Tuesday, November 29th, 2011

Collection of 300 drawings made during Rodin’s last thirty years on view at the Musée Rodin

November 20, 2011 by  
Filed under Art Events & Exhibitions

PARIS.- We know Rodin the sculptor, but do we know Rodin the creator of drawings? This exhibition spectacularly presents a collection of 300 drawings of his last thirty years. During the last part of his life, drawing was the artist’s predominant form of expression.

At over 60, Rodin embarked upon a true career as a drawer. He had always drawn, but the drawings that date from after 1890 can be considered the last manifestation of his genius. Drawing every day from a live model, his passion resulted in a collection of nearly 7,000 pages, brought together almost in its entirety at the Musée Rodin. Starting in 1903, the museum organized several exhibitions devoted exclusively to the body of his works in drawing. The Musée Rodin’s ambition is to reconnect with the richness and the breadth of these exhibitions, allowing the public to discover this little-known aspect of his talent.

At over 60 Rodin embarked upon a true career as a drawer 580x388 Collection of 300 drawings made during Rodins last thirty years on view at the Musée Rodin
At over 60, Rodin embarked upon a true career as a drawer

Through the reconstitution of the major identifiable series (little drawings in ink and watercolor from the years 1890-1895; the Psyches; the Women in Peignoir; the Cambodian Dancers; the shaped and shaded drawings of around 1910; the last drawings, splashed with color, to name just a few), certain themes and characteristics of the artist’s drawings are explored, such as the practice of drawing and the importance of the form that is changed, corrected, erased, cut up, folded in two; the mastery of the continuous and synthetic line; the relationship of body to space; and, finally, the femme fatal or the sexual bodies.

The proposed sequence of the exhibition will end with Rodin’s final drawings, which demonstrate the extraordinary tension the artist introduced between the naturalism of a drawing, capturing a gesture, a movement in all its immediacy, and the increasing independence of line and color. Rodin’s freedom in drawing contributed to opening an immense space for the artists of the 20th century. The true mission of the exhibition is to make the viewer sense this liberty.

On the occasion of this exhibition, the museum will also present a selection of works drawn by the artist Paul-Armand Gette, whose set of themes surrounding the feminine body echo Rodin’s drawings, on the first floor of the Hôtel Biron.

Related posts:

  1. Musee Rodin in Paris Presents “Works in Progress, Rodin and the Ambassadors”
  2. Selections from The Judith Rothschild Foundation Contemporary Drawings Collection on View in Valencia
  3. Frick Collection Announces an Exhibition of Developments in Picasso’s Drawings
  4. Major Collection of Frederick Kiesler Drawings and Sculptures Donated to Philadelphia Museum
  5. Hamburger Kunsthalle Opens First Major Philipp Otto Runge Retrospective in Thirty Years

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