of Auguste Rodin. London: John Murray.
  • Morseburg, Jeffrey (2010). The Indefatigable Miss Hallowell. (Online Essay)[full citation needed]
  • Taillandier, Yvon (1977). Rodin. New York: Crown Trade Paperbacks. ISBN 0-517-88378-3.
  • Tucker, William (1974). Early Modern Sculpture. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-519773-9.
  • Weisberg, Gabriel (1987). The Documented Image, Visions in Art History. New York: Syracuse University Press. ISBN 978-0815624103.
  • Rodin, Auguste (1984). Art: Conversations with Paul Gsell. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-05887-9.
  • Royal Academy of Arts (2006). Rodin. London: Royal Academy of Arts.

Further reading

  • Chevillot, Catherine; Marraud, Hélène; Pinet, Hélène; Adamson, John (transl.) (2014). Rodin: The Laboratory of Creation. Dijon: Éditions Faton. ISBN 978-2878442007.
  • Corbett, Rachel (2016). You Must Change Your Life: the Story of Rainer Maria Rilke and Auguste Rodin, New York: W. W. Norton and Company. ISBN 0393245063.
  • Le Normand-Romain, Antoinette (2014). Rodin. New York: Abbeville. ISBN 978-0789212078.
  • Miller, Joan Vita (1986). Rodin: the B. Gerald Cantor Collection. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art. ISBN 978-0870994432.
  • Sanyal, Narayan (1984). Rodin, Dey's Publishing Company, Kolkata. ISBN 978-81-295-1331-1.
  • Vincent, Clare. "Auguste Rodin (1840–1917)". In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–. (October 2004)
  • Tobias G. Natter, Max Hollein (Eds.): Klimt & Rodin: An Artistic Encounter. DelMonico Books – Prestel Publishing, Munich e. a. 2017, ISBN 978-3-7913-5708-9.

External links

  • Musée Rodin, Paris
  • , association organizing for its members events around Auguste Rodin
  • Rodin Museum, Philadelphia
  • Auguste Rodin at the National Gallery of Art
  • Rodin Collection, Stanford University
  • Auguste Rodin: Timeline of Art History Metropolitan Museum of Art
  • Rodin Exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum Nov 1987 – Jan 1988
  • Rodin at the Victoria and Albert Museum
  • Correspondence with Walter Butterworth held at the University of Salford
  • Public Art Fund: Rodin at Rockefeller Center
  • Video documentary about Rodin's work
  • Works by or about Auguste Rodin at Internet Archive
  • in American public collections, on the French Sculpture Census website  
  •   Auguste Rodin public domain audiobook at LibriVox (by Ranier Maria Rilke, trans. by Jessie Lemont & Hans Trausil)
  • Augusue Rodin, by Ranier Marie Rilke, trans. form the German by Jessie Lemont and Hans Trausil. Sunwise turn. 1919.
  • Newspaper clippings about Auguste Rodin in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
  • Portrait of Auguste Rodin by Alphonse Legros at University of Michigan Museum of Art
  • Thompson, Jennifer A (2018). "Thought". The John G. Johnson Collection: A History and Selected Works. Philadelphia Museum of Art. (cat. 1148). doi:10.29075/9780876332764/101812/1. ISBN 9780876332764. OCLC 1042192763.

auguste, rodin, this, article, about, sculptor, other, people, named, rodin, rodin, surname, 2017, film, rodin, film, françois, auguste, rené, rodin, november, 1840, november, 1917, french, sculptor, generally, considered, founder, modern, sculpture, schooled,. This article is about the sculptor For other people named Rodin see Rodin surname For the 2017 film see Rodin film Francois Auguste Rene Rodin 12 November 1840 17 November 1917 was a French sculptor 1 generally considered the founder of modern sculpture 2 He was schooled traditionally and took a craftsman like approach to his work Rodin possessed a unique ability to model a complex turbulent and deeply pocketed surface in clay He is known for such sculptures as The Thinker Monument to Balzac The Kiss The Burghers of Calais and The Gates of Hell Auguste RodinPhotograph by Beresford 1902BornFrancois Auguste Rene Rodin 1840 11 12 12 November 1840Paris Kingdom of FranceDied17 November 1917 1917 11 17 aged 77 Meudon French Third RepublicKnown forList of sculpturesNotable workThe Age of Bronze L age d airain 1877The Walking Man L homme qui marche 1877 78The Burghers of Calais Les Bourgeois de Calais 1889The Kiss Le Baiser 1889The Thinker Le Penseur 1902AwardsLegion d HonneurMany of Rodin s most notable sculptures were criticized as they clashed with predominant figurative sculpture traditions in which works were decorative formulaic or highly thematic Rodin s most original work departed from traditional themes of mythology and allegory He modeled the human body with naturalism and his sculptures celebrate individual character and physicality Although Rodin was sensitive to the controversy surrounding his work he refused to change his style and his continued output brought increasing favor from the government and the artistic community From the unexpected naturalism of Rodin s first major figure inspired by his 1875 trip to Italy to the unconventional memorials whose commissions he later sought his reputation grew and Rodin became the preeminent French sculptor of his time By 1900 he was a world renowned artist Wealthy private clients sought Rodin s work after his World s Fair exhibit and he kept company with a variety of high profile intellectuals and artists His student Camille Claudel became his associate lover and creative rival Rodin s other students included Antoine Bourdelle Constantin Brancuși and Charles Despiau He married his lifelong companion Rose Beuret in the last year of both their lives His sculptures suffered a decline in popularity after his death in 1917 but within a few decades his legacy solidified Rodin remains one of the few sculptors widely known outside the visual arts community Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Formative years 1 2 Artistic independence 2 Works 2 1 Early figures the inspiration of Italy 2 2 The Gates of Hell 2 3 The Thinker 2 4 The Burghers of Calais 2 5 Commissions and controversy 2 6 Other works 3 Aesthetic 3 1 Method 4 Later years 1900 1917 4 1 United States 4 2 Great Britain 5 Legacy 5 1 Forgeries 6 Citations 7 General sources 8 Further reading 9 External linksBiography EditFormative years Edit Rodin was born in 1840 into a working class family in Paris the second child of Marie Cheffer and Jean Baptiste Rodin who was a police department clerk 3 He was largely self educated 4 and began to draw at age 10 Between ages 14 and 17 he attended the Petite Ecole a school specializing in art and mathematics where he studied drawing and painting His drawing teacher Horace Lecoq de Boisbaudran believed in first developing the personality of his students so that they observed with their own eyes and drew from their recollections and Rodin expressed appreciation for his teacher much later in life 5 It was at Petite Ecole that he met Jules Dalou and Alphonse Legros Rodin circa 1862 In 1857 Rodin submitted a clay model of a companion to the Ecole des Beaux Arts in an attempt to win entrance he did not succeed and two further applications were also denied 6 Entrance requirements were not particularly high at the Grande Ecole 7 so the rejections were considerable setbacks Rodin s inability to gain entrance may have been due to the judges Neoclassical tastes while Rodin had been schooled in light 18th century sculpture He left the Petite Ecole in 1857 and earned a living as a craftsman and ornamenter for most of the next two decades producing decorative objects and architectural embellishments Rodin s sister Maria two years his senior died of peritonitis in a convent in 1862 and Rodin was anguished with guilt because he had introduced her to an unfaithful suitor He turned away from art and joined the Catholic order of the Congregation of the Blessed Sacrament Saint Peter Julian Eymard founder and head of the congregation recognized Rodin s talent and sensed his lack of suitability for the order so he encouraged Rodin to continue with his sculpture Rodin returned to work as a decorator while taking classes with animal sculptor Antoine Louis Barye The teacher s attention to detail and his finely rendered musculature of animals in motion significantly influenced Rodin 8 In 1864 Rodin began to live with a young seamstress named Rose Beuret born in June 1844 9 with whom he stayed for the rest of his life with varying commitment The couple had a son named Auguste Eugene Beuret 1866 1934 10 That year Rodin offered his first sculpture for exhibition and entered the studio of Albert Ernest Carrier Belleuse a successful mass producer of objets d art Rodin worked as Carrier Belleuse chief assistant until 1870 designing roof decorations and staircase and doorway embellishments With the arrival of the Franco Prussian War Rodin was called to serve in the French National Guard but his service was brief due to his near sightedness 11 Decorators work had dwindled because of the war yet Rodin needed to support his family as poverty was a continual difficulty for him until about the age of 30 12 Carrier Belleuse soon asked him to join him in Belgium where they worked on ornamentation for the Brussels Stock Exchange Rodin planned to stay in Belgium a few months but he spent the next six years outside of France It was a pivotal time in his life 12 He had acquired skill and experience as a craftsman but no one had yet seen his art which sat in his workshop since he could not afford castings His relationship with Carrier Belleuse had deteriorated but he found other employment in Brussels displaying some works at salons and his companion Rose soon joined him there Having saved enough money to travel Rodin visited Italy for two months in 1875 where he was drawn to the work of Donatello and Michelangelo Their work had a profound effect on his artistic direction 13 Rodin said It is Michelangelo who has freed me from academic sculpture 14 Returning to Belgium he began work on The Age of Bronze a life size male figure whose naturalism brought Rodin attention but led to accusations of sculptural cheating its naturalism and scale was such that critics alleged he had cast the work from a living model Much of Rodin s later work was explicitly larger or smaller than life in part to demonstrate the folly of such accusations Artistic independence Edit Auguste Rodin John Singer Sargent 1884 Rose Beuret and Rodin returned to Paris in 1877 moving into a small flat on the Left Bank Misfortune surrounded Rodin his mother who had wanted to see her son marry was dead and his father was blind and senile cared for by Rodin s sister in law Aunt Therese Rodin s eleven year old son Auguste possibly developmentally delayed was also in the ever helpful Therese s care Rodin had essentially abandoned his son for six years 15 and would have a very limited relationship with him throughout his life Father and son joined the couple in their flat with Rose as caretaker Charges of fakery surrounding The Age of Bronze continued Rodin increasingly sought soothing female companionship in Paris and Rose stayed in the background Rodin earned his living collaborating with more established sculptors on public commissions primarily memorials and neo baroque architectural pieces in the style of Carpeaux 16 In competitions for commissions he submitted models of Denis Diderot Jean Jacques Rousseau and Lazare Carnot all to no avail On his own time he worked on studies leading to the creation of his next important work St John the Baptist Preaching In 1880 Carrier Belleuse then art director of the Sevres national porcelain factory offered Rodin a part time position as a designer The offer was in part a gesture of reconciliation and Rodin accepted That part of Rodin which appreciated 18th century tastes was aroused and he immersed himself in designs for vases and table ornaments that brought the factory renown across Europe 17 The artistic community appreciated his work in this vein and Rodin was invited to Paris Salons by such friends as writer Leon Cladel During his early appearances at these social events Rodin seemed shy 18 in his later years as his fame grew he displayed the loquaciousness and temperament for which he is better known French statesman Leon Gambetta expressed a desire to meet Rodin and the sculptor impressed him when they met at a salon Gambetta spoke of Rodin in turn to several government ministers likely including Edmund Turquet fr the Undersecretary of the Ministry of Fine Arts whom Rodin eventually met 18 Rodin s relationship with Turquet was rewarding through him he won the 1880 commission to create a portal for a planned museum of decorative arts Rodin dedicated much of the next four decades to his elaborate Gates of Hell an unfinished portal for a museum that was never built Many of the portal s figures became sculptures in themselves including Rodin s most famous The Thinker and The Kiss With the museum commission came a free studio granting Rodin a new level of artistic freedom Soon he stopped working at the porcelain factory his income came from private commissions citation needed In 1883 Rodin agreed to supervise a course for sculptor Alfred Boucher in his absence where he met the 18 year old Camille Claudel The two formed a passionate but stormy relationship and influenced each other artistically Claudel inspired Rodin as a model for many of his figures and she was a talented sculptor assisting him on commissions as well as creating her own works 19 20 21 22 Her Bust of Rodin was displayed to critical acclaim at the 1892 Salon 23 Bust of Rodin 1888 89 by Camille Claudel Although busy with The Gates of Hell Rodin won other commissions He pursued an opportunity to create a historical monument for the town of Calais For a monument to French author Honore de Balzac Rodin was chosen in 1891 His execution of both sculptures clashed with traditional tastes and met with varying degrees of disapproval from the organizations that sponsored the commissions Still Rodin was gaining support from diverse sources that propelled him toward fame 24 In 1889 the Paris Salon invited Rodin to be a judge on its artistic jury Though Rodin s career was on the rise Claudel and Beuret were becoming increasingly impatient with Rodin s double life Claudel and Rodin shared an atelier at a small old castle the Chateau de l Islette in the Loire but Rodin refused to relinquish his ties to Beuret his loyal companion during the lean years and mother of his son During one absence Rodin wrote to Beuret I think of how much you must have loved me to put up with my caprices I remain in all tenderness your Rodin 25 A photograph of Rodin in 1891 by Nadar Claudel and Rodin parted in 1898 26 Claudel suffered an alleged nervous breakdown several years later and was confined to an institution for 30 years by her family until her death in 1943 despite numerous attempts by doctors to explain to her mother and brother that she was sane 27 In 1904 Rodin was introduced to the Welsh artist Gwen John who modelled for him and became his lover after being introduced by Hilda Flodin 28 John had a fervent attachment to Rodin and would write to him thousands of times over the next ten years 29 As their relationship came to a close despite his genuine feeling for her Rodin eventually resorted to the use of concierges and secretaries to keep her at a distance 29 Works Edit The Age of Bronze 1877 In 1864 Rodin submitted his first sculpture for exhibition The Man with the Broken Nose to the Paris Salon The subject was an elderly neighborhood street porter The unconventional bronze piece was not a traditional bust but instead the head was broken off at the neck the nose was flattened and crooked and the back of the head was absent having fallen off the clay model in an accident The work emphasized texture and the emotional state of the subject it illustrated the unfinishedness that would characterize many of Rodin s later sculptures 30 The Salon rejected the piece Early figures the inspiration of Italy Edit In Brussels Rodin created his first full scale work The Age of Bronze having returned from Italy Modeled after a Belgian soldier the figure drew inspiration from Michelangelo s Dying Slave which Rodin had observed at the Louvre Attempting to combine Michelangelo s mastery of the human form with his own sense of human nature Rodin studied his model from all angles at rest and in motion he mounted a ladder for additional perspective and made clay models which he studied by candlelight The result was a life size well proportioned nude figure posed unconventionally with his right hand atop his head and his left arm held out at his side forearm parallel to the body In 1877 the work debuted in Brussels and then was shown at the Paris Salon The statue s apparent lack of a theme was troubling to critics commemorating neither mythology nor a noble historical event and it is not clear whether Rodin intended a theme 31 He first titled the work The Vanquished in which form the left hand held a spear but he removed the spear because it obstructed the torso from certain angles After two more intermediary titles Rodin settled on The Age of Bronze suggesting the Bronze Age and in Rodin s words man arising from nature 32 Later however Rodin said that he had had in mind just a simple piece of sculpture without reference to subject 32 Its mastery of form light and shadow made the work look so naturalistic that Rodin was accused of surmoulage having taken a cast from a living model Rodin vigorously denied the charges writing to newspapers and having photographs taken of the model to prove how the sculpture differed He demanded an inquiry and was eventually exonerated by a committee of sculptors Leaving aside the false charges the piece polarized critics It had barely won acceptance for display at the Paris Salon and criticism likened it to a statue of a sleepwalker and called it an astonishingly accurate copy of a low type 32 Others rallied to defend the piece and Rodin s integrity The government minister Turquet admired the piece and The Age of Bronze was purchased by the state for 2 200 francs what it had cost Rodin to have it cast in bronze 32 St John the Baptist Preaching 1878 A second male nude St John the Baptist Preaching was completed in 1878 Rodin sought to avoid another charge of surmoulage by making the statue larger than life St John stands almost 6 feet 7 inches 2 01 m While The Age of Bronze is statically posed St John gestures and seems to move toward the viewer The effect of walking is achieved despite the figure having both feet firmly on the ground a technical achievement that was lost on most contemporary critics 33 Rodin chose this contradictory position to in his words display simultaneously views of an object which in fact can be seen only successively 34 Despite the title St John the Baptist Preaching did not have an obviously religious theme The model an Italian peasant who presented himself at Rodin s studio possessed an idiosyncratic sense of movement that Rodin felt compelled to capture Rodin thought of John the Baptist and carried that association into the title of the work 34 In 1880 Rodin submitted the sculpture to the Paris Salon Critics were still mostly dismissive of his work but the piece finished third in the Salon s sculpture category 34 Regardless of the immediate receptions of St John and The Age of Bronze Rodin had achieved a new degree of fame Students sought him at his studio praising his work and scorning the charges of surmoulage The artistic community knew his name The Gates of Hell Edit Main article The Gates of Hell The Gates of Hell unfinished Kunsthaus Zurich A commission to create a portal for Paris planned Museum of Decorative Arts was awarded to Rodin in 1880 16 Although the museum was never built Rodin worked throughout his life on The Gates of Hell a monumental sculptural group depicting scenes from Dante s Inferno in high relief Often lacking a clear conception of his major works Rodin compensated with hard work and a striving for perfection 35 He conceived The Gates with the surmoulage controversy still in mind I had made the St John to refute the charges of casting from a model but it only partially succeeded To prove completely that I could model from life as well as other sculptors I determined to make the sculpture on the door of figures smaller than life 35 Laws of composition gave way to the Gates disordered and untamed depiction of Hell The figures and groups in this Rodin s meditation on the condition of man are physically and morally isolated in their torment 36 The Gates of Hell comprised 186 figures in its final form 36 Many of Rodin s best known sculptures started as designs of figures for this composition 8 such as The Thinker The Three Shades and The Kiss and were only later presented as separate and independent works Other well known works derived from The Gates are Ugolino Fallen Caryatid Carrying her Stone Fugit Amor She Who Was Once the Helmet Maker s Beautiful Wife The Falling Man and The Prodigal Son The Thinker Edit Main article The Thinker Rodin s The Thinker 1879 1889 is among the most recognized works in all of sculpture The Thinker originally titled The Poet after Dante was to become one of the best known sculptures in the world The original was a 27 5 inch 700 mm high bronze piece created between 1879 and 1889 designed for the Gates lintel from which the figure would gaze down upon Hell While The Thinker most obviously characterizes Dante aspects of the Biblical Adam the mythological Prometheus 16 and Rodin himself have been ascribed to him 37 38 Other observers de emphasize the apparent intellectual theme of The Thinker stressing the figure s rough physicality and the emotional tension emanating from it 39 The Burghers of Calais Edit Main article The Burghers of Calais The Burghers of Calais 1884 ca 1889 in Victoria Tower Gardens London England The town of Calais had contemplated a historical monument for decades when Rodin learned of the project He pursued the commission interested in the medieval motif and patriotic theme The mayor of Calais was tempted to hire Rodin on the spot upon visiting his studio and soon the memorial was approved with Rodin as its architect It would commemorate the six townspeople of Calais who offered their lives to save their fellow citizens citation needed During the Hundred Years War the army of King Edward III besieged Calais and Edward ordered that the town s population be killed en masse He agreed to spare them if six of the principal citizens would come to him prepared to die bareheaded and barefooted and with ropes around their necks When they came he ordered that they be executed but pardoned them when his queen Philippa of Hainault begged him to spare their lives The Burghers of Calais depicts the men as they are leaving for the king s camp carrying keys to the town s gates and citadel citation needed Rodin began the project in 1884 inspired by the chronicles of the siege by Jean Froissart 40 Though the town envisioned an allegorical heroic piece centered on Eustache de Saint Pierre the eldest of the six men Rodin conceived the sculpture as a study in the varied and complex emotions under which all six men were laboring One year into the commission the Calais committee was not impressed with Rodin s progress Rodin indicated his willingness to end the project rather than change his design to meet the committee s conservative expectations but Calais said to continue citation needed In 1889 The Burghers of Calais was first displayed to general acclaim It is a bronze sculpture weighing two short tons 1 814 kg and its figures are 6 6 ft 2 0 m tall 40 The six men portrayed do not display a united heroic front 41 rather each is isolated from his brothers individually deliberating and struggling with his expected fate Rodin soon proposed that the monument s high pedestal be eliminated wanting to move the sculpture to ground level so that viewers could penetrate to the heart of the subject 42 At ground level the figures positions lead the viewer around the work and subtly suggest their common movement forward 43 The committee was incensed by the untraditional proposal but Rodin would not yield In 1895 Calais succeeded in having Burghers displayed in their preferred form the work was placed in front of a public garden on a high platform surrounded by a cast iron railing Rodin had wanted it located near the town hall where it would engage the public Only after damage during the First World War subsequent storage and Rodin s death was the sculpture displayed as he had intended It is one of Rodin s best known and most acclaimed works 40 Commissions and controversy Edit Rodin in mid career Commissioned to create a monument to French writer Victor Hugo in 1889 Rodin dealt extensively with the subject of artist and muse Like many of Rodin s public commissions Monument to Victor Hugo was met with resistance because it did not fit conventional expectations Commenting on Rodin s monument to Victor Hugo The Times in 1909 expressed that there is some show of reason in the complaint that Rodin s conceptions are sometimes unsuited to his medium and that in such cases they overstrain his vast technical powers 44 The 1897 plaster model was not cast in bronze until 1964 The Societe des Gens des Lettres a Parisian organization of writers planned a monument to French novelist Honore de Balzac immediately after his death in 1850 The society commissioned Rodin to create the memorial in 1891 and Rodin spent years developing the concept for his sculpture Challenged in finding an appropriate representation of Balzac given the author s rotund physique Rodin produced many studies portraits full length figures in the nude wearing a frock coat or in a robe a replica of which Rodin had requested The realized sculpture displays Balzac cloaked in the drapery looking forcefully into the distance with deeply gouged features Rodin s intent had been to show Balzac at the moment of conceiving a work 45 to express courage labor and struggle 46 Rodin observing work on the monument to Victor Hugo at the studio of his assistant Henri Lebosse in 1896 When Monument to Balzac was exhibited in 1898 the negative reaction was not surprising 37 The Societe rejected the work and the press ran parodies Criticizing the work Morey 1918 reflected there may come a time and doubtless will come a time when it will not seem outre to represent a great novelist as a huge comic mask crowning a bathrobe but even at the present day this statue impresses one as slang 8 A modern critic indeed claims that Balzac is one of Rodin s masterpieces 47 The monument had its supporters in Rodin s day a manifesto defending him was signed by Monet Debussy and future Premier Georges Clemenceau among many others 48 In the BBC series Civilisation art historian Kenneth Clark praised the monument as the greatest piece of sculpture of the 19th Century perhaps indeed the greatest since Michelangelo 49 Rather than try to convince skeptics of the merit of the monument Rodin repaid the Societe his commission and moved the figure to his garden After this experience Rodin did not complete another public commission Only in 1939 was Monument to Balzac cast in bronze and placed on the Boulevard du Montparnasse at the intersection with Boulevard Raspail Other works Edit Reclining Woman 1890s in the National Museum Warsaw The popularity of Rodin s most famous sculptures tends to obscure his total creative output A prolific artist he created thousands of busts figures and sculptural fragments over more than five decades He painted in oils especially in his thirties and in watercolors The Musee Rodin holds 7 000 of his drawings and prints in chalk and charcoal and thirteen vigorous drypoints 50 51 He also produced a single lithograph Portraiture was an important component of Rodin s oeuvre helping him to win acceptance and financial independence 52 His first sculpture was a bust of his father in 1860 and he produced at least 56 portraits between 1877 and his death in 1917 53 Early subjects included fellow sculptor Jules Dalou 1883 and companion Camille Claudel 1884 Later with his reputation established Rodin made busts of prominent contemporaries such as English politician George Wyndham 1905 Irish playwright George Bernard Shaw 1906 socialist and former mistress of the Prince of Wales who became King Edward VII Countess of Warwick 1908 54 Austrian composer Gustav Mahler 1909 former Argentine president Domingo Faustino Sarmiento and French statesman Georges Clemenceau 1911 His undated drawing Study of a Woman Nude Standing Arms Raised Hands Crossed Above Head is one of the works seized in 2012 from the collection of Cornelius Gurlitt 55 Aesthetic Edit A famous fragment The Walking Man 1877 78 Rodin was a naturalist less concerned with monumental expression than with character and emotion 56 Departing with centuries of tradition he turned away from the idealism of the Greeks and the decorative beauty of the Baroque and neo Baroque movements His sculpture emphasized the individual and the concreteness of flesh and suggested emotion through detailed textured surfaces and the interplay of light and shadow To a greater degree than his contemporaries Rodin believed that an individual s character was revealed by his physical features 57 Rodin s talent for surface modeling allowed him to let every part of the body speak for the whole The male s passion in The Thinker is suggested by the grip of his toes on the rock the rigidness of his back and the differentiation of his hands 8 Speaking of The Thinker Rodin illuminated his aesthetic What makes my Thinker think is that he thinks not only with his brain with his knitted brow his distended nostrils and compressed lips but with every muscle of his arms back and legs with his clenched fist and gripping toes 58 Sculptural fragments to Rodin were autonomous works and he considered them the essence of his artistic statement His fragments perhaps lacking arms legs or a head took sculpture further from its traditional role of portraying likenesses and into a realm where forms existed for their own sake 59 Notable examples are The Walking Man Meditation without Arms and Iris Messenger of the Gods Rodin saw suffering and conflict as hallmarks of modern art Nothing really is more moving than the maddened beast dying from unfulfilled desire and asking in vain for grace to quell its passion 38 Charles Baudelaire echoed those themes and was among Rodin s favorite poets Rodin enjoyed music especially the opera composer Gluck and wrote a book about French cathedrals He owned a work by the as yet unrecognized Van Gogh and admired the forgotten El Greco 60 Method Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Instead of copying traditional academic postures Rodin preferred his models to move naturally around his studio despite their nakedness 8 The sculptor often made quick sketches in clay that were later fine tuned cast in plaster and cast in bronze or carved from marble Rodin s focus was on the handling of clay 61 George Bernard Shaw sat for a portrait and gave an idea of Rodin s technique While he worked he achieved a number of miracles At the end of the first fifteen minutes after having given a simple idea of the human form to the block of clay he produced by the action of his thumb a bust so living that I would have taken it away with me to relieve the sculptor of any further work 61 He described the evolution of his bust over a month passing through all the stages of art s evolution first a Byzantine masterpiece then Bernini intermingled then an elegant Houdon The hand of Rodin worked not as the hand of a sculptor works but as the work of Elan Vital The Hand of God is his own hand 61 After he completed his work in clay he employed highly skilled assistants to re sculpt his compositions at larger sizes including any of his large scale monuments such as The Thinker to cast the clay compositions into plaster or bronze and to carve his marbles Rodin s major innovation was to capitalize on such multi staged processes of 19th century sculpture and their reliance on plaster casting citation needed Since clay deteriorates rapidly if not kept wet or fired into a terra cotta sculptors used plaster casts as a means of securing the composition they would make from the fugitive material that is clay This was common practice amongst Rodin s contemporaries and sculptors would exhibit plaster casts with the hopes that they would be commissioned to have the works made in a more permanent material Rodin however would have multiple plasters made and treat them as the raw material of sculpture recombining their parts and figures into new compositions and new names citation needed As Rodin s practice developed into the 1890s he became more and more radical in his pursuit of fragmentation the combination of figures at different scales and the making of new compositions from his earlier work A prime example of this is the bold The Walking Man 1899 1900 which was exhibited at his major one person show in 1900 This is composed of two sculptures from the 1870s that Rodin found in his studio a broken and damaged torso that had fallen into neglect and the lower extremities of a statuette version of his 1878 St John the Baptist Preaching he was having re sculpted at a reduced scale citation needed Without finessing the join between upper and lower between torso and legs Rodin created a work that many sculptors at the time and subsequently have seen as one of his strongest and most singular works This is despite the fact that the object conveys two different styles exhibits two different attitudes toward finish and lacks any attempt to hide the arbitrary fusion of these two components It was the freedom and creativity with which Rodin used these practices along with his activation surfaces of sculptures through traces of his own touch and with his more open attitude toward bodily pose sensual subject matter and non naturalistic surface that marked Rodin s re making of traditional 19th century sculptural techniques into the prototype for modern sculpture citation needed The Shade 1880 81 High Museum of Art Atlanta A plaster of The Age of BronzeLater years 1900 1917 Edit A portrait of Rodin by his friend Alphonse Legros By 1900 Rodin s artistic reputation was entrenched Gaining exposure from a pavilion of his artwork set up near the 1900 World s Fair Exposition Universelle in Paris he received requests to make busts of prominent people internationally 37 while his assistants at the atelier produced duplicates of his works His income from portrait commissions alone totaled probably 200 000 francs a year 62 As Rodin s fame grew he attracted many followers including the German poet Rainer Maria Rilke and authors Octave Mirbeau Joris Karl Huysmans and Oscar Wilde 41 Rilke stayed with Rodin in 1905 and 1906 and did administrative work for him he would later write a laudatory monograph on the sculptor Rodin and Beuret s modest country estate in Meudon purchased in 1897 was a host to such guests as King Edward dancer Isadora Duncan and harpsichordist Wanda Landowska A British journalist who visited the property noted in 1902 that in its complete isolation there was a striking analogy between its situation and the personality of the man who lives in it 63 Rodin moved to the city in 1908 renting the main floor of the Hotel Biron an 18th century townhouse He left Beuret in Meudon and began an affair with the American born Duchesse de Choiseul 64 From 1910 he mentored the Russian sculptor Moissey Kogan 65 United States Edit Eve au rocher 1881 c 1899 bronze Jardin des Tuileries Paris While Rodin was beginning to be accepted in France by the time of The Burghers of Calais he had not yet conquered the American market Because of his technique and the frankness of some of his work he did not have an easy time selling his work to American industrialists However he came to know Sarah Tyson Hallowell 1846 1924 a curator from Chicago who visited Paris to arrange exhibitions at the large Interstate Expositions of the 1870s and 1880s Hallowell was not only a curator but an adviser and a facilitator who was trusted by a number of prominent American collectors to suggest works for their collections the most prominent of these being the Chicago hotelier Potter Palmer and his wife Bertha Palmer 1849 1918 citation needed The next opportunity for Rodin in America was the 1893 Chicago World s Fair 66 Hallowell wanted to help promote Rodin s work and he suggested a solo exhibition which she wrote him was beaucoup moins beau que l original but impossible outside the rules Instead she suggested he send a number of works for her loan exhibition of French art from American collections and she told him she would list them as being part of an American collection 67 Rodin sent Hallowell three works Cupid and Psyche Sphinx and Andromeda All nudes these works provoked great controversy and were ultimately hidden behind a drape with special permission given for viewers to see them 68 Bust of Dalou and Burgher of Calais were on display in the official French pavilion at the fair and so between the works that were on display and those that were not he was noticed However the works he gave Hallowell to sell found no takers but she soon brought the controversial Quaker born financier Charles Yerkes 1837 1905 into the fold and he purchased two large marbles for his Chicago manse 68 Yerkes was likely the first American to own a Rodin sculpture 69 Other collectors soon followed including the tastemaking Potter Palmers of Chicago and Isabella Stewart Gardner 1840 1924 of Boston all arranged by Sarah Hallowell In appreciation for her efforts at unlocking the American market Rodin eventually presented Hallowell with a bronze a marble and a terra cotta When Hallowell moved to Paris in 1893 she and Rodin continued their warm friendship and correspondence which lasted to the end of the sculptor s life 70 After Hallowell s death her niece the painter Harriet Hallowell inherited the Rodins and after her death the American heirs could not manage to match their value in order to export them so they became the property of the French state 71 Great Britain Edit After the start of the 20th century Rodin was a regular visitor to Great Britain where he developed a loyal following by the beginning of the First World War He first visited England in 1881 where his friend the artist Alphonse Legros had introduced him to the poet William Ernest Henley With his personal connections and enthusiasm for Rodin s art Henley was most responsible for Rodin s reception in Britain 72 Rodin later returned the favor by sculpting a bust of Henley that was used as the frontispiece to Henley s collected works and after his death on his monument in London 73 Through Henley Rodin met Robert Louis Stevenson and Robert Browning in whom he found further support 74 Encouraged by the enthusiasm of British artists students and high society for his art Rodin donated a significant selection of his works to the nation in 1914 After the revitalization of the Societe Nationale des Beaux Arts in 1890 Rodin served as the body s vice president 75 In 1903 Rodin was elected president of the International Society of Painters Sculptors and Engravers He replaced its former president James Abbott McNeill Whistler upon Whistler s death His election to the prestigious position was largely due to the efforts of Albert Ludovici father of English philosopher Anthony Ludovici who was private secretary to Rodin for several months in 1906 but the two men parted company after Christmas to their mutual relief 76 During his later creative years Rodin s work turned increasingly toward the female form and themes of more overt masculinity and femininity 37 He concentrated on small dance studies and produced numerous erotic drawings sketched in a loose way without taking his pencil from the paper or his eyes from the model Rodin met American dancer Isadora Duncan in 1900 attempted to seduce her 77 and the next year sketched studies of her and her students In July 1906 Rodin was also enchanted by dancers from the Royal Ballet of Cambodia and produced some of his most famous drawings from the experience 78 Fifty three years into their relationship Rodin married Rose Beuret They married on 29 January 1917 and Beuret died two weeks later on 16 February 79 Rodin was ill that year in January he suffered weakness from influenza 80 and on 16 November his physician announced that congestion of the lungs has caused great weakness The patient s condition is grave 79 Rodin died the next day age 77 at his villa 81 in Meudon Ile de France on the outskirts of Paris 6 A cast of The Thinker was placed next to his tomb in Meudon it was Rodin s wish that the figure served as his headstone and epitaph 82 In 1923 Marcell Tirel Rodin s secretary published a book alleging that Rodin s death was largely due to cold and the fact that he had no heat at Meudon Rodin requested permission to stay in the Hotel Biron a museum of his works but the director of the museum refused to let him stay there 83 84 Rodin in 1914 Rodin s gravesite at the Musee Rodin de MeudonLegacy EditRodin willed to the French state his studio and the right to make casts from his plasters Because he encouraged the edition of his sculpted work Rodin s sculptures are represented in many public and private collections The Musee Rodin was founded in 1916 and opened in 1919 at the Hotel Biron where Rodin had lived and it holds the largest Rodin collection with more than 6 000 sculptures and 7 000 works on paper The French order Legion d honneur made him a Commander 85 and he received an honorary doctorate from the University of Oxford During his lifetime Rodin was compared to Michelangelo 38 and was widely recognized as the greatest artist of the era 86 In the three decades following his death his popularity waned with changing aesthetic values 86 Since the 1950s Rodin s reputation has re ascended 60 he is recognized as the most important sculptor of the modern era and has been the subject of much scholarly work 86 87 The sense of incompletion offered by some of his sculpture such as The Walking Man influenced the increasingly abstract sculptural forms of the 20th century 88 Rodin restored an ancient role of sculpture to capture the physical and intellectual force of the human subject 87 and he freed sculpture from the repetition of traditional patterns providing the foundation for greater experimentation in the 20th century His popularity is ascribed to his emotion laden representations of ordinary men and women to his ability to find the beauty and pathos in the human animal His most popular works such as The Kiss and The Thinker are widely used outside the fine arts as symbols of human emotion and character 89 To honor Rodin s artistic legacy the Google search engine homepage displayed a Google Doodle featuring The Thinker to celebrate his 172nd birthday on 12 November 2012 Rodin had enormous artistic influence A whole generation of sculptors studied in his workshop These include Gutzon Borglum Antoine Bourdelle Constantin Brancuși Camille Claudel Charles Despiau Malvina Hoffman Carl Milles Francois Pompon Rodo Gustav Vigeland Clara Westhoff and Margaret Winser 90 even though Brancusi later rejected his legacy Rodin also promoted the work of other sculptors including Aristide Maillol 91 and Ivan Mestrovic whom Rodin once called the greatest phenomenon amongst sculptors 92 Other sculptors whose work has been described as owing to Rodin include Joseph Csaky 93 94 Alexander Archipenko Joseph Bernard Henri Gaudier Brzeska Georg Kolbe 95 Wilhelm Lehmbruck Jacques Lipchitz Pablo Picasso Adolfo Wildt 96 and Ossip Zadkine 97 98 Henry Moore acknowledged Rodin s seminal influence on his work 99 Several films have been made featuring Rodin as a prominent character or presence These include Camille Claudel a 1988 film in which Gerard Depardieu portrays Rodin Camille Claudel 1915 from 2013 and Rodin a 2017 film starring Vincent Lindon as Rodin 100 Furthermore the Rodin Studios artists cooperative housing in New York City completed in 1917 to designs by Cass Gilbert was named after Rodin 101 The Kiss 1889 Rodin s signature on The Thinker The grounds of Musee Rodin Rodin Museum Philadelphia PennsylvaniaForgeries Edit The relative ease of making reproductions has also encouraged many forgeries a survey of expert opinion placed Rodin in the top ten most faked artists 102 Rodin fought against forgeries of his works as early as 1901 and since his death many cases of organized large scale forgeries have been revealed A massive forgery was discovered by French authorities in the early 1990s and led to the conviction of art dealer Guy Hain 103 To deal with the complexity of bronze reproduction France has promulgated several laws since 1956 which limit reproduction to twelve casts the maximum number that can be made from an artist s plasters and still be considered his work As a result of this limit The Burghers of Calais for example is found in fourteen cities 40 In the market for sculpture plagued by fakes the value of a piece increases significantly when its provenance can be established A Rodin work with a verified history sold for US 4 8 million in 1999 104 and Rodin s bronze Eve grand modele version sans rocher sold for 18 9 million at a 2008 Christie s auction in New York 105 Art critics concerned about authenticity have argued that taking a cast does not equal reproducing a Rodin sculpture especially given the importance of surface treatment in Rodin s work 106 A number of drawings previously attributed to Rodin are now known to have been forged by Ernest Durig 107 Citations Edit Auguste Rodin Art History Oxford Bibliographies Retrieved 24 March 2018 William Tucker Early Modern Sculpture Rodin Degas Matisse Brancusi Picasso Gonzalez 16 Schjeldahl Peter The Stubborn Genius of Auguste Rodin The New Yorker Retrieved 7 October 2017 Rodin was a child of the working class His father was a police clerk Francois Auguste Rene Rodin International Dictionary of Art and Artists St James Press 1990 Reproduced in Biography Resource Center Farmington Hills Mich Thomson Gale 2006 Jianou amp Goldscheider 31 a b Rodin Famous Sculptor Dead The New York Times 18 November 1917 p E3 Hale 40 a b c d e Morey C R 1918 The Art of Auguste Rodin The Bulletin of the College Art Association of America 1 4 145 54 doi 10 2307 3046338 JSTOR 3046338 Auguste Rodin Biography rodin web org Retrieved 14 March 2017 Date of death from Elsen 206 Jianou amp Goldscheider 34 a b Jianou amp Goldscheider 35 Hale 49 50 Taillandier 91 Hale 65 a b c Janson 638 Hale 70 a b Hale 71 Akbar Arifa 11 August 2012 How Rodin s tragic lover shaped the history of sculpture The Independent Retrieved 16 April 2020 Camille Claudel National Museum of Women in the Arts nmwa org Retrieved 16 April 2020 Young Girl with a Sheaf National Museum of Women in the Arts nmwa org Retrieved 16 April 2020 Camille Claudel artnet www artnet com Retrieved 16 April 2020 Ayral Clause Odile 2002 Camille Claudel A Life New York Harry N Abrams pp 98 99 ISBN 0810940779 Auguste Rodin Biography Art amp Facts Hale 75 Ward Jackson Philip Camille Claudel Grove Art Online Oxford University Press Retrieved 19 December 2006 Kerri Mahon Elizabeth 2011 Scandalous Women The Lives and Loves of History s Most Notorious Women New York Penguin Group p 279 ISBN 978 0399536458 Grunfeld Frederic V 15 August 2019 Rodin A Biography Plunkett Lake Press a b Langdale Cecily 1987 Gwen John New Haven and London Yale University Press pp 31 33 ISBN 0 300 03868 2 Janson 637 Hale 50 a b c d Hale 51 Hale 80 a b c Hale 68 a b Elsen 35 a b Jianou amp Goldscheider 41 a b c d Bell Millicent Spring 2005 Auguste Rodin Raritan 14 1 31 a b c Alhadeff Albert 1966 Rodin A Self Portrait in the Gates of Hell The Art Bulletin 48 3 4 393 95 doi 10 2307 3048395 JSTOR 3048395 Taillandier 42 46 48 a b c d Swedberg Richard 2005 Auguste Rodin s The Burghers of Calais The Career of a Sculpture and its Appeal to Civic Heroism Theory Culture amp Society 22 2 45 67 doi 10 1177 0263276405051665 S2CID 145116141 a b Stocker Mark November 2006 A simple sculptor or an apostle of perversion Apollo 164 537 94 97 Hale 117 Hale 115 M Rodin and French Sculpture The Times 4 October 1909 p 12 Auguste Rodin His Sculpture And Its Aims The Times 19 November 1917 p 11 Hale 136 Schor Naomi 2001 Pensive Texts and Thinking Statues Balzac with Rodin Critical Inquiry 27 2 239 64 doi 10 1086 449007 S2CID 161863627 Hale 122 Civilisation BBC Episode 12 Hale 12 Varnedoe Kirk April 1974 Early Drawings by Auguste Rodin The Burlington Magazine 116 853 197 204 Hale 82 Hare Marion J 1987 Rodin and His English Sitters The Burlington Magazine 129 1011 372 81 David Buttery 1988 Portraits of a lady Studley Warwickshire Brewin Books ISBN 0947731431 OCLC 26723104 Photo Gallery Munich Nazi Art Stash Revealed Spiegel 17 November 2013 Retrieved 17 November 2013 Art Exhibitions Auguste Rodin The Times 14 July 1931 p 12 Hale 76 NGA Sculpture Galleries Auguste Rodin Adobe Flash National Gallery of Art Washington D C Archived from the original on 30 November 2006 Retrieved 12 December 2006 Hale 69 a b Werner Alfred 1960 The Return of Auguste Rodin Criticism 2 1 48 54 a b c Quoted in Jianou amp Goldscheider 62 Hale 147 Anderson Alder 1902 Auguste Rodin at Home The Pall Mall Magazine Vol 27 no 1 No 93 pp 325 338 Julius Muriel January 1987 Human Emotion Made Tangible The Work of Auguste Rodin Contemporary Review 250 1452 41 Moissey Kogan DGM Retrieved 30 March 2017 The Indefatigable Miss Hallowell p 6 Rodin The Shape of Genius p 399 a b The Documented Image p 97 Franch John 2006 Robber Baron The Life of Charles Tyson Yerkes Urbana University of Illinois Press p 209 Extensive correspondence in Musee Rodin The indefatigable Miss Hallowell p 8 Newton Joy 1994 Rodin Is a British Institution The Burlington Magazine 136 1101 822 28 Lee Sidney ed 1912 Henley William Ernest Dictionary of National Biography 2nd supplement Vol 2 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 244 246 Hale 73 Biography Musee Rodin Archived from the original on 7 December 2011 Retrieved 15 April 2007 Ludovici Anthony M 1923 Personal Reminiscences of Auguste Rodin Cornhill Magazine Vol LV Nos 325 26 New Series Hale 10 Kinetz Erica 27 December 2006 Rodin Show Visits Home Of Artist s Muses The New York Times p E1 a b Auguste Rodin Gravely Ill The New York Times 17 November 1917 p 13 Auguste Rodin Has Grip The New York Times 30 January 1917 p 3 Accueil Musee Rodin musee rodin fr Retrieved 14 March 2017 Elsen 52 Art Rodin s Death Time 24 March 1923 Archived from the original on 6 November 2007 Fenster Bob 2000 Duh The Stupid History of the Human Race Kansas City Andrews McMeel p 99 ISBN 0 7407 1002 8 Rodin Legion d honneur Ministere de la Culture et de la Communication Leonore Culture gouv fr a b c Hunisak John M 1981 Rodin Rediscovered Art Journal 41 4 370 71 doi 10 2307 776450 JSTOR 776450 a b Gardner Albert Ten Eyck 1957 The Hand of Rodin The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin New Series 15 9 200 04 doi 10 2307 3257752 JSTOR 3257752 Taillandier 23 Lampert Catherine Rodin Francois Auguste Rene Grove Art Online Oxford University Press Retrieved 19 December 2006 WAR MEMORIAL IN ALEXANDRA PARK Non Civil Parish 1389636 Historic England historicengland org uk Hans de Roos 2004 Rodin s Approach to Art Ameena Mohammad amp Meg Mason 2011 Ivan Mestrovic Papers Syracuse University Archives Archived from the original on 6 September 2015 Edith Balas 1998 Joseph Csaky A Pioneer of Modern Sculpture Philadelphia American Philosophical Society Solomon R Guggenheim Museum New York Joseph Csaky Collection Online Archived from the original on 20 September 2015 Heather Hess 2011 German Expressionism Georg Kolbe Museum of Modern Art Adolfo Wildt Peggy Guggenheim Collection Archived from the original on 8 March 2020 Retrieved 27 July 2015 Leaving Rodin behind Sculpture in Paris 1905 1914 Musee d Orsay 2006 Rodin and Modernism Musee Rodin Archived from the original on 21 June 2015 Henry Moore talks about Rodin s irresistible influence from the archive The Guardian 23 March 2013 Bradshaw Peter 23 May 2017 Rodin review Jacques Doillon sculpts an excruciatingly bad film The Guardian Retrieved 28 December 2020 Gray Christopher 14 May 2006 Living Spaces Tailor Made for Artists The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 14 November 2020 Esterow Milton June 2005 The 10 Most Faked Artists ARTnews Retrieved 5 February 2007 Proces Guy Hain une decision qui fera jurisprudence Le Journal des Arts n 126 27 April 2001 Artclair com Retrieved on 2 November 2011 Winship Frederick M 16 September 2002 Bogus bronzes flood market an estimated 4 000 fake castings have put the market for 19th and 20th century bronze sculpture in jeopardy Insight on the News 26 1 Monet fetches record price at New York auction AFP Archived from the original on 12 May 2008 Retrieved 8 May 2008 Gibson Eric 2005 The real Rodin New Criterion 24 4 37 40 Rodin Fake or Fortune Series 5 Episode 3 31 July 2016 BBC Television Retrieved 31 July 2016 General sources EditCrone Rainer Salzmann Siegfried eds 1992 Rodin Eros and Creativity Munich Prestel ISBN 3 7913 1809 8 Elsen Albert E 1963 Rodin New York The Museum of Modern Art LCCN 63014847 Getsy David 2010 Rodin Sex and the Making of Modern Sculpture New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 16725 2 Hale William Harlan 1973 1969 World of Rodin 1840 1917 Time Life Library of Art ed New York Time Life Books LCCN 70105511 Janson H W 1986 History of Art 3rd ed New York Harry N Abrams ISBN 0 8109 1094 2 Jianou Ionel amp Goldscheider C 1967 Rodin Paris Arted Editions d Art LCCN 68084071 Lampert Catherine 1986 Rodin Sculpture and Drawings New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 0 7287 0504 4 Le Normand Romain Antoinette 2007 The Bronzes of Rodin Paris Editions de la Reunion des Musees Nationaux Ludovici Anthony 1926 Personal Reminiscences of Auguste Rodin London John Murray Morseburg Jeffrey 2010 The Indefatigable Miss Hallowell Online Essay full citation needed Taillandier Yvon 1977 Rodin New York Crown Trade Paperbacks ISBN 0 517 88378 3 Tucker William 1974 Early Modern Sculpture New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 519773 9 Weisberg Gabriel 1987 The Documented Image Visions in Art History New York Syracuse University Press ISBN 978 0815624103 Rodin Auguste 1984 Art Conversations with Paul Gsell Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 0 520 05887 9 Royal Academy of Arts 2006 Rodin London Royal Academy of Arts Further reading EditChevillot Catherine Marraud Helene Pinet Helene Adamson John transl 2014 Rodin The Laboratory of Creation Dijon Editions Faton ISBN 978 2878442007 Corbett Rachel 2016 You Must Change Your Life the Story of Rainer Maria Rilke and Auguste Rodin New York W W Norton and Company ISBN 0393245063 Le Normand Romain Antoinette 2014 Rodin New York Abbeville ISBN 978 0789212078 Miller Joan Vita 1986 Rodin the B Gerald Cantor Collection New York Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 978 0870994432 Sanyal Narayan 1984 Rodin Dey s Publishing Company Kolkata ISBN 978 81 295 1331 1 Vincent Clare Auguste Rodin 1840 1917 In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art 2000 October 2004 Tobias G Natter Max Hollein Eds Klimt amp Rodin An Artistic Encounter DelMonico Books Prestel Publishing Munich e a 2017 ISBN 978 3 7913 5708 9 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Auguste Rodin Wikiquote has quotations related to Auguste Rodin Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Rodin Auguste Musee Rodin Paris Friends of Rodin association organizing for its members events around Auguste Rodin Rodin Museum Philadelphia Auguste Rodin at the National Gallery of Art Rodin Collection Stanford University Auguste Rodin Timeline of Art History Metropolitan Museum of Art Rodin Exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum Nov 1987 Jan 1988 Rodin at the Victoria and Albert Museum Correspondence with Walter Butterworth held at the University of Salford Public Art Fund Rodin at Rockefeller Center Video documentary about Rodin s work Works by or about Auguste Rodin at Internet Archive Auguste Rodin in American public collections on the French Sculpture Census website Auguste Rodin public domain audiobook at LibriVox by Ranier Maria Rilke trans by Jessie Lemont amp Hans Trausil Augusue Rodin by Ranier Marie Rilke trans form the German by Jessie Lemont and Hans Trausil Sunwise turn 1919 Newspaper clippings about Auguste Rodin in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Portrait of Auguste Rodin by Alphonse Legros at University of Michigan Museum of Art Thompson Jennifer A 2018 Thought The John G Johnson Collection A History and Selected Works Philadelphia Museum of Art cat 1148 doi 10 29075 9780876332764 101812 1 ISBN 9780876332764 OCLC 1042192763 Retrieved from 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