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Wednesday, June 23, 2021

Rodin Museum, Philadelphia

The Rodin Museum in Philadelphia was created by Jules Mustbaum (1872-1926), a local philanthropist who collected works by Rodin. He commissioned a neoclassical building to house his collection. The building was completed in 1929, a few years after his death.

Entrance to the Rodin Museum

Auguste Rodin (1840-1917) did not train at the School of Fine Arts in Paris but did follow many of their guiding principles and techniques. He also broke out on his own, often creating partial figures or focusing on formal qualities rather than narrative ones. His work was revolutionary and made him an exemplar for future sculptors.

His most famous work is The Thinker, a copy of which is by the entrance. The work was originally modeled in clay and later cast in bronze in three different sizes. Out front is the original medium size.

The Thinker

The back of The Thinker

The gateway at the entrance leads into a formal garden.

Inside the gate

The Gates of Hell are the doors that seem to be the main entrance to the building (!). Rodin had a commission to create doors for a new museum. He drew inspiration from Dante's The Divine Comedy. He made a chaotic melange of characters who suffer in the Inferno. The museum was never built but Rodin worked on the project on and off for over thirty years. 

The Gates of Hell, maybe not the entrance you want to go through

Interestingly, his depiction of Dante contemplating the souls in Hell was the origin of The Thinker, which became an independent sculpture first exhibited in 1889 as The Thinker: The Poet, Fragment of a Door.

Hey, I know that guy!

During the 1346 siege of Calais, King Edward III demanded six of the town's leaders as prisoners in exchange for not harming the rest of the citizens. These prisoners were later spared thanks to the English queen's influence but the event was quite famous and Rodin sculpted The Burghers of Calais for the town. The men are depicted walking dejectedly toward their fate, wearing sackcloth and rope halters.

The Burghers of Calais

Inside the museum are many smaller works. I enjoyed the whimsy of The Hand from the Tomb.

Sculptures don't get more partial than this

Danaid (The Source) is another castoff from The Gates of Hell. The mythological character carried a leaking jug of water. Rodin sculpted it in clay and Jean Escoula carved a marble copy around 1902.

Danaid

The Benedictions was to be part of a monument to French Workers. The angels would be at the top, showering blessings on the laborers below.

The Benedictions

Emmanuel Fremiet's Joan of Arc is a triumphant French hero riding out from a victory.

Joan of Arc

Seated Figure from the early 1890s was modeled in clay. Rodin used the same shape in his Ecclesiastes crafted in 1898, though now the figure is on his back. Presumably the book is the Bible text.

Seated Figure and Ecclesiastes

At 22, Rodin joined a monastery after his older sister's death. He was only there for five months. While he was there, he made this bust of Father Pierre-Julien Eymard.

Father Pierre-Julien Eymard

This next bust is called Colossal Head of Saint John the Baptist. It's clearly not post-decapitation, but still expresses the somberness of Jesus Christ's cousin.

Colossal Head of Saint John the Baptist

Below is a copy of Rodin's The Kiss. The work started as another part of The Gates of Hell, with the two figures representing the adulterers Paolo and Francesca. Rodin exhibited it on its own in 1887, he decided not to use it for the doors and called it simply The Kiss. Henri Greber received permission to copy the sculpture in 1929 specifically for this museum. 

The Kiss

An alternate view

Rodin worked on a monument to honor write Honore de Balzac. The art community was a bit underwhelmed by the execution. Local merchants made small, whimsical imitations, like the work on the right below, portraying Balzac as a seal!

Balzac and his imitator

Rodin entered this sculpture in a competition to depict the heroism of the Parisians during the Franco-Prussian War. The contest was in 1879 and the judges were not ready for his style or his honest depiction of the suffering soldier supported by a winged spirit. After World War I, it was used in Verdun for a memorial to the battle fought there.

The Call to Arms

The Thinker is such a popular sculpture that the museum has a second, smaller version inside the museum for patrons to admire.

One side of the argument

The other side

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