|
Auguste Rodin
1840 - 1917

The French sculptor Auguste Rodin (1840-1917) conceived of his
sculpture largely as volumes existing in space, as materials to
be manipulated for a variety of surface effects. Thus he
anticipated the aims of many 20th-century sculptors.
Auguste
Rodin, the son of a police inspector, was born in Paris on Nov.
12, 1840. He studied drawing under Horace Lecoq de Boisbaudran
and modeling under the sculptor Jean Baptiste Carpeaux at the
School of Decorative Arts in Paris (1854-1857). Simultaneously
Rodin studied literature and history at the College de France.
Rejected three times by the École des Beaux-Arts, he supported
himself by doing decorative work for ornamentalists and set
designers.
In 1862, as a result of the death of his sister Maria, who had
joined a convent, Rodin attempted to join a Christian order, but
he was dissuaded by the perceptive father superior. Rodin
continued as a decorator by day and at night attended a class
given by the animal sculptor Antoine Louis Barye.
In 1864 Rodin began to live with the young seamstress Rose
Beuret, whom he married the last year of his life. Also in 1864
he completed his Man with a Broken Nose, a bust of an old street
porter, which the Salon rejected. That year he entered the
studio of Carrier-Belleuse, a sculptor who worked in the light
rococo mode of the previous century. Rodin remained with
Carrier-Belleuse for six years and always spoke warmly of him.
In 1870 he and his teacher went to Brussels, where they began
the sculptural decoration of the Bourse. The next year they
quarrelled, and Carrier-Belleuse returned to Paris, while Rodin
completed the work under A. J. van Rasbourg.
The Human Figure
In 1875 Rodin went to Italy, where he was deeply inspired by the
work of Donatello and of Michelangelo, whose sculpture he
characterized as being marked by both "violence and constraint."
Back in Paris in 1876, Rodin made a bronze statue of a standing
man raising his arms toward his head in such a way as to project
an air of uncertainty, a figure held in a pose of slight torsion
suggestive of Michelangelo's Dying Slave. Rodin originally
entitled the piece the Vanquished, then called it the Age of
Bronze. When he submitted it to the Salon, it caused an
immediate controversy, for it was so lifelike that it was
believed to have been cast from the living model. The piece was
unusual for the time in that it had no literary or historical
connotations. After Rodin was exonerated by a committee of
sculptors, the state purchased the Age of Bronze.
In 1878 Rodin began work on the St. John the Baptist Preaching
and various related works, including the Walking Man. Lacking
not only moral and sentimental overtones but a head and arms as
well, the Walking Man was an electrifying image of forceful
motion. Derived partially from some of Donatello's late works,
it was based on numerous poses of the model in constant motion.
Rodin raised the very act of walking into a subject worthy of
concentrated study.
Rodin's interests continued to broaden. Between 1879 and 1882 he
worked at ceramics, and between 1881 and 1886 he produced a
number of engravings. By 1880 his fame had become international,
and that year the minister of fine arts commissioned him to
design a doorway for the proposed Museum of Decorative Arts. The
project, called the Gates of Hell after Dante's Inferno,
occupied Rodin for the rest of his life, and particularly in the
next decade, but it was never finished. The Gates were cast in
their incomplete state in the late 1920s.
For Rodin, the study of the human figure in a variety of poses
indicative of many emotional states was a lifelong
preoccupation. In the St. John the artist caught the prophet at
the moment when he was moved deeply, gesturing automatically by
the strength of the idea he was presenting. The gestures of
Rodin's figures seem motivated by inner emotional states. In his
bronze Crouching Woman (1880-1882) an almost incredibly
contracted pose becomes something beyond a mere mannerism. The
cramped posture of the woman suggests humility, perhaps a
conviction of debasement.
One of Rodin's most ambitious conceptions was the group
commissioned by the municipality of Calais as a civic monument.
The Burghers of Calais (1884-1886), a group larger than life
size, commemorates the episode during the Hundred Years War when
a group of local citizens agreed to sacrifice their lives to
save their city. The pathos and horror of the subject accord
with the romantic sentiments of the time. One of the figures
clutches his head, another exhorts his companion, an older man
walks stoically ahead. Each of the burghers is individualized,
even while they all move ahead to a common purpose. The
psychological interactions of the figures were acutely observed,
and a lifelike immediacy was achieved. The group was finally
installed in 1895.
Portrait Busts
From the late 1880s Rodin received many commissions from private
individuals for portrait busts and from the state for monuments
commemorating renowned people. Most of the state commissions
exist in the state of models, such as the monument to Victor
Hugo (begun 1889), which was to have been placed in the Panthéon
in Paris, and the monuments to James McNeill Whistler, Napoleon,
and Pierre Puvis de Chavannes. Among Rodin's portrait busts are
those of George Bernard Shaw, Henri Rochefort, Georges
Clémenceau, and Charles Baudelaire.
In the Head of Baudelaire (1892), as in his other portraits,
Rodin went beyond mere verisimilitude to catch the inner spirit.
Baudelaire's face looks ahead with rapt attention, and the eyes
seem to be transfixed upon something invisible. Remarkably,
Rodin used as his model not Baudelaire, who had died in 1867,
but a draftsman named Malteste, who, for the sculptor, had all
the characteristics of the Baudelairean mask: "See the enormous
forehead, swollen at the temples, dented, tormented, handsome
nevertheless…."
In 1891 the Societé des Gens de Lettres commissioned Rodin to do
a statue of Honoré de Balzac, a work that was subsequently
rejected. It was not until 1939 that this work was placed at the
Raspail-Montparnasse intersection in Paris. Here, too, Rodin
went beyond the external appearance of the subject to catch the
inner spirit. As is seen in a bronze of 1897, Balzac, wrapped in
his dressing gown, is in the throes of inspiration. Details and
articulations of the body are not indicated, all the better to
call attention to the haughty yet grandiloquent pose of the
inspired writer.
Almost single-handedly Rodin inaugurated the modern spirit in
sculpture by freeing it from its dependence upon direct
representation and conceiving of sculptural masses as abstract
volumes existing in space. To conceive of his aims as being
analogous to those of the impressionist painters is not entirely
correct, for while the roughness of the surfaces of his
sculpture may be connected with the loose handling of the
painters, Rodin's painfully slow, intense realizations of the
inward spirit of his subjects are foreign to the surface effects
of most of the impressionists.
Rodin matured slowly, and his first principal work, the Age of
Bronze, was not made until he was past 35, yet he achieved fame
in his lifetime. After 1900 he knew intimately many of the great
men of his time, and his apprentices included Antoine Bourdelle
and Charles Despiau. In 1916 Rodin bequeathed his works to the
state. He died in Meudon on Nov. 17, 1917.
Gates of Hell and Related Compositions
The Gates of Hell was conceived in the tradition of the great
portals of Western art, such as Lorenzo Ghiberti's Gates of
Paradise in Florence. Rodin was unable to plan the Gates as a
total organized design, and they remained a loose federation of
groups. Yet certain of the isolated figures or groups of
figures, when enlarged and executed separately, became some of
Rodin's finest pieces: Three Shades (1880), Crouching Woman
(1885), the Old Courtesan (1885), the Kiss (1886), and the
Thinker (1888).
The Thinker on the upper lintel of the Gates regards the
debauchery and despair in the sections below. The Thinker was
formally inspired by Michelangelo's terribilita', and the motif
of the right elbow crossed over the left thigh derives from
Michelangelo's Medici tombs. In this piece Rodin conceived of
man as beset by intellectual frustrations and incapable of
acting: the figure is self-enclosed, completely introverted.
The Three Shades on the top of the portal also derives from
Michelangelo, especially from the figures of the Slaves, but
instead of repeating the inner torment of Michelangelo's
figures, they seem beset by languor and utter despair.
The Kiss was derived from one of the pairs of intertwined lovers
on the Gates. The over-life-sized marble figures, sitting on a
mass of rough-hewn marble, seem to emerge out of the unfinished
block in the manner of Michelangelo. But the surfaces of the
bodies of the lovers are soft and fluid and suggest the warmth
of living flesh. As seen in the Kiss, Rodin was capable of
unabashed eroticism.
The Old Courtesan, based on a study of an aged Italian woman,
may have been inspired by a poem of François Villon. Here Rodin
showed through the sagging breasts, wrinkled skin, and
phlegmatic gestures a completely different conception of the
human female form, but the response of the observer is not one
of revulsion. In this old, tottering body Rodin captured not
ugliness but an uncommon sort of beauty.
JACANA HOME PAGE
|
CLASSIC VIDEO CLIPS
|
JACANA ASTRONOMY SITE
JACANA PHOTO LIBRARY |
OLD MAUN PHOTO GALLERY |
MAUN PHONE DIRECTORY
FREE FONTS |
PIC OF THE DAY
|
GENERAL LIBRARY |
MAP LIBRARY |
TECHNICAL LIBRARY
HOUSE PLANS LIBRARY
|
MAUN E-MAIL, WEBSITE & SKYPE LIST
|
BOTSWANA GPS CO-ORDINATES
MAUN SAFARI WEB LINKS |
FREE SOFTWARE |
JACANA WEATHER PAGE
JACANA CROSSWORD LIBRARY |
JACANA CARTOON PAGE |
DEMOTIVATIONAL POSTERS
This web page was last updated on:
15 December, 2008
              |