Auguste Rodin
Auguste Rodin:''This article is about the artist and sculptor, Auguste Rodin. See, Rodan, for an article about the monster.''
Image:Rodin burghers of calais.jpg|right|thumb|300px|Rodin's ''The Burghers of Calais'' in Calais, France.
'''Auguste Rodin''' (November 12, 1840 – November 17, 1917) was a France|French sculptor.
Born '''François-Auguste-René Rodin''', in Paris, France, he stands at the culmination of the figurative tradition in sculpture, as after him sculptors increasingly turned towards abstract art|abstraction.
One of his early works, ''The Age of Bronze'', created during his years in Belgium, looked so realistic that the sculptor was accused of ''surmoulage'' (taking plaster moulds from the live model).
Rodin struggled to clear his name and in 1880 was awarded the commission to create a portal for the planned Museum of Decorative Arts. Although the museum was never built, Rodin worked nearly all his life on his major work, ''The Gates of Hell'', depicting scenes from Dante Alighieri|Dante's ''The Divine Comedy|Inferno'' in high relief.
Many of his best-known sculptures, like ''The Thinker'' (''Le Penseur'', originally titled ''The Poet''), representing the poet Dante), ''The Three Shades'' (''Les Trois Ombres''), and ''The Kiss'' (''Le Baiser'') were designed as figures for this monumental landscape of eternal passion and punishment, and only later presented as works in their own right. Other well-known works derived from ''The Gates'' are: the ''Ugolino'' group, ''Fugitive Love'', ''The Falling Man'', ''The Sirens'', ''Fallen Caryatid Carrying her Stone'', ''Damned Women'', ''The Standing Fauness'', ''The Kneeling Fauness'', ''The Martyr'', ''She Who Once Was the Beautiful Helmetmaker's Wife'', ''Glaucus'', ''Polyphem''.
Through his method of ''marcottage'', he used the same sculptural elements time and time again, under different names and in different combinations.
Instead of copying traditional academic postures, Rodin preferred to work with amateurs models, street performers, acrobats, strong men and dancers. In his atelier, the models walked around freely while the sculptor made quick sketches in clay, which were later fine-tuned, cast in plaster, and forged into bronze or marble. Rodin was fascinated by dance and spontaneous movement; his ''John the Baptist'' shows a walking preacher, displaying two phases of the same stride simultaneously.
Image:Hoellentor.jpg|thumb|left|250px|''The Gates of Hell'', Musée Rodin.
In 1883, Rodin agreed to supervise Alfred Boucher's sculpture course during his absence and so met the 18-year-old sculptress Camille Claudel. Rodin fell in love with his talented pupil, and Claudel recognized her chance to be tutored by the greatest sculptor talent of her time, who was just breaking through to fame. They creative and intimate couple. Claudel inspired Rodin as a model for many of his tragic love couples and assisted him during his work on another important commission, ''The Burghers of Calais'' (''Les Bourgeois de Calais'').
Although they shared an atelier at a small old castle (68 Boulevard d´Italie, Paris), Rodin refused to give up his ties with Rose Beuret, his loyal companion during his years of poverty in Belgium and mother of their son Auguste-Eugène Beuret, born January 18, 1866. He never fulfilled a contract with Claudel to give up all contact with other women, and marry her. After nearly 15 years, the couple parted. Claudel went her own artistic way, but found herself isolated.
Rodin, commissioned to create a ''Monument to Victor Hugo'' in the 1890s, dealt extensively with the subject of ''artist and muse'', reflecting the various aspects of his stormy and complex relationship with Claudel in ''The Poet and Love'', ''The Genius and Pity'', ''The Sculptor and his Muse''. Like many of Rodin's public commissions, the ''Mounument to Victor Hugo'' met resistance because it did not fit conventional expectations. The 1897 plaster model was finally cast in bronze in 1964.
His ''Monument to Balzac'', exhibited at the 1898 salon at the Champ des Mars showing the writer in his morning frock, was repudiated as well. After the frustrating experience, Rodin did not finish any public commissions. Instead, after 1903 he had his most successful works enlarged to monumental dimensions.
As France's best known artist, he had a large staff of pupils and craftsmen working for him. He created a number of society portrait busts, especially for wealthy American collectors, and began presenting fragmentary sculptures, which in his opinion contained the essence of his artistic statement, like ''Meditation without Arms'', ''Iris, Messenger of the Gods'' or ''The Walking Man''.
During his last creative years, Rodin concentrated on small dance studies (ca. 1915), and produced numerous erotic drawings, sketched in a loose way, without taking his pencil from the paper or his eyes from the model. An exhibition of these drawings in Weimar in 1906 caused the so-called Kessler scandal, and Harry Count Kessler was dismissed as curator of the Weimar Museum.
On January 29, 1917, Rodin finally married Rose Beuret, who died two weeks later.
Auguste Rodin died on November 17, 1917. A cast of ''The Thinker'' was placed next to his tomb in Meudon, France|Meudon, Île-de-France, France.
==Legacy==
Image:Balzac Bust Rodin1892.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Rodin's bust of Honoré de Balzac|Balzac, bronze, (1891-1892), which he gave to the Victoria and Albert Museum in 1914.
The Musée Rodin in Paris was founded to administer and exhibit the huge body of work (over 5,000 plaster items, over 1,000 bronze sculptures, ca. 8,000 drawings, and as many photographs) Rodin left to the French government by several deeds of donation, shortly before his death. A part of this collection is shown at Hôtel Biron, much of it displayed in an outdoor garden. The most of plaster collection is kept at Villa des Brillants in Meudon, a suburb of Paris, where Rodin lived and worked during the last decades of his life.
With his works, Rodin also transferred the rights of reproduction to the Musée Rodin. According to French Law (Decree Nr. 81.255 of 3 March 1981), only 12 copies of each work can be issued as an ''original'' edition. Although the copyrights to Rodin's work expired in 1987, 70 years after the artist's death, according to French law the Musée Rodin still exerts the ''droit moral'' (moral right), to prevent damage to the artist's good name by copies of inferior quality.
One of Rodin's 1889 sculptures was used by the rock band Black Sabbath as the cover art for their 1987 album of the same name, ''The Eternal Idol''.
==Locations of Rodin sculpture==
* Musée Rodin, Paris, France
* Rodin Museum, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
* National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC
* A bust of Joseph Pulitzer by the artist is in the World Room of Journalism Hall at Columbia University
* Iris & B. Gerald Cantor Center for Visual Arts#Rodin sculpture garden|Sculpture Garden, Stanford University, Palo Alto, California, United States|USA
* California Palace of the Legion of Honor, San Francisco, California, USA
* Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, California|Los Angeles, California
* Public displays:
**Statue of Honoré de Balzac, Boulevard Raspail, near Boulevard Montparnasse, in the 6ème arrondissement, Paris|6th arrondissement of Paris, France.
**Statue of ''The Burghers of Calais'' on Calais' main square by the town hall.
==External links==
* [http://www.musee-rodin.fr/ Musee Rodin, Paris]
* [http://www.rodinmuseum.org/ Rodin Museum, Philadelphia]
* [http://www.insecula.com/contact/A005837.html/ Auguste Rodin works presented by Insecula ]
* [http://www.insecula.com/salle/theme_40001_M0123.html/ Views of the Musée Rodin in Paris, France]
* [http://www.rodin-web.org/ Rodin-Web.org - independent academic platform]
Category:1840 births|Rodin, Auguste
Category:1917 deaths|Rodin, Auguste
Category:Artists|Rodin, Auguste
Category:French sculptors|Rodin, Auguste
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