Auguste Rodin
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| Rodin in his studio at
Medoun. © Harlingue-Viollet, Paris |
COLLECTION OF
AUGUSTE RODIN FOUNDRY PLASTERS
This collection
of foundry plasters has been assembled over several years with the
intention of reproducing a limited edition of Rodin bronzes of the highest
quality. In fact, using the finest craftsman and techniques developed by Rodin's fondeurs,
bronze casts were created with the utmost attention to the details,
size, and patinas which exist in casts supervised by the artist during
his lifetime. With this purpose in mind, lifetime casts were examined,
and the foundry plasters selected were those which
maintained the details and quality of Rodin's best works.
Plaster was the
form in which Rodin recorded his genius. First modelling in clay, which
disintegrates over time, Rodin recorded a composition's important stages
and finished form by making a negative mold (un moule bon creu) from the
clay. He then used this mold to cast a permanent form in plaster. A
plaster was always the starting point for further innovations in the
composition or replication in bronze or stone.
The goal of this
project has been to collect examples of Rodin's most significant works.
These examples include, among others, such universally renowned figures
as "The Age of Bronze", "Eve", "The Kiss", and "The
Thinker".
COLLECTION OF
BRONZES FOR SALE
The collection
consists of a series of over 50 different Rodin sculptures, from which
will be cast limited number of pieces each, with a certificate of authenticity.
This document guarantees that the
bronze was cast by the lost wax process from a foundry plaster. Each
bronze is finished using the exact same patinas and techniques as used
during the life of the artist.
All dimensions and details are
exact to life time casts.
Each cast is numbered.
BOOK
A book has been
produced documenting the history of the foundry plasters, the high
quality, validity, and importance of this collection, and the bronze
casts derived from it. The book was printed by Arti Grafiche Amilcare
Pizzi S.p.A., one of the premier art book printers, with contributions
from notable people, and photographic work done by Mario Carrieri
(considered the foremost photographer of sculpture).
Price of the book: £49
(soft) or £70 (hard edition) available in the Hay Hill Gallery or by
order through this site.
Legal rights with respect to recasts from foundry plasters
of Auguste Rodin
The Auguste Rodin bronze casts using the foundry
plasters is authorized by the laws of the United States, countries of
the European Union, countries of South America, and Asia. More
specifically, this work is lawful under both the copyright, and moral
rights statutes that have been enacted in these countries.
With respect to copyright law, the United States, Europe, South America,
and Asia provide that all copyright in a work expire seventy (70) years
after the death of the author. Since, Rodin died in 1917, all copyright
rights in his works, including these plasters and the
works previously created with them, terminated in 1987 with
exception of France, which terminated in 1989 for reasons particular to
France's national history.
Moreover, recasting of the Rodin sculptures is supported by the
philosophy underlying the copyright laws. Copyright regimes enable an
artist to control and profit from their work, thereby encouraging
artistic endeavour for the benefit of the artist and the general public.
However, copyright theory also posits that the public's interest
eclipses that of the artist's heirs or assignees over time and that it
is better served by termination of private control over copyrights after
the passage of several generations. That time has expired for Rodin's
works and, therefore, there is no longer any copyright bar against their
re-casting.
The few rights that remain to an artist's estate or assignees after
transfer or termination of copyright rights are referred to as moral
rights, or droit moral. These rights are strongest in France but they
exist in varying forms in a number of other countries. They include:
-
control over proper attribution of a work (droit a la paternite);
-
the right to prevent publication of the original work (droit de
divulgation);
-
the right to withdraw the original work from the public and to make
modifications to the work (droit de retrait ou de repentir);
-
the right to prevent alterations to the work (droit au respect de
l'Oeuvre).
These Rodin casts, however, do not implicate the droit
moral for several reasons. First, they are not lifetime casts, but
rather recasts from foundry plasters. Therefore, the moral rights
related to physical control over the works, such as the rights of
withdrawal, alteration and publication, do not extend to them.
Moreover, the re-casts do not alter the plasters or the image
embodied in the Rodin originals and, therefore, they do not involve
the droit au respect de l'Oeuvre. Finally, all the bronze casts
contain accurate attribution, thus respecting droit a la paternite
and avoiding any confusion regarding the origins of each work.
Most
people do not realize that the vast majority of the bronzes that
currently come to the market place today, whether in action or being
sold in a gallery are posthumously cast. In fact many of the Rodin bronzes found in museums and public exhibitions have been
cast after the life of the artist.
Techniques used in the bronze casts
The Rodin casts are cast using the lost wax process
(the process preferred by Auguste Rodin). All casts are under the
direction and supervision of experts and are done
in one of the finest foundries in the world located in Italy. All
processes and techniques replicate in exact detail s of those used by the
artist during his lifetime. These casts are equal in all details to
lifetime casts and are among the finest casts ever done from this
remarkable artist.
All patinas are done using the same chemicals and techniques of the
lifetime works and are identical to lifetime casts.
To view the technique behind the lost wax process, see the process
section (to be published soon, it's under reconstruction now).
AUGUSTE RODIN: HIS LIFE AND ART
Auguste Rodin
is generally recognized as the most important sculptor of the nineteenth
century. Born to a family of modest means in 1840 and slow to gain
recognition, Rodin nonetheless won five of France’s largest commissions
for monuments during the 1880s and 1890s. During these decades he
produced grand public works and a vast oeuvre of drawings and small
sculptures. By 1890 Rodin had become the most renowned sculptor in
France; by 1900 he had achieved international recognition. His
innovations in form and subject matter established his reputation as the
first master of modern sculpture. Rodin’s fame and productivity have
been matched by only one artist in the twentieth century, Pablo Picasso.
Rejected by the state-sponsored art school, the Ecole des Beaux-Arts,
Rodin was one of the few self-taught French sculptors of the nineteenth
century. He moved from novice to sculptor’s assistant (praticien)
without benefit of prolonged academic training. Rodin learned about
techniques on the job and about style by studying in the galleries of
the Louvre. Devoted to Greek and Roman art, he also studied the masters
of the French Renaissance, Germain Pilon (1528-1590) and Pierre Puget
(1620-1694). Not averse to learning from more contemporary masters,
Rodin looked for guidance to François Rude (1769-1815), James Pradier
(1792-1852), and Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux (1827-1875).
Rodin’s career can be divided into four phases: training and
apprenticeship (1854-76), maturity (1877-89), zenith (1890-1901), and
final years (1902-17). Each of these periods was characterized by a
defining event. After a decade of living in poverty and working for
other sculptors, in 1876 Rodin made a pilgrimage to Italy. His study of
antique sculpture, Michelangelo, and other artists of the Italian
Renaissance provided the necessary impetus for him to make the
transition from Rodin the gifted artisan to Rodin the artist. In 1880,
after his submissions to the Salon were accorded modest success, Rodin
received the commission for the huge bronze doors for a proposed Musée
des Arts Décoratifs. Work on the doors, now known as The Gates of Hell,
coincided with Rodin’s reading of Baudelaire and Dante, kindred souls
who inspired his art of the next decades.
Two great exhibitions, both held in Paris, bracket the height of
Rodin’s career: the 1889 exhibition at Galerie Georges Petit, which he
shared with Claude Monet; and the grand retrospective that he installed
in his own pavilion on the pont d’Alma for the Universal Exposition of
1900. The Georges Petit exhibition sealed Rodin’s position as France’s
premier sculptor and opened doors to collections and museums around the
world. After the close of the Universal Exposition in 1901, Rodin
reerected his pavilion beside his villa-studio in Meudon. This first "Musée
Rodin," the pavilion was the artist’s last completed public project; it
became a perpetual monument and salesroom for him. He had become a
living legend. Great commercial success and modest innovation marked
Rodin’s final years, which he devoted largely to creating drawings,
assemblages, and small-scale works, and looking after his collections of
antique sculpture and contemporary paintings.
The subject of numerous biographies, Rodin remains largely a riddle.
Despite the fact that his life is accompanied by vast documentation, the
motives of his personal life and career are often difficult to fathom.
His personality encompassed the simultaneous expression of intensely
private and grandly public personas. In her exhaustive and deeply
probing biography of the artist, Ruth Butler summarized his personality
as "lonely."1 Conventional in his tastes, he held to the opinions and
prejudices of a lower-middle-class upbringing: until the last phase of
his life, he preferred to live in humble circumstances without such
modern improvements as heat and electric light. Despite modest
accommodations and a mind-numbing work schedule, Rodin was never
intellectually insular. He accrued a wide knowledge of art and
literature and an extraordinary range of human contact. Yet he had few
friends. Rather, he had colleagues and defenders-including some of the
most powerful cultural personalities and politicians of his day-and
enemies in abundance. Although generally awkward in public, Rodin could
be courtly and effusive in audiences, elegant and open in his written
correspondence and interviews.
The key to Rodin’s life was his relationships with women: his strong
ties to his sister, who died when he was twenty-two; a lifelong union
with Rose Beuret, whom he married only at the very end of their lives;
and a heartbreaking affair with Camille Claudel, from which neither
participant ever fully recovered. These ties formed the tragic core of a
personality that also sought out relationships on many levels with a
host of female artists, models, dancers, fortune hunters, grandes dames,
and aristocratic soul mates. Throughout his maturity, Rodin was deeply
committed to these erotic and intellectual liaisons, attachments that
were a primary source of his creativity.
Convinced early on that he was a great artist, Rodin was as
determined to establish his reputation as he was prolific and audacious
in his production. From 1872 to 1885 Rodin worked incessantly until he
gained the status and network necessary to produce major commissions.
Especially in his later years, the role of Rodin the entrepreneur who
managed several large ateliers and the simultaneous production of
multiple commissions drove the Rodin the artist into ever more
idiosyncratic refuges. Stays in various hideaways and increasingly
emotional approaches to drawing and making small sculpture provided some
relief from business and personal pressures. Despite conflicts,
rejections, and his ineptitude as a public figure, Rodin managed the
most complex career of his age with more skill and success than any
other artist of his generation.
Although Rodin’s materials and methods for making sculpture were not
novel, even his earliest figures are original. To the academic practice
of creating a balance between nature and an ideal, Rodin brought three
innovations: an equal attention to every detail of the work; an
insistence that the figure itself is the subject, not that the figure
portrays a subject; and the dynamism supplied by complex asymmetrical
axes. Such innovations would have remained intellectual and technical
were it not for the genius of Rodin’s hands. He had a superb, unmatched
gift for modelling clay and plaster. Rodin was able to translate his
immense passion for work and his abiding love of the human form into
thousands of small and many grand works, the animate patterns of
solitary genius.
"Nature" and "movement" were terms used by Rodin as touchstones for
making sculpture. Following nature, which Rodin insisted was essential
for a work of value, meant working from a model. The initial stages of
creating a form involved drawings and clay sketches, which he
manipulated until he had selected a pose and scale for a fully modelled
work in clay. For both small and large figures, he worked from the live
model to develop a series of profiles. Normally, Rodin employed
professionals from Paris; however, for commissions with important
historical themes, such as The Burghers of Calais, he sought out
individuals with the same origins and from the same regions as the
historic subjects. To imbue his figures with movement, or "life"
(another of his terms), Rodin returned to his models in session after
session, making additions, new profiles, and other changes. Only when
the clay figure possessed the required movement-in terms of both implied
motion and animate surface-did Rodin proceed to make an image in plaster
or another medium.
During his career, Rodin pulled hundreds of molds from his clay
models. He then made plaster casts from these molds, casts that he would
sometimes modify. The majority of Rodin’s innovations and refinements
involved plaster, the medium he favoured not only for experiments and
improvements of a work but for first exhibitions in the Paris Salons and
gifts to friends and patrons. His involvement in casting his works in
bronze was limited to his choice of mold makers, foundries, and
patinators, whose work he supervised with exacting care. Perhaps because
in his early years he had been required to carve stone for other
artists, once successful, Rodin limited his work in marble to shaping
key details and adjusting final finishes.
In theory and practice Rodin emphasized a link, not merely between
the physical and the spiritual, but also between the sensual and the
spiritual. Such a dynamic had been developed by Renaissance and baroque
masters, but Rodin’s work is unique in the intensity and omnipresence of
sensual themes, in his monuments as well as in his smaller creations.
Rodin never tired of female subjects. Their beauty, energy, and
sexuality-expressed in figures dancing, falling, walking, and
writhing-became the primary themes of the private work of his late
years.
These forms, sometimes abbreviated or reduced to a hand or a torso,
often repeated with small variations and always animate and sensual,
expressed the aesthetics of the fragment, of a work always in process.
During the final stages of his career, Rodin learned to abandon, or to
release, his forms from completion, rather than force them into a
finished state. He also learned to create by assemblage and by
subtraction and also that the process of making, rather than of
developing explicit meaning, was the primary activity of his art. Rodin
distilled this process into the phrase "to work well." The aesthetic of
the fragment and the studio as the final shape of art constitute Rodin’s
legacy for modern sculpture.
Movement and sensuality were not, of course, Rodin’s only themes. His
great individual figures and best monuments reveal a depth of feeling
for humanity and a nobility of thought that place them among the finest
works of European sculpture. The human and historic content of The
Thinker and The Burghers of Calais transcends the circumstances of their
making, establishing a rapport with past masterpieces by Donatello and
Michelangelo as well as with works by twentieth-century masters. Rodin’s
sculpture has an accessibility and breadth often lacking in works by
even his most gifted contemporaries. This universality looks forward to
the sculpture of Alberto Giacometti and Henry Moore.
Rodin’s position is now assured, even though it was not so at the end
of his life. The momentous changes in art of the first decades of the
twentieth century made Rodin’s work and way of working seem
anachronistic. After his death in 1917, curators at the Musée Rodin
inventoried his collections and issued casts, principally through the
Alexis Rudier foundry, but Rodin’s reputation went into eclipse between
1930 and 1960. His achievement was so great, however, that beginning in
the 1960s a number of extraordinary scholars began to re-examine his life
and work. This re-evaluation has led to a series of internationally
significant exhibitions and publications and to the reestablishment of
Rodin’s reputation as one of the great masters of European art.
Notes
1. Ruth Butler, Rodin: The Shape of Genius
(New Haven and London, 1993), p. 514.
2. The disparity between the content and
techniques of Rodin’s personal works and these features in his large
commissions has been a major point of discussion in scholarship over the
last three decades. Modernist critics have generally disparaged the
bronzes and marbles because Rodin, in keeping with nineteenth-century
academic practice, delegated their execution to his foundry men (fondeurs)
and praticiens.
Leo Steinberg and scholars following him conclude
that Rodin’s achievements are limited to the drawings, clays, and
plasters that exhibit his extraordinary command of the materials and
through which he developed an aesthetic of movement and sensuality most
fully exemplified in the fragments and unevenly finished works. Critics
grounded in nineteenth-century art, led by Albert Elsen, by contrast,
have proposed that Rodin’s greatness is consistent, albeit different, in
his personal and public works.
BRONZES LIST
Posthumous casts in an edition of 8, cast in 1999-2000 using all life-time
original techniques and patinas
1.
The Great Thinker - Height: cm.183 ( 72")
2.
The Thinker - Height: cm.73 ( 28 3/4")
3.
The Hand of the Great Thinker - Height: cm.c. 38 cm (15")
4.
The Hand of the Thinker - Height: cm.c. 15 cm (5 7/8")
5.
The Age of Bronze (large) - Height: cm.180 ( 70 7/8")
6.
The Age of Bronze (medium) - Height: cm.103 ( 40 1/2")
7.
The Age of Bronze (small) - Height: cm.63 ( 24 7/8")
8.
Bust of the Age of Bronze (small) - Height: cm.28 ( 11")
9.
Bust of the Age of Bronze (large) - Height: cm.53 ( 20 7/8")
10.
The Walking Man - Height: cm.85 ( 33 1/2")
11.
Head of St. John the Baptist - Height: cm.37 ( 14 5/8")
12.
Head of Eustache de Saint Pierre - Height: cm.34.5 ( 13 5/8")
13.
Eternal Spring - Height: cm.65 ( 25 5/8")
14.
Eve (medium) - Height: cm.74 ( 29 1/8")
15.
Torso Morhardt - Height: cm.39 ( 15 3/8")
16.
Nijinsky - Height: cm.31 ( 12 1/4")
17.
Fallen Caryatid carrying her Stone - Height: cm.43 ( 16 7/8")
18.
Feminine Torso - Height: cm.29 ( 11 3/8")
19.
The Danaid (small) - cm.23 long (9 1/8")
20.
Eve (large) - Height: cm.170.5 ( 67 1/8")
21.
Iris, Messenger of the Gods - cm.93 long (36 5/8")
22.
The Kiss - Height: cm.85.5 ( 33 5/8")
23.
Study for the Walking Man - Height: cm.53 ( 20 7/8")
24.
Hand of Rodin holding feminine Torso - Height: cm.22 ( 8
5/8")
25.
The Man with broken Nose - Height: cm.25.1 (9 7/8")
26.
Balzac in Dominican Robe - Height: cm.106 (41 3/4")
27.
Balzac Nude - Height: cm.74.5 (29 3/8")
28.
Dance Movement A - Height: cm.64.5 (25 3/8")
29.
Dance Movement B - Height: cm.33 (13") |
30.
Dance Movement D - Height: cm.32 (12 5/8")
31.
Dance Movement E - Height: cm.35 (13 3/4")
32.
Torso of Adele - cm.44 long (17 3/8")
33.
Hand of Adam - Height: cm.32 (12 5/8")
34.
Left Hand of Pierre Wiessant - Height: cm.33 (13")
35.
Head of Balzac - Height: cm.17.5 (6 7/8")
36.
Nijinsky (small) - Height: cm.17 (6 3/4")
37.
Eve (medium, round base) - Height: cm.68 (26 3/4")
38.
Study for Pierre Wiessant - Height: cm.62.5 (24 5/8")
39.
Hand of God - Height: cm.13 ( 5 1/8")
40.
Children with lizard - Height: cm.39 ( 15 3/8")
41.
Burgher Andreus de Andres - Height: cm.43 ( 17")
42.
The Shade - Height: cm.94 (37")
43.
Crouching Woman - Height: cm.31 ( 12 1/4")
44.
Right Hand of Pierre Wiessant - Height: cm.32 (12 5/8")
45.
Study of Hand - Height: cm.25 ( 9 7/8")
46.
Bust of Balzac - Height: cm.19.5 (7 3/4")
47.
Iris (small) - Height: cm.38.5 H (15 1/8"), cm.43 long (16 7/8")
48.
Bust of Jean D'Aire - Height: cm.45 (17 3/4")
49.
The Kiss (small) - Height: cm.25 (9 7/8")
50.
The Kiss (medium) - Height: cm.60.5 (23 7/8")
51.
The Danaid (large) - Height: cm.30 (11 7/8")
52.
Hand of God (large) - Height: cm.112 ( 44 1/8")
53.
The Athlete - Height: cm.41 (16 1/8")
54.
Fugit Amor - Height: cm.37 (14 5/8")
55.
Kneeling Fauness - Height: cm.50 (19 3/4")
56.
St. John the Baptist preaching - Height: cm.54 (21 1/4")
57.
The Kiss, 16" - Height: cm.40 (15 3/4") |
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