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authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-05 03:52:03 -0800
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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #50665 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/50665)
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-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 50665 ***
-
-AUGUSTE RODIN
-
-THE MAN--HIS IDEAS--HIS WORKS
-
-BY
-
-CAMILLE MAUCLAIR
-
-AUTHOR OF
-
-"THE GREAT FRENCH PAINTERS AND THE EVOLUTION OF FRENCH PAINTING FROM 1830"
-"THE FRENCH IMPRESSIONISTS," ETC.
-
-TRANSLATED BY
-
-CLEMENTINA BLACK
-
-WITH FORTY PLATES
-
-NEW YORK
-
-E. P. DUTTON & CO.
-
-1905
-
-
-
-
-TO
-
-EUGÈNE CARRIÈRE
-
-AND
-
-ROGER MARX
-
-
-
- MY DEAR FRIENDS,
-
- One of you is a great painter, whose art and mind are
- fraternally akin to Rodin's. The other is the first French
- Art critic of our day, and has nobly defended Rodin from the
- outset.
-
- For these reasons I felt it just and natural to dedicate
- this book to both of you, as a testimony of my affection,
- given in the presence of the English public, and under the
- auspices of a name that unites all three of us in the love
- of beauty.
- C. M.
-
-
-
-
-The photographs used as illustrations to the present volume are kindly
-lent by M. Buloz, art publisher of Paris, to whom we offer our sincere
-thanks; and for five of them--very remarkable in their effect (the
-_Bellona,_ the bust of _Hugo_, the two studies of torsos for the _St.
-John the Baptist,_ and the _Fair Woman who was a Helmet-maker_) we are
-indebted to Messrs. Haweis and Coles, to whom we are no less grateful.
-The very faithful portrait of M. Rodin is the work of M. Eckert, of
-Prague.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-Auguste Rodin is certainly the contemporary French artist about whom
-most has been written, especially during the last ten years. In
-addition to innumerable articles in newspapers and reviews, several
-books have been devoted to him. In offering the present work to the
-English public I think it desirable to define exactly the aim which I
-propose to myself. To begin with, as my limits of size are somewhat
-narrow, I shall endeavour to condense into a restricted space as many
-interesting details as I can give, and to neglect nothing that may
-contribute to a clear and precise presentment of Rodin's personality
-and work. But such details have already been collected in some French
-works; and if I were to content myself with presenting a new version of
-them to the public I should have fulfilled but half of my task and my
-duty.
-
-The other half interests me far more keenly. It seems to me that
-after having told the reader all that he ought to know about a man, a
-critic should then try to make a closer and deeper study of him--come
-into contact with his ideas and his soul, form an original judgment of
-him, and in short pass from the iconographie or biographic side to the
-artistic and psychological side of his work. I have tried, therefore,
-to begin where my fellow-workers have left off and to say exactly what
-they do not appear to me to have said.
-
-The things written about Rodin have been mainly literary compositions,
-admiring and lyrical passages, to which his favourite subjects have
-served as texts. Much less has been heard about his personal ideas upon
-the technical principles of sculpture, or about his methods of work.
-The reason of this is primarily a fear of fatiguing the public, to
-whom the technicalities of an art--which involve dry explanations--are
-less interesting than the results. Moreover, it must be owned that
-few writers understand these questions. In painting, as in sculpture,
-persons who do not practise these arts, or who are not sufficiently
-familiar with the brush and the chisel to understand the secrets of
-works of art, even if not to produce them, generally prefer to avoid
-these dangerous aspects and keep to literary eulogy. A work is
-proclaimed great, and the reader is adjured to believe it so, but it is
-infinitely more difficult to give him a clear, technical explanation of
-why that work is great. Towards that quarter, therefore, I have chosen
-to turn, expecting to find there things to say that cannot be read
-elsewhere.
-
-Rodin has not merely created beautiful statues. He is an innovator, (or
-rather a renovator), in his methods of sculpture, and that fact has
-called down severe criticism on his head. A long-standing friendship,
-which I reckon as an honour, has allowed me to have numerous
-conversations with him upon the very basis of his art, upon the manner
-in which he practises it, and upon his ideas in relation to his own
-work and to ancient and modern sculpture. To these ideas the synthetic
-mind of Rodin imparts so much vigour that they are the motives of his
-work and cannot be separated from it. My desire has been to present
-them; and instead of giving the public my own opinions, in passages of
-more or less brilliancy, I wished to give those--so infinitely more
-interesting--which have been uttered by the artist himself. Often,
-in the course of this book, I shall be merely the transcriber while
-he speaks, and I think my readers will be grateful to me for that.
-Furthermore, in regard to technical points and to the way in which
-Rodin conceives composition and modelling, I may--and even, in order to
-inspire a just and necessary confidence, I should--say that when Rodin
-exhibited his _Balzac_ his first innovation in his present manner, he
-had so much faith in my friendship and in my critical powers that he
-entrusted to me the duty of explaining these delicate points in the
-French reviews,[1] and in a later lecture given at the Paris Exhibition
-of 1900, in the pavilion where he was exhibiting the whole of his
-works. These explanations, in their main lines, I have rewritten here.
-In that portion I have endeavoured to do original critical work, after
-having satisfied the biographical demands of the reader. I have avoided
-discussions of too abstract an æstheticism; I believe that everything
-can be said simply and in simple forms; I believe also that even in the
-most subtle questions of art there is an inner light that renders them
-accessible to all whose minds are sincere, and whose hearts are open to
-emotion. But I hope that, in reading this book, people will understand
-very exactly why a statue by Rodin is different from any other statue,
-and why he made it so--a matter which too few writers have explained.
-It is not so much my business to display abundantly the admiration
-which I feel, but which, no more than my friendship, shall induce me to
-turn my essay into a hymn of praise.
-
-Rodin himself is the first man to be wearied by some praises, and a
-just observation upon his methods gives him much more pleasure. Like
-every man of high intelligence, he would rather be understood than
-praised.
-
-I believe myself to be filling a gap and satisfying a wish by giving
-at the end of this volume some remarks upon the artists whom Rodin has
-influenced. He is commonly treated as "a force of nature"; "an isolated
-phenomenon"; people affect to consider him as a sort of immense
-unconscious producer. These are absurd hyperboles. Rodin is a man of
-strong will, logical, and conscious of what he is doing, and strongly
-linked to the Greeks and to the Gothic school; he has very definite
-theories, and several sculptors, of whom Rodin's extreme admirers do
-not speak, preferring to leave their divinity alone in the clouds, draw
-their inspiration from his views. I shall name some men to whom Rodin
-is much attached and in whose work he takes pleasure in following the
-development of his principles, for he knows what he wishes, whence
-he comes and whither he goes, and has a horror of being thought a
-visionary--a phenomenon, as people say in their indiscreet zeal; on the
-contrary, he holds himself to be a real classical artist, whose example
-cannot possibly be harmful. I have thought it well, also, to conclude
-by a summary of the principal works or essays dealing with Rodin, at
-least in France; and by a chronological list of his statues--that is to
-say, of course, an approximate list, for many fragments of this great
-mass of work have been destroyed by Rodin himself, especially in the
-earlier part of his career, before 1877. No such list has ever been
-made, and it may add to the interest of the present volume; I give
-it under the artist's authorisation, for I made it in his house and
-according to his advice.
-
-It is bad to repeat oneself. Yet I am anxious to say once more--and my
-insistence will be understood--that my long friendship and personal
-admiration for Auguste Rodin and my gratitude for the affectionate
-regard that he shows me count for nothing here. A study is asked
-of me, not a panegyric. When I have reckoned up the vast quantity
-of work, the maker's life, theories, talks, doings, and influence,
-very little room will be left for compliments. It will be for the
-reader to think them. Many people who would have had a difficulty
-in talking of sculpture have found Rodin a convenient subject for
-literary declamations--too many for me to wish to imitate them. Such a
-course would be pleasing neither to the artist nor to the public, and
-would content them no more than it would content me. Precise details
-about the man, the work, and the iconography; clear explanations of
-technicalities and ideas--these form all my ambition. The statement of
-facts will be enough to arouse love and admiration for Rodin; louder
-than all praises and with a stronger claim speaks the work of thirty
-years.
-
- C. M.
-
-
-[1] "The Art of Rodin," _Revue des Revues,_ Paris, 15th June, 1898; and
-lecture, 31st July, 1900.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-I. YOUTH AND EARLY WORK OF RODIN--HIS FIRST ATTEMPTS; HIS TIME AT
-CARRIER'S--HIS STAY IN BRUSSELS AND WORK THERE--"THE AGE OF BRASS" AT
-THE SALON OF 1877; THE INCIDENT ARISING IN REGARD TO IT--THE "ST. JOHN
-THE BAPTIST"; BEGINNING OF RODIN'S REPUTATION
-
-II. RODIN'S STUDIO--HIS WORKS FROM 1880 TO 1889--"EVE"; SOME BUSTS;
-THE MONUMENT TO VICTOR HUGO--"THE GATE OF HELL"--"THE DANAID"--THE
-"THOUGHT"--THE EXHIBITION OF CLAUDE MONET AND RODIN, IN 1889--THE
-MONUMENT TO CLAUDE LORRAINE AT NANCY (1892)--"THE BURGHERS OF CALAIS"
-(1888-1895)
-
-III. RODIN'S WORK FROM 1895 TO 1898--SMALL GROUPS--THE STATUE OF
-"BALZAC"--THE INCIDENT OF THE SOCIÉTÉ DES GENS DE LETTRES--THE
-"TECHNIQUE" OF THE "BALZAC"--RODIN'S IDEAS UPON MODELLING AND
-COMPOSITION--HIS OPINIONS ABOUT THE GREEKS, THE GOTHIC STYLE,
-CLASSICISM, AND MYTHOLOGICAL SUBJECTS--RODIN'S "ANTIQUE" PERIOD
-
-IV. WORKS SINCE THE "BALZAC"--SMALL WORKS IN MARBLE--PLAN OF THE
-MONUMENT TO LABOUR--DRAWINGS AND ETCHINGS
-
-V. RODIN'S PRIVATE LIFE--HIS PERSON, STUDIO, AND HOME--HIS INFLUENCE;
-SCULPTORS INSPIRED BY HIS IDEAS--RODIN'S PLACE IN THE FRENCH
-SCHOOL--HIS PRESENT POSITION IN RESPECT TO ACADEMIC SCULPTURE
-
-VI. APPENDIX--CHRONOLOGICAL LIST OF RODIN'S PRINCIPAL WORKS--LIST
-OF THE PRINCIPAL BOOKS OR ARTICLES WRITTEN ABOUT HIM--QUOTATIONS
-REFERRING TO HIM--AN OPINION OF EUGÈNE CARRIÈRE'S; AN OPINION OF
-HENLEY'S--VARIOUS NOTES
-
-INDEX 141
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
- ETERNAL SPRING (photogravure) _Frontispiece_
- THE AGE OF BRASS
- THE AGE OF BRASS
- ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST PREACHING
- EVE
- SKETCH FOR THE MONUMENT TO THE DEFENDERS OF THE NATION
- UGOLINO AND HIS CHILDREN
- BELLONA
- BELLONA
- VICTOR HUGO (dry-point)
- VICTOR HUGO (dry-point)
- BUST OF VICTOR HUGO
- MONUMENT TO VICTOR HUGO (fragment)
- VICTOR HUGO (fragment)
- NEREIDS (group at base of the Victor Hugo monument)
- SHADES (for the top of _The Gate of Hell_)
- THE THINKER
- DANAID
- DANAID
- THOUGHT
- THE FAIR HELMET-MAKER
- A NYMPH (bronze)
- PUVIS DE CHAVANNES
- JEAN PAUL LAURENS
- BUST OF MADAME V.
- THE BURGHERS OF CALAIS
- A BURGHER OF CALAIS
- A BURGHER OF CALAIS
- A BURGHER OF CALAIS
- BALZAC
- BALZAC
- PRIMITIVE MAN
- YOUNG WOMAN BETWEEN GOOD AND EVIL COUNSEL
- IRIS
- NUDE STUDY
- AUGUSTE RODIN
- CORNER OF RODIN'S STUDIO AT MEUDON
- CORNER OF RODIN'S STUDIO AT MEUDON
- STUDY IN BRONZE FOR THE "BALZAC"
- NUDE FIGURE (photographed in the open air, at twilight,
- in the garden in Meudon)
-
-
-
-
-AUGUSTE RODIN
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-
-YOUTH AND EARLY WORK OF RODIN--HIS FIRST ATTEMPTS; HIS TIME AT
-CARRIER'S--HIS STAY IN BRUSSELS AND WORK THERE--"THE AGE OF BRASS" AT
-THE SALON OF 1877; THE INCIDENT ARISING IN REGARD TO IT--THE "ST. JOHN
-THE BAPTIST"; BEGINNING OF RODIN'S REPUTATION
-
-
-Auguste Rodin was born in Paris, in the Val de Grâce quarter, on the
-14th of November, 1840, of a family of humble employés. The child
-at first attended a day-school in the Rue Saint Jacques, then went
-to a boarding-school at Beauvais, kept by his uncle. At fourteen he
-returned to Paris and entered the school of art in the Rue de l'École
-de Médecine. A period of desperate industry at once set in for him.
-
-In addition to the lessons of this little school, where from eight
-to twelve young Rodin learned the elements of drawing, and later on
-of modelling, copied drawings in crayons and reliefs in the Louis
-XVI. style, he went twice a week to Barye's classes at the Jardin
-des Plantes; "Barye," he says, "did not teach us much; he was always
-worried and tired when he came, and always told us that it was very
-good." But Rodin, together with Barye's son and some other lads, had
-arranged a sort of studio for themselves in a cellar of the museum,
-making seats of tree-trunks, and already attempting sculpture. At
-six in the morning he used to go to draw animals, then he copied the
-anatomical objects in the Museum. He remembers that, being too poor to
-buy an anatomy of the horse, he copied it piece by piece. After Barye's
-class, or the classes of the Rue de l'École de Médecine, he would lunch
-on a bit of bread and some chocolate and hasten to the Louvre, and
-in the evenings he would go to draw and study at the Gobelins. Then
-he worked for a maker of ornaments, since it was necessary to earn a
-living. From fourteen to seventeen years old Rodin led this fevered
-existence. "In those three years," he has often repeated to me, "I came
-to understand the meaning of a drawing from the life, the synthesis of
-my art, and the rhythm of animals. I remember that a companion of those
-days,[1] of whom I have since lost sight, made me see, in a couple
-of hours, on a very true and simple principle, an observation of the
-necessary equilibria of movement not taught in the schools, the secret
-of the plans of a figure. That lesson has influenced my whole life. As
-for the ornament-maker, in whose workshop I earned a scanty wage, I
-long deplored being constrained to do so, but I have since thought with
-affection of it, understanding that there are as many sources of beauty
-in ornament as in the face."
-
-His work at the ornament-maker's allowed Rodin to earn his living as an
-art-worker and as a strenuous and silent student; and he vegetated in
-this manner until he attained his twenty-fourth year, never ceasing,
-in spite of his poverty and of his daily labour, to work at sculpture.
-Then he offered himself as an assistant and pupil at the studio of
-Carrier-Belleuse. Carrier-Belleuse was then at the full height of his
-reputation as an elegant sculptor, whose real gifts of spontaneous
-invention were being rendered insipid by his desire to please. Rodin
-remained six years at Carrier-Belleuse's, and worked there without
-gaining much instruction. But he meditated and taught himself. From his
-twenty-fourth year dates the head known as _The Man with the Broken
-Nose_, which is a masterly work, strongly inspired by the antique,
-and already foreshadowing all his future. This clay head, which the
-young man sent to the Salon of 1864, was refused. From time to time
-Rodin tried to compete for admission to the École des Beaux Arts; he
-was thrice refused. This disgusted him with the usual career upon which
-his lack of any income invited him to enter. His ideas, his independent
-temper, his presentiments, and his love of an art personal to himself,
-showed him that he would never gain anything, and never have the
-academic discipline necessary to succeed. He took advantage of an
-opportunity. Carrier-Belleuse had a commission at Brussels and did not
-care to execute it; Rodin got permission from his master, who esteemed
-him, to undertake it in his name, and, after having spent six years
-in the fashionable sculptor's studio, he went to Brussels, where Rude
-had already spent a considerable time. He was destined to remain there
-until 1877, working with the Belgian sculptor, Van Rasbourg, at the
-pediment of the Bourse, where his sign manual may still be seen, as it
-may upon some caryatids of a house on the Boulevard d'Anspach and upon
-some other works.
-
-Of this exile at Brussels we know that the artist retains only kindly
-memories, but he is too sparing of personal details to enable us to
-analyse with any certainty this part of the life of a tenacious,
-concentrated man who, entirely occupied with his dreams, with
-indefatigable study, the anxieties of poverty, and his lonely pride,
-had no desire to be known.
-
-"I worked very hard over there," he says, to sum up the matter. It
-is certain that Rodin was at this time already in possession of
-that formidable will which led to his success, and also of that
-disdainful obstinacy which prefers obscurity and lack of success to
-any compromise. He speaks little or not at all of the drama that was
-being worked out in him at this time, or of the way in which he refined
-and cultivated his perceptions, nor of the painting lessons that he
-took of Lecoq de Boisbaudron, in company of Alphonse Legros, who
-became his intimate friend; but this influence of Lecoq de Boisbaudron
-must not pass unnoted. It does great honour to that master teacher
-who has formed so many eminent modern artists. His seven years' stay
-at Brussels allowed Rodin to live modestly but decently, amid quiet
-surroundings, to reflect, and to shape himself intellectually; it was a
-sort of spiritual retreat that did him good, apart from the fact that
-he gained a thorough knowledge of the Flemish Primitives and of the
-Gothic masters who were so strongly to influence him. No biography,
-however, could render comprehensible the way in which, for example, the
-brain of a low-born and poor child was able, amid poverty and incessant
-manual labour, to grow into the wide and deep brain of a thinker
-familiar with the synthesis of art; these things are the secrets of
-personality.
-
-[Illustration: THE AGE OF BRASS]
-
-Rodin was destined to emerge suddenly from obscurity at the age of
-thirty-seven, that is to say, at a time of life when many men think
-themselves hopelessly sacrificed, and when he had already produced
-much and suffered much; for it may be said that the whole of his work
-from 1855-75 is unknown and lost, and yet what labour it represents!
-Except _The Man with the Broken Nose_, none of it is ever mentioned;
-the pediment of the Bourse at Brussels is crumbling away, time is
-devouring Rodin's work upon it no less than Van Rasbourg's; he will not
-speak of the many figures that he made to the order of Carrier-Belleuse
-and interpreted according to his own free inspiration; and he only
-occasionally alludes to a large figure that was broken in a household
-removal, and was, in his opinion, one of the best he ever made in his
-life. In 1876 _The Man with the Broken Nose,_ in marble, was admitted
-to the Salon. This determined Rodin in 1877 to send in his statue, _The
-Age of Brass,_ and this gave rise to an incident, the very injustice of
-which was to bring him into notice.
-
-The jury,[2] astonished by this work, admitted it, but accused the
-artist of having taken a cast from life, so perfect was the modelling.
-The practice of taking a cast from the life is unhappily frequent,
-and we know he praised academicians who employ this artistic fraud
-without any scruple. Rodin protested. He had had a Belgian soldier for
-his model in Brussels: he had photographs taken of him and sent them
-to the jury, who did not even open the packet, and persisted in the
-allegations. Three sculptors, however, Desbois, Fagel, and Lefèvre, who
-thenceforward became Rodin's friends, protested in his favour, some
-critics spoke of the affair, and Rodin's work made so much impression
-that the secretary of the Fine Arts, Turquet, bought _The Age of Brass_
-(which stood for a long time in the Luxembourg Gardens and is now in
-the museum).
-
-Rodin waited until 1880 to exhibit _St. John the Baptist_. Meanwhile
-Turquet had conceived a friendship for him and wished to wipe out the
-unjust accusation brought against _The Age of Brass._ The inspectors
-of the Fine Arts department disowned the purchase of that work and
-declared it cast from life. Rodin, discouraged, remained silent; a
-chance saved him. As he was continuing to look for work in order to
-support his young wife and himself, and to defray the expenses of his
-art, he chanced to be executing a group of children in a composition
-for the sculptor Boucher. His facility was prodigious; Boucher saw
-him improvise the group in a few hours and went, thunderstruck, to
-tell some of his friends. He had the honesty to declare that such
-a man, having done thus before his own eyes, was capable of making
-_The Age of Brass._ Chapu, Thomas, Falguière, Delaplanche, Chaplin,
-Carrier-Belleuse, and Paul Dubois insisted loyally, and Rodin's cause
-was won. Turquet, delighted, and free to act, bought the _St. John the
-Baptist_ and gave Rodin a commission. Then the artist answered: "I
-am ready to fulfil it. But to prove surely that I do not take casts
-from the life I will make little bas-reliefs--an immense work with
-small figures, and I think of taking the subject from Dante." This
-was the origin of that celebrated _Gate of Hell_, which is not yet
-completed, and which, continually handled afresh, has finally become
-the central motive of all Rodin's dreams, the storehouse of his ideas
-and researches.
-
-[Illustration: THE AGE OF BRASS]
-
-From that time forward (1880) Rodin was what he is to-day; he had
-emerged, once for all, from obscurity, and went on to display without
-interruption and without hesitation the succession of works that have
-rendered him celebrated. He knew his path, his method, his field of
-thought. From the age of sixteen to that of forty he had, by unknown
-persistent labour, been ripening his individuality. And his work,
-from _The Age of Brass_ to the _Balzac_, is but a visible development
-of that hidden period. The period from the _Balzac_ to our own day
-testifies to a new theory that he has framed. But one may say that
-the Rodin of the years from 1877 to 1897 was entirely contained in
-the unknown man of the preceding period. It was, indeed, that slow
-preparation that gave to the revelation of the works that appearance
-of certainty, of sudden mastery, which so struck people's minds. We
-are accustomed to see artists make youthful successes with works of
-brilliant promise, then we follow their course and see them growing
-greater. Rodin came to light in twenty-four hours. He was thought to
-be a young beginner; his past struggle was unknown; people were aware
-of him only when he had done with scruples and had, as he says, "made
-peace with himself." From this fact came his prestige. From it came
-also his well-defined attitude in regard to academic art.
-
-[Illustration: ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST PREACHING]
-
-We need to recall the graceful, effeminate, and conventional statuary
-of the generation from 1865 to 1875 in order to comprehend fully
-what _The Age of Brass_ and _St. John the Baptist_ brought into the
-exhibitions when they made their appearance there. Rough truth, a sense
-of movement, an intense realism, an absolute scorn of the pleasing, a
-lofty style, a deep feeling of organic life, power due to the eager
-love of form, of muscular formation and physical activity; all these
-things inevitably shocked the gentle sculptors who were enamoured of
-the academic style and of mythology. Moreover, Rodin was unknown;
-he had no claim, knew nobody, had never asked for anything, and was
-a son of the people. That Carrier-Belleuse's former workman should
-take upon himself to make statues all by himself aroused scorn. His
-technical skill was so great that there could be no possibility of
-denying it. Therefore, in spite, the accusation of casting from the
-life was invented. The accusers did not reflect upon the splendid
-testimonial that would be given to the artist if he should succeed in
-proving that his skill alone had created this perfection. The amusing
-thing is that the same people who declared this skill too great to be
-anything but a reproduction, accused Rodin, twenty years later, over
-his _Balzac_, of not knowing his craft! Apart from this question of
-fact, and these professional jealousies, the style of these works could
-not fail to displease. In them there was already a sort of symbolic
-and savage beauty, which has become a characteristic of Rodin's art.
-The pained, awakening movement of the man in _The Age of Brass_, the
-gesture of _St. John the Baptist_, and still more his wild face with
-its open mouth, were so much outside the usual conventions as to make
-everybody feel that here was an artist resolved to take no account of
-the "École" and its principles. These two splendid studies of the nude
-already contained a very special thought. Rodin, therefore, was hated
-in the first place as a man who would be revolutionary. He was hated
-because he was powerful, because he emerged suddenly from obscurity,
-and because he was felt to possess an obstinate individuality. It was
-also for these very reasons that warm sympathies went out to Rodin
-from among artists opposed to the spirit of the "École," and from
-independent writers who divined in him a man capable of expressing in
-his art thoughts and emotions that had ceased to be found in art.
-
-[Illustration: EVE.]
-
-
-[1] This unknown student was called Constant Simon. Rodin remembers him
-as a remarkable man.
-
-[2] The hanging committee of the Salon is called a "jury."--TRANS.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-RODIN'S STUDIO--HIS WORKS FROM 1880 TO 1889--"EVE"; SOME BUSTS;
-THE MONUMENT TO VICTOR HUGO--"THE GATE OF HELL"--"THE DANAID"--THE
-"THOUGHT"--THE EXHIBITION OF CLAUDE MONET AND RODIN, IN 1889--THE
-MONUMENT TO CLAUDE LORRAINE AT NANCY (1892)--"THE BURGHERS OF CALAIS"
-(1888-1895)
-
-
-Rodin's previous works, from 1881 to 1889, had been produced in modest
-abodes in the Rue des Fourneaux and the Boulevard de Vaugirard, and
-later, in a little studio, granted by the Government, at the Dépôt des
-Marbres, in the Rue de l'Université, where a certain number of studios
-are given to sculptors. From 1889 onwards the Government granted Rodin
-two larger studios there, which he still occupies. At a later date
-he also had, at his own expense, a studio in an odd corner of the
-Boulevard d'Italie, at a place called the Clos Payen, besides a house
-at Sèvres, and eventually one at Meudon, in which he still lives and of
-which I shall speak again. Among these were distributed his studies
-and his finished works: _The Gate of Hell_ was sketched in at the Rue
-de l'Université, and there, too, Rodin's assistants are at work upon
-his present groups.
-
-[Illustration: SKETCH FOR A COMPETITION. MONUMENT TO THE DEFENDERS OF
-THE COUNTRY]
-
-From 1879 Rodin worked at Sèvres, having been introduced by
-Carrier-Belleuse, and a vase decorated by him may be seen there.
-In 1880 he made a fine competitive design for the _Monument to the
-Defenders of the Nation,_ which was not accepted. In 1881 he made a
-figure of _Adam_, which he destroyed, and an _Eve,_ which must be
-reckoned among his noblest creations--an _Eve_ ashamed of her faults,
-bowed down by terror, vaguely tormented less by remorse for her sin
-than by the idea of having created beings for future sorrow. This
-_Eve_ is a bronze of formidable appearance and all Rodin breathes in
-it. As in the _St. John the Baptist,_ we feel the effect of a definite
-conception of sculpture, but here the design is more spiritual and the
-scheme of modelling simpler and larger. From that time onward we shall
-find the artist producing regularly, putting forth a peaceful power,
-and working in complete possession of himself, not free certainly
-from doubts and searchings, but allowing nothing of the sort to be
-seen. Rodin's way of working is very peculiar; he does not begin one
-piece of work, carry it to its conclusion, and then devote himself to
-another. He has had from the outset a certain number of thoughts that
-correspond to forms, and although he has only shown his works one after
-another, he has nevertheless elaborated them side by side, working at
-them simultaneously and modifying them one by another. Thus _The Gate
-of Hell_ has been made and remade for more than twenty years; thus
-the monument to Hugo, not yet handed over, goes back, by the sketches
-for it, to 1886; while the studies for _The Burghers of Calais_ date
-from 1888, though the monument was only completed in 1895; thus, too,
-among the little groups on which Rodin is still at work, are many that
-have grown out of rough sketches made fifteen years ago. Rodin has a
-store of ideas and emotions dear to him, upon which he has patiently
-meditated, which he has promised himself to execute, and which he
-brings to ripeness in silence, remaining throughout long years without
-appearing to concern himself with them. "Strength and patience" might
-be his characteristic motto. Like all great artists, he thought out
-the essential lines of his work at once, lines that I shall define at
-the end of this book. His is a synthetic and generalising mind, which
-can only begin its active course after slow meditation, and conceives
-no isolated thing; spontaneous and at the same time prudent. He had
-that time of meditation at Brussels, not hastening to produce, not
-permitting himself to express an idea until he had prepared in detail
-the technical expression, the necessities of the craftsman.
-
-[Illustration: UGOLINO AND HIS CHILDREN]
-
-The _Ugolino_, a cast, of which Rodin exhibited the first sketch in
-1882, is the first sign of that preoccupation with Dante, which was to
-be shown in all his later work. He has read comparatively few things,
-and that designedly; he attaches himself strongly to a few great and
-profound works, and meditates upon them indefatigably. His whole
-symbolic imagination has been fed by Dante and his whole sensuous
-imagination by Baudelaire. These two gloomy poets have impressed him,
-and it may be said that he has absorbed them. Almost all Rodin's great
-symbolic figures refer to the _Inferno_, and all his little groups of
-lovers have the neurotic subtlety, the refined, homesick melancholy
-of the _Fleurs du Mal._ He has a constant need to evolve from realism
-to general ideas, from thought to delight or sorrow, and the ideal of
-Dante or of Baudelaire is strangely mingled in him with love of the
-antique and worship of mythology. It is, indeed, this quite individual
-fusion that forms the basis of his personality. The _Ugolino_, which
-was exhibited, first alone and then with his dying children, over
-whom he is crouching, haggard and already almost like a wild beast,
-is a tragic and powerful work. The same year Rodin produced the bust
-of Alphonse Legros, which has taken so high a place in England in
-the opinion of the best judges, and in that of the lamented W. E.
-Henley, whose penetrating criticism paid homage from the first to our
-sculptor's art.
-
-[Illustration: BELLONA _Page_ 17]
-
-[Illustration: BELLONA]
-
-_The Genius of War,_ the _Monument to General Lynch_, and the very
-curious _Bellona,_ date from 1883; the _President Vicunha_[1] and a
-_Bust of a Young Woman_, from 1884. This was rather a period of groping
-than of production; Rodin was continuing his studies, and becoming
-more confirmed in his technical methods. We must go on to the year
-1885 to reach the revelation of three of his finest sculptures--the
-three busts of _Dalou_, _Victor Hugo,_ and _Antonin Proust_, which
-powerfully declare his personality. These are works that are not
-disputable, that cannot be accused of having a "literary" intention,
-mere bits of sculpture giving evidence of mastery and showing surfaces,
-planes, and high lights worthy of the very finest busts of the French
-school. As time goes by, the ideas, the philosophy, the symbolism,
-the "dramatisation" of Rodin's compositions may come to be disputed,
-or exact comprehension of them may be lost; but works like these will
-always, by their mere professional worth, bear witness for him. Life,
-thought, strength, and character are carried as far as is possible. The
-bust of Hugo was the outcome of some few studies that the artist was
-able to make from the life. Hugo declared David of Angers to have made
-so good a bust of him that he considered it unnecessary ever to sit
-again. Rodin wished to obtain sittings, but failed; the poet admitted
-him to his table, and merely said to him, "Come when you like, observe
-me ... and do what you can." At table Rodin took sketches of Hugo in
-cigarette-paper books; he had a stand and some clay in the ante-room,
-and from time to time he would run in to note down anything that had
-just struck him.
-
-VICTOR HUGO. (DRY POINT)
-
-VICTOR HUGO. (DRY-POINT)
-
-In this manner was that admirable bust completed, which (with the two
-etchings here reproduced) was the only material of which Rodin could
-make use for the Hugo with the bowed head of his future monument, the
-commission for which was given him by the Government after the death of
-the national poet in 1883, and which is on the eve of completion.
-
-The next year (1886) Rodin exhibited the scheme of the monument itself,
-which has since undergone several variations, but of which the central
-theme is always as follows: Hugo, naked and half-draped, like a god,
-is seated on a rock at the edge of the sea. With his outstretched left
-arm he makes a silencing gesture towards the sea and the Nereids,
-and thus begs them to let him listen to the Muse of his Inner Voice,
-who rises, pensively, behind him, and to the Muse of Anger, who,
-crouched on a rock above his head, seems ready to fly up into the
-sky. This Muse may also be interpreted as an Ins, the messenger of
-the voices of the elements, and the Muse of the Inner Voice is also
-called Meditation. She is of the greatest beauty; hers is one of the
-figures in which, before the _Balzac_, Rodin indicates his new method
-of amplifying the relief and systematically altering the proportions,
-in order--according to an idea which I shall analyse in detail in
-the next chapter--to secure a decorative effect. Nothing can be more
-expressive and more supernatural than the harmonious sadness of this
-great drooping shape; it is really a soul incarnated in a movement of
-modesty and secret contemplation that disturbs and moves us as we gaze.
-The Hugo himself is truly Olympian in the majesty of his gesture, the
-vastness of his heroic nudity, and the magic of the shadow that bathes
-his face bowed partly down over his breast; and the monument as a whole
-is of magnificent decorative unity. There are to be two monuments
-to Victor Hugo, one for the Pantheon, the other for the Luxembourg
-Gardens, and they are to have slight variations, not in the attitude
-of Hugo himself, but in the significance and style of the adjacent
-figures. These two monuments, however, have not been accepted without
-great difficulties caused by the very nature of Rodin's conception; and
-the fact that they are accepted has not prevented the Place Victor Hugo
-from being disfigured by a hideous and gigantic monument, the work of
-Barrias, which fills the place of those that Rodin had not completed.
-Rodin's slowness, which arises from the scrupulous circumspection
-of his mind--never satisfied with itself--and from his habit of working
-simultaneously at several subjects, has always contributed towards
-driving away official commissions from him; while the jealousy of
-his fellows and the exceptional character of his work have further
-helped to bring about strained relations between him and the official
-circle. Rodin does not care about pleasing or about being understood
-by everybody, and he has no idea of concessions. Thus almost all his
-important works have given rise to incidents likely to disturb his
-peace and hinder his work.
-
-[Illustration: BUST OF VICTOR HUGO.]
-
-[Illustration: VICTOR HUGO MONUMENT. (A FRAGMENT)]
-
-[Illustration: VICTOR HUGO. (A FRAGMENT)]
-
-Together with the sketch of the Hugo monument, a bust of Henry Becque,
-and a curious etching made from it, Rodin exhibited in 1886 the first
-drawings belonging to _The Gate of Hell_, or at least to the work which
-people have agreed to call by that title. I have already related the
-origin of that Government commission. In the beginning Rodin had been
-asked to make a door in high-relief, intended for the Musée des Arts
-Décoratifs. But the sculptor's imagination, beset by ideas of Dante,
-soon deviated from the original scheme. The door really exists in the
-studio of the Rue de l'Université, under the aspect of a vast rough
-model in plaster and beams, in the very simple shape of a two-leaved
-door 19 ½ feet high, with a frieze, a tympanum, and two lateral
-capitals. It was, at first, to have been surmounted by the two figures
-of Adam and Eve, but Rodin gave them up. He now seems determined to
-place the _Shades_, here reproduced, in the highest plane.[2] On the
-uppermost beam _The Thinker_ is to be seated. In the panels of the
-door and upon the wide uprights are enshrined figures--to the number
-of over a hundred--detached in high-relief, exactly as upon the gates
-of the Baptistery in Florence, which Rodin has, quite simply, taken
-as his model. These figures were, at first, direct interpretations
-from Dante, in particular Paolo and Francesca da Rimini and divers
-inhabitants of the Inferno. Then Rodin intermingled figures due solely
-to his inspirations from Baudelaire and to his own sharp perception
-of tragic perversity. He enlarged Dante's conception as he modernised
-it, and has ended by making this door into what he smilingly calls
-"my Noah's Ark." That means that he is continually putting in little
-figures which replace others; there, plastered into the niches left
-by unfinished figures, he places everything that he improvises,
-everything that seems to him to correspond in character and subject
-with that vast confusion of human passions. The size of these figures
-is greatly restricted; the largest scarcely exceed thirty-nine inches
-in height. The dimensions of the final rendering, however, still remain
-to be fixed. The splendid figure called _The Thinker_ is carried out
-in bronze larger than life, and Rodin is credited with an intention of
-bringing up all the other figures to the same dimensions, which would
-represent an unheard-of outlay and a gate nearly a hundred feet high--a
-Cyclopean work indeed! _The Thinker_, who has been so called on account
-of the likeness between his attitude and that of Michael Angelo's
-_Pensieroso_, is much more truly an image, with his stunted body and
-a primitive man's face, of the cave-dweller, the prognathous savage
-beholding the crimes and passions of his progeny unroll themselves
-below him. Immediately beneath him may be seen the most celebrated
-characters of the Dante cycle, notably the lovers of Rimini entwined
-and falling into hell.[3] Then as we descend towards the ground the
-figures become more independent of the subject, more personally
-invented by the artist, and at the foot we find "women damned," such as
-Baudelaire conceived, amid characters from heathen mythology.
-
-[Illustration: NEREIDS (Group at the base of the Victor Hugo monument.)]
-
-It may thus be said that, although, perhaps, the celebrated doorway
-may never be finished, it is a storehouse of Rodin's creations. It
-stands by him as a theme for inspirations, and he brings into it a
-whole category of thoughts and works, never troubling himself about the
-architecture or the actual scheme. He will be for ever improvising some
-little figure, shaping the notation of some feeling, idea, or form, and
-this he plants in his door, studies it against the other figures, then
-takes it out again, and if need be, breaks it up and uses the fragments
-for other attempts. Many of these little figures have developed into
-important separate groups. Rodin is ruled primarily by the need to
-create and to satisfy an irresistible vocation; he cares little what
-may be the ultimate transformation of his inventions, and his sculpture
-is, furthermore, so conceived that it may be executed on a large scale
-or a small; this is indeed so much the case that it is often impossible
-to judge from a photograph what are the dimensions.
-
-
-[Illustration: SHADES (For the top of "The Gate of Hell".)]
-
-_The Gate of Hell_ might therefore better be called "the Pandemonium,"
-or some quite other name. If it were to be carried out it could not
-contain all the figures destined for it by the artist. There they
-stand, innumerable, ranged on shelves beside the rough model of the
-door, representing the entire evolution of Rodin's inspiration, and
-forming what I call, with his consent, "the diary of his life as a
-sculptor." To enumerate these figures and groups would take too long;
-suffice to say that the larger part of Rodin's small marbles and
-bronzes are but completions of these sketches, and that on account of
-the essentially decorative character of the outlines and the intense
-originality of the proportion and balance of the figures, they can
-be conceived either as statuettes or as lifesized works. Such as it
-is, _The Gate of Hell_ is the plan of a piece of work unique in the
-sculpture of modern days, a plan slowly elaborated, and of which every
-detail has been foreseen and analysed for years. No one has dared to
-undertake so audacious an assemblage of figures upon such a scheme, and
-the scheme is present to Rodin in its entirety. He by no means forgets
-the decorative effect nor the harmonious aspects, the concords that the
-gate should have, and if ever Government should require him to deliver
-his work he would be able to do so without delay. Twenty years in the
-studio have matured it in his mind. The work that Dante inspired has
-assumed a more general significance. Low-relief, high-relief, figures
-standing free, groups, single figures, all the styles of sculpture are
-gathered into the symphony of a throng, lost amid whirling mists of
-hell and converging towards the figure of the Thinker. The conception
-embraces centuries. Ugolino is there, and so are centaurs, female
-fauns, satyrs, and creatures dreamed of by Baudelaire, abstract
-personifications of vices--in particular, there is the extraordinary
-group of the miser dying of hunger over his treasure beside a
-prostitute _(Avarice and Lewdness)._ The Thinker, in his austere nudity
-and pensive strength, is at one and the same time the alarmed Adam,
-the implacable Dante, and the compassionate Virgil of this frightful
-unrestrained humanity, but he is, above all, the ancestor, the first
-man, simple and unconscious, looking down on what he has begotten. The
-symbolism and philosophy of the artist are independent of any religious
-doctrine; his spiritual ardour excels in setting free the symbols of
-the various creeds, and he is supported mainly by deep and incessant
-consultation of nature, and by his exceptional sense of expression
-in movements. He attains the decorative harmony of his work not by
-additions, but by systematic suppressions, as the Gothic artists and
-those of the Renascence did.
-
-[Illustration: THE THINKER]
-
-_The Gate of Hell_ is the outcome of studies made by Rodin from the
-Gothic sculptors, during his stay in Brussels. In this, and in _The
-Burghers of Calais_, he resumes the deep influence that he there
-underwent. As to the influence that the antique had upon him, that only
-showed itself later, in his smaller works in marble, and especially
-in the _Balzac_ and recent productions. The _Gate_ corresponds to the
-period in which Rodin's great aim was to create, through intensity
-of movement and originality of attitude and outline, a _new system
-of the dramatic_ in his art, which the taste of the day had frozen
-into a false "neo-Greek nobility," obtained by immobility, by inertia
-of outline, and by a fear of seeing too living a movement break the
-general harmony. To seek a fresh harmony in the very study of movement,
-to create, side by side with _static_ art, a _dynamic_ art, such, in a
-brief formula, was Rodin's idea.
-
-He was shortly to exhibit a work which was still more significant of
-the thoughts with which he was busy. For, though I have spoken at once
-of that famous _Gate,_ which is the _leit-motiv_ of Rodin's art, it
-must be remembered that in 1886 nothing was known of it but drawings.
-Only by degrees have groups and fragments of it been seen, and the
-work itself has never left the studio in the Rue de l'Université. It
-was _The Burghers of Calais_ which revealed most clearly to the public
-Rodin's capabilities in the way of style and of composing a whole work,
-and I will speak of the _Burghers_ in this chapter, although the work
-was not completed until 1892 and was not set up in Calais until 1895.
-
-[Illustration: DANAID]
-
-[Illustration: DANAID]
-
-[Illustration: THOUGHT]
-
-In 1887 we may note _Perseus and the Gorgon_, and a marble _Head of
-the beheaded St. John_, which belongs to the Marchioness of Carcano.
-In 1888 was exhibited the exquisite _Danaid,_ one of the most tender
-female figures that were ever lovingly moulded by this sculptor of
-the energetic, and one which has a subtle delicacy of soul that seems
-strangely placed between two works of power. At the same time a naked
-figure was also shown at the Exposition des Beaux Arts, in Brussels--a
-_Man Walking_, which was no other than one of the _Burghers,_ and
-of which the robust execution made an impression. The year 1889 marked
-an increase of the artist's activity. He was busy upon preparatory work
-for the monument of Claude Lorraine, which he had been commissioned to
-make for Nancy. He was going on with _The Gate of Hell._ He completed a
-statue of Bastien-Lepage for the cemetery of Damvilliers. He began upon
-the busts of the art critics, Octave Mirbeau and Roger Marx, finished
-an admirable little _Dream-Group_ in marble, in which a young man is
-lying back and trying to hold fast a sphinx-woman who takes flight,
-wild and fateful. An impressionist sketch of _Hecuba_, crouching down
-and shrieking, and _Thought_, in marble, completed the record of this
-well-filled year. _Thought,_ a proud, sweet head rising from a block,
-is one of Rodin's best known works and the very symbol of his art.
-It occupies a place in the Museum of the Luxembourg, where it is in
-company with _The Danaid,_ the _St. John, The Kiss,_ a masterly female
-bust, and a bronze statuette. _The Fair Helmet-Maker,_ from Villon's
-poem, is a work on a very small scale, but containing the depth and
-strength of tragedy--the whole drama of a human body's ruin.
-
-[Illustration: THE FAIR HELMET-MAKER]
-
-
-In 1889 Rodin and Claude Monet together held, in the George Petit
-gallery, an exhibition which has remained famous and which united
-our two greatest artists. Rodin sent to it the _Women Damned_, the
-_Beheaded St. John_, some _Fauns_ and _Bacchantes_, _Bastien-Lepage,_
-in all some thirty works, among which was _The Burghers of Calais_,
-shown complete for the first time. The sensation produced was immense.
-Rodin now tasted unmistakable fame, and his reputation spread all over
-the world. This fame, however, did not disarm the official circle, and
-not until the last three or four years have the critics been unanimous
-in their praise of the great French sculptor, whose every important
-work has given occasion to a battle, because its beauty arose from
-principles opposed to the whole system taught in the schools.
-
-The five following years were marked by various works which did not,
-however, interfere with the threefold parallel continuation of the
-_Victor Hugo, The Burghers of Calais,_ and _The Gate of Hell_, which
-were exhibited in various states in the Salon. Rodin considers it his
-duty, indeed, to submit to the public the phases of his work, rough
-attempts, clay, marbles, or bronzes, before the final completion; and
-understanding very well that his style is, or seems to be difficult,
-he thus explains himself to the public in the exhibitions, and allows
-people to follow the stages through which his thought passes. In
-addition to these works may be noted, for the year 1890, the bust
-of a young woman, in silver, _Brother and Sister_, bronze, and the
-_Torso_ of St. John the Baptist. In 1891, _The Caryatid_, a marble
-figure of a young woman with a stone upon her shoulder, the group of
-_The Young Mother_ (first bronze and then marble), and _A Nymph._ In
-1892, the busts of _Rochefort_ and of _Puvis de Chavannes,_ which, with
-those of _Dalou, Jean Paul Laurens_, _Hugo_, and _Falguière,_ form
-an incomparable series from Rodin's hand of portraits that surpass
-all modern French sculpture, and are admirable alike in execution and
-expression. The _Puvis de Chavannes_ is perhaps the finest; it is a
-work that does not pall even beside Donatello himself. In 1892 the
-_Burghers_ and the _Claude Lorraine_ were completed. The _Burghers_
-waited three years for their setting up, but the monument to Lorraine
-was inaugurated immediately, thanks to the devoted efforts of that
-great art-worker in glass, Émile Gallé, and of Roger Marx, who by
-his writings and his incessant activity has had a most noble effect
-upon modern French art. These two eminent men, both natives of Nancy,
-enforced the acceptance of the work. The monument consists of a statue
-of Lorraine, standing, palette in hand, his head raised eagerly towards
-the east, and of a pedestal from which Apollo and his rearing horses
-stand out in splendid high-relief. Thus did Rodin seek to pay homage
-to the master-painter who adored movement in light, by acclaiming
-both these in his turn. Fault has been found with the importance of
-the pedestal in comparison with the statue, the objectors failing to
-understand that this allegory of Apollo incarnated the very soul of
-the great artist whose effigy towered over the whole work, and that
-this whole could not be dissevered. The idea animating this composition
-was criticised by the authorities. Here, once more, Rodin with his
-symbolic vision, his tendency to bold simplifications of the general,
-synthetic idea, was found disturbing. He was asked for the _sculptured
-portrait_ of a man, and he preferred to give prominence to a symbol
-that expressed the dream and the essential genius of that man, the
-sun-painter--an idea which was logical, but which ran counter to
-the received prejudice as to portrait statues. The propagandist
-persistence of Gallé and Roger Marx, however, convinced the people of
-Nancy, who are now very proud of their monument. The horses and the
-Apollo are the most living, palpitating, and lyrical things that Rodin
-has produced.
-
-[Illustration: PUVIS DE CHAVANNES]
-
-[Illustration: JEAN-PAUL LAURENS]
-
-In 1893 Rodin made the bust of Madame _Séverine,_ the medallion of
-_César Franck,_ and several works in marble; _Galatea, The Death of
-Adonis, The Education of Achilles,_ and _The Wave._ From 1894 date
-the _Eternal Spring,_ one of his tenderest and purest works, besides
-an _Orpheus and Eurydice,_ an _Adonis and Venus,_ and finally _Christ
-and the Magdalen._ For, by degrees, he was returning to religious and
-mythological subjects, after having expressed only general symbols
-or pieces of pure realism; and I shall have to call attention at a
-later point to the original manner in which Rodin was bold enough to
-interpret these subjects which the academic classicism seemed to have
-worn out and left insipid for ever.
-
-The year 1895 at last beheld the inauguration, on the 3rd of June, of
-_The Burghers of Calais_ at Calais. To the same year belongs another
-fine work in marble: _Illusion, the Daughter of Icarus,_ besides
-a vigorous bronze, _The Crouching Man,_ a medallion of _Octave
-Mirbeau,_ and--at this early date--some nude studies for the _Balzac,_
-for the _Balzac_ was studied minutely in the nude, a point of which
-many people know nothing, before appearing draped in the famous
-dressing-gown which was destined, in 1898, to arouse so much clamour.
-
-[Illustration: BUST OF MADAME V.]
-
-The _Burghers_ were set up, by subscription, in a square in Calais.[4]
-
-The monument is one in which Rodin has deliberately departed from
-all the rules of official art. These require that the effect should
-be pursued primarily by a compact grouping, the same thought being
-translated by the same gesture from all the persons. Rodin, on the
-contrary, desired to leave their full individuality to his six burghers
-going in their shirts and with halters on their necks to surrender
-themselves to King Edward, and he has isolated them on their one
-base. These six men are walking, one behind the other, two by two,
-half naked and miserable, with their emaciated faces--men besieged,
-sacrificed. One devotion unites them in the name of their town's
-salvation, but their characters and their thoughts remain distinct,
-and in each may be read a different drama of the conscience. They
-have not the factitious enthusiasm and the declamatory gesture with
-which an ordinary sculptor would have thought well to furnish them;
-they are simply citizens who have resolved to fulfil a fatal duty,
-and are going to perform it without cowardice, but nevertheless were,
-yesterday, trades-people and family-men with no pretensions to the
-heroic. They bear with them their regrets, their inner heartbreak, and
-are not thinking of striking an attitude in the eyes of history. They
-are the unknown, obscure heroes of a fatality such as often arose in
-their rough times; and of how many dead men, devoted like them, has
-history forgotten the deeds and names! There is Eustace de St. Pierre,
-with his shaven magistrate's face, stiff and controlled, carrying the
-key of the town; behind him Andrieux d'Andres, with his hands clenched
-over his sobbing face, turns back, this last time, towards the city.
-Jean de Fiennes, with his rough beard and weak, old man's shoulders, is
-listening to Jean d'Aire, who, younger than he, is murmuring words that
-perhaps confide to him his horror of death, and entreat from the old
-man encouragement in renunciation. But in front of all the others the
-two brothers, Jacques and Pierre de Wissant, advance resolutely; and
-one turns back to hasten his friends, while one exhorts them, pointing
-with a restrained gesture towards heaven.
-
-[Illustration: THE BURGHERS OF CALAIS]
-
-The entire reality of these figures is no less striking than their
-ideality, just as is the case in the beautiful creations of the
-"Primitives." These are men whose absolutely real nakedness reveals
-itself beneath the coarse sacks that clothe them, a nakedness not
-harmonised into any style, but shown in all its veracity by an artist
-who has chosen models suitable to his characters without any care to
-arrange them or to give them that pretended _beauty_ which would be
-merely a falsehood and an enfeeblement. These are six wretched men,
-shivering with cold and anguish. The scene is as close as possible
-to history, and the faces are real--ugly or ordinary. But an idea
-transfigures them. The tragedy of their sacrifice gives them a strange
-greatness, and they become fine because their soul is fine. We guess
-the gradation of their reflections: none faces his fate just like
-another, and the reason is that, though what they will is one, what
-they leave is different for each, and everything in them speaks, from
-their faces down to the least attitude of their limbs. Their expression
-is sober; a heavy silence enwraps them; we follow them with our
-eyes as the dwellers in Calais must have done from the heights of
-their walls; and they are so grouped that from every point we see them
-separately, presenting a distinct aspect, and yet the one base unites
-and uplifts them. This is a marvel of psychological composition.
-
-Technical skill assists this composition; we find the power of the
-_St. John_, but more simplification. Only the essential lines attract
-the eye, the details are subsidiary to the whole. Admirable bits of
-flesh modelling are only noticed after long examination; the substance
-is scarcely thought of, so much is the mind held at first by the
-intellectual drama, and this was what Rodin desired. These six beings,
-side by side, are august in their sorrow, and they move us by means of
-their simplicity and by the absence of any theatrical gesture. We feel
-the bodies under the shirts, for Rodin made six complete models in the
-nude before he threw upon them these rags of stuff and knotted ropes.
-The feet are strongly attached to the earth; we guess that their limbs
-are heavy, because, though their will bids them walk, every step leads
-towards death. The impression is extraordinary and such as perhaps no
-sculpture ever gave before. This is a reality of all time: the epic of
-the sacrifice of the humble. As for the style, it recalls the Gothic
-sculptors by the rugged power of the moulding, the asceticism of the
-heads, and the strength of the knotty limbs. We are compelled to think
-of the Flemish "primitives," and especially of those genial Burgundian
-sculptors and image-makers of genius who produced the immortal figures
-of Philippe Pot's tomb in the Louvre. There is the same desire for
-expression in sculpture, which seeks beauty solely in intensity of
-character, and finds style in the sincere study of reality--all
-these things concurring towards the greater synthesis of the work's
-general thought. Rodin there shows himself an essentially French and
-northern artist, alien from all that the academies, hypnotised by the
-Italianism of the second Renascence, have chosen to invent as dogmas
-of beauty. _The Burghers of Calais_ is a work of the true French
-classic tradition--of the national classicality which has nothing in
-common with that classicality imported from Italy in 1550 by which our
-indigenous artists have so long been oppressed, thanks to the "École
-de Rome." Standing before such a creation we recognise this truth
-sharply--this truth which is the secret of Rodin's genius and of
-the enthusiasm that he aroused. Better than Rude, better than Barye,
-better even than Carpeaux, has he found the way to free himself, and to
-go back, by power of thought and mastery, to our true national lineage.
-
-[Illustration: A BURGHER OF CALAIS]
-
-[Illustration: A BURGHER OF CALAIS]
-
-[Illustration: A BURGHER OF CALAIS]
-
-The _Burghers_ ought, according to Rodin's idea, to be placed in front
-of the old Hotel de Ville of Calais, facing the sea; and he wished
-the group to be placed on a very high pedestal, so that the figures
-should stand out against the open sky, or else, on the other hand,
-almost on the level, so that everyone could walk round them, live with
-them, almost elbow them. A bad site has been chosen and a pedestal of
-moderate height and ordinary appearance. The _Burghers_ are very fine
-all the same, and are certainly the most powerful piece of sculpture
-of the epoch. I have promised to be sober in my praises of Rodin, but
-I do not see why in speaking of such a work as this I should hide my
-convictions. Those who have seen it cannot fail to consider it, as I
-do, the work of a thinker and of an artist of genius.
-
-
-[1] It Is curious to recollect that the very fine equestrian statue of
-General Lynch and the monument to President Vicunha, sent to America
-by Rodin, were never paid for, and that, owing to revolutions, they
-actually disappeared, so that these works may be considered lost. Only
-the spoiled rough models and some photographs remain.
-
-[2] These _Shades_ are a symbolic representation of men who are just
-dead, and who are bending down with folded hands in misery and terror
-gazing at the hellish crowd into which they are about to fall.
-
-[3] The final version of this group has been treated by Rodin
-separately, and is known by the name of _The Kiss_. The marble group is
-in the Museum of the Luxembourg.
-
-[4] A statue of Eustace de St. Pierre had been asked for. Rodin sent
-the six effigies of burghers, and this gave rise to fresh difficulties
-with the authorities.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-RODIN'S WORK FROM 1895 TO 1898--SMALL GROUPS--THE STATUE OF "BALZAC"
---THE INCIDENT OF THE SOCIÉTÉ DES GENS DE LETTRES--THE "TECHNIQUE"
-OF THE "BALZAC"--RODIN'S IDEAS UPON MODELLING AND COMPOSITION--HIS
-OPINIONS ABOUT THE GREEKS, THE GOTHIC STYLE, CLASSICISM, AND
-MYTHOLOGICAL SUBJECTS--RODIN'S "ANTIQUE" PERIOD.
-
-
-The year 1896 was occupied by the continuation of work for the Hugo
-monument. The _Muse of Anger_ and the _Muse of the Inna' Voice_ were
-brought to their full completion. In addition to these Rodin made a
-very fine head of _Minerva,_ in marble, with a silver helmet; a statue
-of a _Conqueror_, holding a statue of _Victory;_ and two groups--_The
-Poet and the Life of Contemplation_ (for M. Fenaille, the faithful
-admirer, who was, at a later date, to publish his sketches) and _The
-Eternal Idol,_ a marvel of inspiration. A young naked woman is in a
-half-sitting posture, her head bent, her gaze lost in a dream. A man
-kneeling before her, his arms behind him and his desire restrained,
-puts his head gently forward and kisses the idol beneath the left
-breast over the heart, with mute fervour, and with a mystic, amorous
-concentration of his whole being. Rarely does sculpture allow of so
-much pulsating life and so much psychological emotion united to plastic
-perfection and originality of arrangement.
-
-From 1897 date the marble group of the _Women Bathing,_ the last
-studies for the _Balzac,_ and the studies for the _Monument to
-President Sarmiento_, a statue upon a pedestal in high-relief. Small
-groups in marble and in bronze are a form of which Rodin is fond. He
-has been led to devote himself largely to them on account of _The Gate
-of Hell,_ the dimensions of which necessitated small figures. Moreover,
-Rodin reserves this form of art for certain categories of works that
-have a character of passion and intimacy. It should be possible to pass
-easily round them, to lean over them, almost to touch them and move
-them about; one should be able to live with them, as one cannot do with
-large figures meant to be looked at from below. The happy form of the
-small sculptured block, which the eighteenth century had employed to
-so much advantage, allows this constant communion of the spectator and
-the work of art. Rodin, who executes his bigger figures in so large a
-style, reserves for these a style that is minute but never mannered.
-The outlines remain large, so much so, indeed, that the work would
-always bear an enlarged scale; but the modelling is wrought with an
-almost caressing touch and with a strange love of form. Here the rough
-sculptor, so Gothic in his austerity, fingers the marble with the care
-and the delicacy of a lover; he reveals himself as a fervent adorer of
-smooth, womanly flesh; he plays with the subtlest variations of light
-upon the inflexion of marble surfaces, and the man who is reproached
-with caring for nothing but "character" and with despising "beauty"
-creates arms, necks, knees, and bosoms of exquisite perfection. His
-favourite type of woman is the long, delicately made woman, with
-a small bust, largely curved hips, and a face full of will, the
-nervous, feline, voluptuous woman, of head rather than of heart, such
-as Baudelaire and Rops have imagined. The characteristic feature of
-Rodin's small groups is the seeking after new combinations of movement.
-I have said already that his essential idea was the production of
-_dynamic_ art; that is to say that, finding himself face to face
-with an academic school that had grown inert owing to its care for
-pseudo-harmony, he had determined to draw sculpture out of this blind
-alley and to show, before all things, how the expression of movement
-might lead to an entirely new conception of decorative outline. From
-this endeavour arose those little groups of lovers in which the
-attitudes are so infinitely varied, those curious presentments in
-which the arms and legs are placed as freely as in a painting. But the
-painting has the help of shadow, of backgrounds, and of values, which
-allow the light to be concentrated on a single point and the rest to be
-blurred. Rodin has attempted so to compose his most audacious movements
-that, in walking round, a new aspect of them is constantly presented,
-whereas ordinary sculpture, meant to be seen from a single point, does
-not allow the spectator to pass behind it. This difficulty and this
-main idea have led Rodin to treat modelling and composition in a way
-upon which I shall dwell more fully later on, and to invent a style of
-statuary which borrows some of the laws of painting.
-
-These thoughts had long been ripening in Rodin when at last he resolved
-to apply them to his _Balzac_, which was really not his first attempt
-in this direction, but the first that was seen in public. When this
-statue appeared in the Salon of 1898, it created such a commotion that
-for a week the public forgot, over it, the events of that vast serial
-story, the Dreyfus affair. The clamour was extraordinary; some people
-raged at what they considered a scandalous practical joke, others
-warmly defended the new work. The Société des Gens de Lettres, already
-irritated by Rodin's delays in finishing the statue, declared plainly
-that it refused the _Balzac_, a decision which led to the resignation
-of the committee. Rodin might have brought an action and won it,
-for, strictly speaking, his agreement required the society to accept
-the work such as he delivered it. He preferred to withdraw his work
-without claiming its price or discussing the matter. Once again his art
-encountered violent opposition from the official camp--but to struggle
-is repugnant to his temper. Inflexible in his will as a producer, he is
-timid and proud in his attitude towards contradictions. Opportunity,
-moreover, offered him a roguish and witty revenge. Falguière was
-commissioned to make a _Balzac._ This put Falguière in a very awkward
-position; after all the fuss made about Rodin's statue, he must needs
-produce something finer, or at the very least equally interesting. He
-was certain of a bad reception at the hands of Rodin's admirers and he
-was bound to please the others. Falguière only succeeded in producing a
-mediocre work. The _Balzac_ that may be seen at the present time in the
-Avenue de Friedland is nothing but a half-hearted imitation of Rodin's;
-it is Rodin's _Balzac_ seated, and without character or interest. This
-work appeared in 1900, at a time when opinion was already beginning
-to recognise the injustice done to Rodin, and it pleased nobody.
-Then Rodin, to show that the incident had in no way altered his
-friendly relations with Falguière,[1] made an admirable bust of his
-fellow-worker, which was as fine as the second _Balzac_ was poor, and
-thus gave to Falguière and to the public, also, a silent and ironical
-lesson.
-
-What, then, was this _Balzac_ which was so much detested, and about
-which the most abusive and extraordinary things were written? Merely
-the image of the great writer, draped in a dressing-gown, with empty,
-hanging sleeves; he has risen in the night and is walking up and down,
-disturbed and sleepless, pursuing an idea that has suddenly presented
-itself. He is bent forward, his head thrown back, the eyes deep-set,
-and the mouth contracted in a smile of challenge. The powerful
-neck--the neck indeed of a bull--emerges from the open wrapper. Rodin
-made use of various daguerreotypes, and especially of a celebrated
-portrait of Balzac, that shows him in shirt-sleeves with one brace,
-and folded arms. The enormous proportions of the head, the amazing
-strength of the thorax, the monstrous and leonine character of the face
-are all exact. "His was the countenance of an element," said Lamartine
-of Balzac, "with a torso that was joined to the head by an enormous
-neck, short legs, and short arms." These words absolutely justify the
-statue. Rodin had made studies for it in the nude (there are some fine
-clay models of the subject in his studio), then he clothed it with a
-gown (or to be more exact, with a bath-wrap, for that is what Balzac's
-famous monk's robe was), and proceeded to simplify the folds until
-he had left only the two or three essential ones. The result thus
-obtained, with the disproportion of body and legs, led Rodin to hide
-the short, ugly, useless arms under the drapery, and the figure thus
-assumed pretty much the appearance of a mummy, of a sort of monolith,
-from which nothing stood out but the one point of interest, the savage
-and magnificent animality of the head, with its darkened gaze and the
-bitterly curved mouth, of which Rodin had made a separate small study
-in bronze. A great heave of the shoulders throws the body slightly
-backward, causing it to rest upon one leg, which is apparently bent,
-while the other is moved forward to walk.
-
-[Illustration: BALZAC]
-
-The whole work gives the impression of a _menhir_, a pagan dedicatory
-stone. Interest is concentrated solely upon the head. Rodin considered
-that the representation of a celebrated figure offered no corporeal
-interest. It is evident that a great error prevails on this subject.
-The ancients have transmitted to us naked or draped statues. It must
-be remembered that this homage was almost always paid to warriors,
-athletes, or courtesans; to represent these at full length was to
-express their fame. Their beautiful shape received fit homage. The gods
-were conceived as incarnations of moral beauty in physical beauty.
-But as time and morality have gradually brought us to honour men who
-are great in thought, the bodily representation of them has strayed
-into an extremely false path. Dress and physical exterior ceased to be
-of plastic interest, but the manner of our homage remained the same.
-Busts with pedestals commemorating in writing the deeds or the works
-would have been the right form of celebration. But this, the only
-intelligent form, appeared to our modern statue-maniac ages too scanty.
-This heretical opinion has given birth to the gentlemen in frock-coats
-who disfigure our present towns and are hoisted upon pedestals in our
-public squares. To this absurd point have we come: in order to honour
-the soul we reproduce its husk, the body, which is destined to the
-nothingness of the grave, and we represent the shoes and coats as
-exactly as the head. We attempt in our pious regard for the essence
-of a thinker to represent that part of him which was transitory. The
-result is photography in bronze, a wretched artistic contradiction.
-Nevertheless, if we are to bow to custom and represent a man at full
-length of whom the head is the only important fact, we must indeed
-give him a body that is like reality; but the artist should try to
-concentrate interest as much as possible on the face. So illogical
-is this style in itself that the bodies and clothes are copied from
-chance models; the head of the person to be glorified is stuck on to
-them, and it is the merest bit of luck if it has been possible to shape
-this head itself from actual evidence! For plenty of statues represent
-individuals who never looked like them, and of whom no authentic
-likeness exists, which is the height of absurdity and the very
-burlesque of an honour.[2]
-
-[Illustration: BALZAC]
-
-In such cases an allegorical monument should be a matter of necessity;
-yet we behold hundreds of such statues, all the same, and our prejudice
-in favour of verisimilitude requires us to contemplate the embroidery
-of their doublets or the trimming of their coats.
-
-Rodin, for his part, to whom such ideas, which degrade his art to the
-lowest level, are revolting, believes that composition and expression
-should be so arranged as to make the spectator forget the _plastique_
-of the body. In his busts he neglects the inevitable linen collar,
-coat-collar, and necktie. The graceful dress of _Claude Lorraine_, the
-shirt and rope of _The Burghers of Calais,_ had served his purpose
-well, and in the statues of _General Lynch_ and _Bastien-Lepage_ he
-had reduced the modern dress to large bronze reliefs without precise
-details. Especially in the image of a thinker he seeks to annul the
-costume. The Olympian character of Hugo allowed of the nude; for the
-massive deformity of Balzac the dressing-gown was appropriate. The
-majority of those who mocked did not even know that this careless
-costume was habitual to the author, and that Rodin chose to surprise
-him in his home and in the fever of work, instead of showing him in the
-street with a hat and stick, as they would no doubt have expected.
-
-The _Balzac_, then, presents the aspect of a sheath of stone pushed out
-by a few twisting folds, which give it the appearance from behind of
-an upright sarcophagus. The size of the head, the abnormal largeness
-of the chest and neck, which have aroused mockery, are historic. Apart
-from these points, one honestly wonders what it is that can have
-shocked people in this bold and sincere work. The face is admirable in
-its pride, its strength of will, its haughty irony, and penetrating
-power of thought. The modelling and the leading lines are masterly.
-The rather ghostly look of the clay disappears in the bronze, as may
-be seen from the little head in that material, of which the monument
-was to be made. It is the freedom, the spontaneity, the life of the
-statue, which, as in the case of the _Burghers,_ gave a shock to the
-conventions of the official world and disturbed the ideas of the public
-at large.
-
-It is true, nevertheless, and is generally admitted even by its most
-active adversaries that this great figure possesses a strange haunting
-power; when one had seen it in the Salon one could see nothing else
-after it, and could not succeed in getting away from it. People
-returned to it, in order to attack it, but they did return to it
-inevitably. The same official sculptors who in 1877 had accused _The
-Age of Brass_ of being cast from life because the figure was so exact
-did not shrink from accusing this same Rodin, matured by twenty years
-of work, of "not knowing the figure" and hiding his Balzac under a
-robe out of weakness. Besides these reproaches, which were made in
-bad faith, reproaches arose which exclaimed at Rodin's madness or
-hypocritically regretted that a man of so much talent should have made
-so great a mistake. But one thing which the _Bahac_ never encountered
-was indifference; what was the spell which compelled everybody to
-regard it as an irritating puzzle, as a challenge, as a work out of the
-ordinary run? Plenty of hostile faces were to be seen, but many of
-them showed a secret fear of being in the wrong, of misunderstanding a
-fine thing, a work which was a forerunner. This same fear might have
-been read as early as 1867 upon the faces of the detractors who stood
-in a ring around Manet's first works.
-
-The spell lay in the extreme simplification, the reduction of the
-elements to a powerful unity, according to a scheme with which Rodin
-had made experiments in silence and which he now revealed. And at
-this point I am led to a brief explanation of Rodin's ideas upon the
-technical part of his art.
-
-At the time of the _Balzac's_ appearance I gave an account of the way
-by which Rodin had been led to a new conception of sculpture. This was
-in an article[3] that has been reproduced more or less everywhere, and
-that Rodin has been good enough to consider as the emanation and direct
-expression of his artistic wishes. I cannot enter into all the details.
-The scale of this book would not allow of that, but the following are
-the principal points of that evolution.
-
-Rodin's is above all a temperament inclined to the expression of
-passionate and tragic character. Thence comes his constant study of
-movement. As I said before, that study has led him to give unlooked-for
-values to the general outline and to produce works which may be viewed
-on all sides and which continually show a fresh and balanced aspect
-that explains the other aspects: otherwise the daring gestures and the
-bold combinations of the limbs would have given an air of absurdity
-to the groups. Rodin is at the same time very reflective and very
-instinctive. He matures a thought slowly, but he often passes by
-chance from that thought to its realisation. This is the predominant
-feature of his nature, and it explains his entire art. Rodin often
-appears unconscious, astonished at what he had in him and at what he
-has brought into existence, to such a degree that he explains it badly
-enough. He sees his thought in the whole of nature and finds it there
-again; that thought, indeed, is fed by general ideas, and is, if I may
-say so, almost "elemental." From this point of view Rodin's _genius_
-is independent of his _talent_ as a sculptor. It sometimes happens to
-him to see a block of marble or a knob of wood, and the form of such an
-object will show him what he will make and the movement of the figure.
-He adapts to it one of the ideas which he always has in reserve: the
-aspect of the wood or the marble determines the passage of the thought
-to the material which will incarnate it. I said one day to Rodin: "One
-would say that you knew there was a figure in that block, and that you
-do nothing beyond breaking away the stone that hides it from us." He
-answered that that was exactly his feeling as he worked. Upon the naked
-figure Rodin has ideas that are peculiar to his nature as a mystic and
-a realist. He considers the body with its four limbs as a cypher, of
-which the combinations are infinite. That is an old idea that was held
-by primitive theologians of the Eastern religions. And it is the fact
-that Rodin has invented an immense series of attitudes and combinations
-that one would not have thought possible: he attaches little groups to
-the side of a block of marble with the freedom of a painter throwing
-a figure upon a background. He makes his people light, he makes them
-soar, he entwines them in surprising positions.
-
-It was therefore absolutely essential that he should find means to
-constitute a logical harmony _on every side_ of his works. Scholastic
-statuary is opposed to this principle. Its tendency is to treat groups
-as bas-reliefs. The spectator must stand in front, at a certain spot,
-and whatever is behind is accessory: the decorative line produces its
-effect only from that point. So true is this that statues are very
-often so placed in public squares that people cannot pass round them.
-The academic sculptors treat a piece of sculpture like a picture; it
-has a right side and a wrong side. Rodin, shocked at this method, began
-by working in quite a different way. He made successive sketches of all
-the faces of his works, going constantly round them so as to obtain a
-series of views connected in a ring. Travels in Italy had led him to
-think that the ancients proceeded in this manner and that their great
-endeavour was to get the design of the outline by means of movement,
-which continually modifies the anatomy. Anatomy, indispensable to
-the artist, becomes the source of all the academic errors if once
-we forget that it is but inertia, the state of non-action, and
-consequently incapable of expressly teaching us about life and about
-the modifications that thought imposes upon flesh. The real value of
-a living figure is given by profiles studied successively in a full
-light. Rodin was delighted by this way of working. But his pictorial
-inclinations, his ideas about the possible formation of a _background_
-in sculpture as in painting, were not satisfied.
-
-When the academic school wishes to make use of a background to a figure
-it confines itself to a hollow or a relief. Rodin desired that a statue
-should stand free and should bear looking at from any point, but he
-desired nevertheless that it should remain in relation with light and
-with the surrounding atmosphere. He was struck by the hard, cut-out
-aspect of ordinary statues, and asked himself how an atmosphere might
-be given to them. Painting has two means to this end: of which the
-first is _values. Values_ are independent of colour. Values, an element
-common to both arts, are in painting and sculpture _the relations as
-to opacity or transparence of an object and the background against
-which it is seen._ They may be dark on a light ground, light on a dark
-ground, or light upon a ground that is likewise light; but they are
-always the very life of the outline, and the important point is to fix
-that outline first of all. When we see a person placed between the
-sun and ourselves, against the light, we do not at first perceive the
-details within the outline, but we do see the general mass of the body,
-and that mass is filled with more or less intense colour, in which we
-presently distinguish details. Our perception at the moment is as much
-sculptural as pictorial. Rodin, struck by the importance of this idea,
-devoted himself to obtaining, _at once and together,_ the _volume;_
-that is to say, the equivalent in sculpture of the _value,_ and the
-design of _successive views of one movement._
-
-But the second means in painting is the employment of intermediate
-tones encircling the figure and combining with the background. How
-could an equivalent be found for that? Logic led Rodin on to a step
-which alarmed him: he made experiments after examining the antiques
-very closely. He took fragments of his statues and began to raise them
-in certain places by layers of clay, intensifying the modelling and
-enlarging the lines. He observed that the light now played better upon
-these enlarged lines; the refraction of light upon these amplified
-surfaces was softer, the hardness of the cut-out outline vanished,
-and a radiant zone shaped itself around his figures and united them
-gradually with the atmosphere. In this way, therefore, by means of
-this systematic accentuation of the outlines, an intermediate tone, _a
-radiancy of the forms,_ was produced.
-
-Rodin understood at once that he had found his way to the deepest
-secret of his art; that is to say, to the ideal limit where through its
-hidden laws a plastic art touches the other arts in a negation of all
-that is merely materialistic. The intermediate tones in painting, the
-radiating surfaces in sculpture, are the same principle as the nervous
-radiations noted in photographing a hand, where it may be seen that
-the fingers are prolonged by emanations. Nothing is fixed, limited,
-or finished in nature, and the radiating state is the only real one.
-But this was a dangerous discovery for a sculptor, since people would
-immediately exclaim upon the _deformation_ _of what was seen_, the
-alteration of the fact, the falsification of anatomy. Therefore Rodin
-proceeded in silence and with very great prudence. The point was not,
-of course, _to enlarge_ _all surfaces equally_, for that would have
-produced only an increase of scale. The thing was _to amplify_, with
-tact, _certain parts of the modelling_, the edges of which were swept
-by the light, so as to give a halo to the outline. At the same time,
-Rodin experimented in a series of drawings made on purpose, forbidding
-himself to give any detail, tracing only the outlines of bodies filled
-in with one wash of water-colour that gave the _value._ I shall return
-to these sketches. They cannot be understood without a knowledge of
-their original purpose.
-
-This theory, to which Rodin approved of my giving the name of
-_deliberate amplification of surfaces_, is simply the critical
-principle of Greek sculpture, which has been entirely misunderstood
-by the academic school. That school, which is supposed to honour the
-Greeks, is really false to their spirit and their teaching. Moreover,
-this principle, which belongs to all the primitive statuary that
-was made for the open air, is to be found among the Egyptians and
-the Assyrians. It calls in question the academic tradition whereby
-_exactitude_ is confounded with _truth._ In reality it may be said
-to be a profoundly classic principle which has been denied by the
-academic school. Here, as in painting, classicism is opposed to the
-academic. Hence it should be concluded that in reality Rodin is by
-no means an _innovator_ opposing himself to a school that retains
-classic traditions, but, speaking precisely, a classic, returning to
-nature, replacing himself in the state of mind of a Greek before his
-model, and opposing himself to a school that has overloaded art with
-methods, formulas, and expedients that change the character of antique
-and Gothic art. Rodin has a horror of what is called "originality,"
-and an even greater horror of what is called "inspiration." He only
-trusts completely to work and to minute, sincere observation of nature.
-"Slowness is a beauty," he often says. He has the greatest antipathy
-for "sculpture with literary meanings," and has often been galled,
-without saying so, by certain praises, in which writers, reeling off
-pages of description about his works, have thought to please him by
-dwelling on the idea and not on the execution. "I invent nothing,"
-he says; "I rediscover. And the thing seems new because people have
-generally lost sight of the aim and the means of art; they take
-that for an innovation which is nothing but a return to the laws of
-the great sculpture of long ago. Obviously, I think; I like certain
-symbols, I see things in a synthetic way, but it is nature that gives
-me all that. I do not imitate the Greeks; I try to put myself in the
-spiritual state of the men who have left us the antique statues. The
-'École' copies their works; the thing that signifies is to _recover
-their method._ I began by showing close studies from nature like _The
-Age of Brass._ Afterwards I came to understand that art required a
-little more largeness, a little exaggeration, and my whole aim, from
-the time of the _Burghers_, was to find a method of exaggerating
-logically: that method consists in the deliberate amplification of the
-modelling. It consists also in the constant reduction of the figure to
-a geometrical figure, and in the determination to sacrifice any part of
-a figure to the synthesis of its aspect. See what the Gothic sculptors
-did. Look at the cathedral of Chartres; one of the towers is massive
-and without ornament: they sacrificed it to give value to the exquisite
-delicacy of the other tower.
-
-"In sculpture the projection of the muscular _fasciculi_ must be
-accentuated, the foreshortening forced, the hollows deepened; sculpture
-is the art of the hole and the lump, not of clear, well-smoothed,
-unmodelled figures. Ignorant people, when they see close-knitted true
-surfaces, say that 'it is not finished.' No notion is falser than that
-of _finish_ unless it be that of _elegance_; by means of these two
-ideas people would kill our art. The way to obtain solidity and life is
-by work carried out to the fullest, not in the direction of achievement
-and of copying details, but in that of truth in the successive
-schemes. The public, perverted by academic prejudices, confounds art
-with neatness. The simplicity of the 'École' is a painted cardboard
-ideal. A cast from life is a copy, the exactest possible copy, and
-yet it has neither motion nor eloquence. Art intervenes to exaggerate
-certain surfaces, and also to fine down others. In sculpture everything
-depends upon the way in which the modelling is carried out with a
-constant thought of the main line of the scheme, upon the rendering of
-the hollows, of the projections and of their connections; thus it is
-that one may get fine lights, and especially fine shadows that are not
-opaque. Everything should be emphasised according to the accent that
-it is desired to render, and the degree of amplification is personal,
-according to the tact and the temperament of each sculptor; and for
-this reason there is no transmissible process, no studio recipe, but
-only a true law. I see it in the antique and in Michael Angelo. To work
-by the profiles, in depth not by surfaces, always thinking of the few
-geometrical forms from which all nature proceeds, and to make these
-eternal forms perceptible in the individual case of the object studied,
-that is my criterion. That is not idealism, it is a part of the
-handicraft. My ideas have nothing to do with it but for that method; my
-Danaids and my Dante figures would be weak, bad things. From the large
-design that I get your mind deduces ideas."
-
-Rodin, then, is convinced that he is classical, and rebels against the
-"École" which claims to be so. He has the greatest admiration for the
-Renascence, but declares that he does not so clearly understand the
-genius of the Gothic sculptors. He admires it, but has not thoroughly
-penetrated it. "I feel it, but I cannot express it," he says. "I cannot
-analyse the Celtic genius to my own satisfaction. In the Middle Ages
-art came from groups, not from individuals. It was anonymous; the
-sculptors of cathedrals no more put their names to their works than
-our workmen put theirs on the pavement that they lay. Ah! what an
-admirable scorn of notoriety! The signature is what destroys us. We do
-portraits, but what we do is not so great. These kings and queens, on
-the cathedrals, were not portraits. The fellow-workers stood for one
-another, and they interpreted; they did not copy. They made clothed
-figures; the nude and portraiture only date from the Renascence. And
-then those fellows cut with the tool's end into the block, that is why
-they were called sculptors. As for us, we are modellers. And what a
-disgraceful thing that casting from life is, which so many well-known
-sculptors do not blush to use! It is a mere swindling in art. Art was
-a vital function to the image-makers of the thirteenth century; they
-would have laughed at the idea of signing what they did, and never
-dreamed of honours and titles. When once their work was finished,
-they said no more about it, or else they talked among themselves.
-How curious it would have been to hear them, to be present at their
-gatherings, where they must have discussed in amusing phrases, and with
-simple, deep ideas!... Whenever the cathedrals disappear civilisation
-will go down one step. And even now we no longer understand them, we
-no longer know how to read their silent language. _We need to make
-excavations not in the earth, but towards heaven._..." An admirable
-saying that Rodin has often repeated to me and that I have never heard
-without deep emotion! He has the secret of these true formulas, and
-his words, which are not eloquent, but, rather, obscure, are suddenly
-lighted up by them. His speech, like his sculpture, is born from
-sincere contact with the essence of nature. In regard to the Renascence
-and Michael Angelo, he reports that he received no decisive lesson
-from either until after a journey to Italy in 1875. "I believed before
-that," he says, "that movement was the whole secret of this art, and
-I put my models into positions like those of Michael Angelo. But
-as I went on observing the free attitudes of my models I perceived
-that they possessed these _naturally_, and that Michael Angelo had
-not preconceived them, but merely transcribed them according to the
-personal inspiration of human beings moved by the need of action. I
-went to Rome to look for what may be found everywhere: _the latent
-heroic in every natural movement._ [4]
-
-"Then I gathered the elements of what people call my symbolism. I do
-not understand anything about long words and theories. But I am willing
-to be a symbolist, if that defines the ideas that Michael Angelo gave
-me, namely that the essence of sculpture is the modelling, the general
-scheme which alone enables us to render the intensity, the supple
-variety of movement and character. If we can imagine the thought of
-God in creating the world, He thought first of the construction, which
-is the sole principle of nature, of living things and perhaps of the
-planets. Michael Angelo seems to me rather to derive from Donatello
-than from the ancients; Raphael proceeds from them. He understood that
-an architecture can be built up with the human body, and that, in
-order to possess volume and harmony, a statue or a group ought to be
-contained in a cube, a pyramid; or some simple figure. Let us look at a
-Dutch interior and at an interior painted by an artist of the present
-day. The latter no longer touches us, because it does not possess the
-qualities of depth and volume, the science of distances. The artist who
-paints it does not know how to reproduce a cube. An interior by Van
-der Meer is a cubic painting. The atmosphere is in it and the exact
-volume of the objects; the place of these objects has been respected,
-the modern painter places them, arranges them as models. The Dutchmen
-did not touch them, but set themselves to render the distances that
-separated them, that is, the depth. And then, if I go so far as to say
-that _cubic truth, not appearance, is the mistress of things,_ if I
-add that the sight of the plains and woods and country views gives me
-the principle of the plans that I employ on my statues, that I feel
-cubic truth everywhere, and that plan and volume appear to me as laws
-of all life and all beauty, will it be said that I am a symbolist, that
-I generalise, that I am a metaphysician? It seems to me that I have
-remained a sculptor and a realist. Unity oppresses and haunts me."
-
-"What," says Rodin again, "is the principle of my figures, and
-what is it that people like in them? It is the very pivot of art,
-it is balance; that is to say, the oppositions of volume produced
-by movement. That is the striking, material fact in art, with all
-due deference to those persons who conceive art as distinct from
-'brutal' reality. Art is like love. For many people it is a dream, a
-psychological complication, a palace, a perfume, a stage scene; but
-nothing of the sort! The essential of love is the pairing; all the
-rest is only detail, charming, and full of passion, but detail. It is
-the same in art: people come and praise my symbols and my expressions
-to me; but I know that the plans are the essential thing. Respect the
-plan, make it exact from every point; movement intervenes, displaces
-these volumes and creates a fresh balance. The human body is like a
-_walking temple,_ and like a temple it has a central point around which
-the volumes place and spread themselves. When one understands that,
-one has everything. It is simple, but it must be seen, and academism
-refuses to see it. Instead of recognising that that is the key to my
-method they prefer to say that I am a poet. That expression signifies
-that people feel, confusedly, the difference between an art resting
-on conventions and one derived from truth; only they think that the
-'poetic' art is the conventional one. They call that _inspiration._
-That is the belief that has led to the theory of genius being madness.
-But men of genius are just those _who, by their trade-skill, carry the
-essential thing to perfection._ People say that my sculpture _is that
-of an 'exalté.'[5]_
-
-"I do not deny that there is exaltation in my works; but that
-exaltation existed not in me, but in nature, in movement. The divine
-work is naturally exalted. As for me, all I do is to be true; my
-temperament is not 'exalted'; it is patient. I am not a dreamer,
-but a mathematician; and if my sculpture is good it is because it is
-geometrical."
-
-From these fragments of conversation the reader will conceive how
-Rodin's generalising spirit leads him from the realism of his daily
-work to the synthesis of a sort of ideo-realistic metaphysical system.
-He has the sense (belonging only to genius) of the _continuity of
-the universe_, and he certainly had it at a time when, unlettered
-as he was, he would not have known how to explain it specifically
-to himself. He constantly formulates this metaphysical system, as I
-have seen it formulated by Stéphane Mallarmé, who could never see
-anything without instantly bringing together two ideas or images that
-no one would ever have thought of connecting. Spontaneous analogy
-is the mark of genius and the secret of all real poetry. This is
-why I consider Rodin as a very great poet--not in the sense that he
-dislikes, but on the contrary, by giving to the word "poet" its deep
-etymological significance according to the Greek, that of "making,
-creating, vivifying." We may understand, too, in how great a degree an
-intellectuality of this kind offers a living challenge to the ideas
-of the "École." The man who thinks thus is necessarily isolated and
-has struggled all his life, never making a concession and saying
-nobly, "The artist, like the woman, has an honour to preserve." I will
-further quote from Rodin the following reflection[6]: "Where you follow
-nature, you get everything. When I have a beautiful woman's body for
-a model the drawings that I make from it give me images of insects,
-birds, and fishes. That seems improbable, and I had no suspicion of
-it myself. Formerly I used to be seeking shapes for vases, either to
-use them at Sèvres, where I used to work, or elsewhere.... I never
-succeeding in finding a beauty of proportions and lines such as I had
-the feeling of, because I only founded my attempts upon _imagination._
-Since that time I have drawn women's bodies, and one of these bodies
-gave me, in the synthesis of it, a magnificent shape for a vase, with
-true and harmonious lines. The point is not to create. Creation and
-improvisation are useless words. Genius only comes to the man who
-understands with his eye and his brain. Everything is in the things
-about us. Manufacture and ornamental art want reforming according to
-these ideas. I should have liked to see that. Everything-is contained
-in nature. There is an harmonious, continual, uninterrupted movement. A
-woman, a mountain, a horse, in conception they are all the same thing,
-they are made on the same principles. Young artists compose instead of
-following their models and understanding that therein lies infinity."
-Here Rodin directly touches a scientific truth--the relative monotony
-of Nature's productive forms. Nature does everything with very few
-forms: the variations are so infinite that there are no two leaves
-alike, but the nerves of a leaf, the lines of a vein, an artery, a
-bird's wing, a fishbone, a nerve-cell, are identical; multiplicity
-derives from identity and returns to it, so that everything is reduced
-to a fundamental geometry which perhaps is but the effect of a single
-cellular generation. In this respect the laws of art and of science
-are the same, even as among all the arts there is a synthesis of
-common laws, an identity where we seem to behold a difference. Recent
-work in science, by establishing the existence of states of radiation
-(Crookes, Röntgen, Hertz) is busy undermining our old conception of
-matter, showing us the identity of it with the immaterial, and thereby
-abolishing our preconceptions about the idea and the fact, music and
-sculpture, considered as different manifestations. I remember that I
-one day kept Rodin's curiosity excited for a long time by explaining
-the details of this theory to him; he was not acquainted with it,
-and listened to me as to a writer in love with general ideas. But it
-was clear that in his mere province as a sculptor he knew far better
-and had penetrated far more deeply into this enthralling problem of
-identity. His is a luminous mind, of the same kind as the electric
-rays; it rather penetrates than surrounds what is obscure to it. On
-that day he was disturbed, and I was irritated by certain declamations
-which had been written about his "philosophy," and of which the author
-had assuredly not comprehended the logical consequences; and we came
-to the conclusion that it would be much better for Rodin's peace of
-mind to keep silent upon these points, for his "philosophy" could only
-be made comprehensible to those who could understand the method of his
-sculpture.
-
-It is time, however, to pause in this path and to return simply to
-the question of sculpture. Nor was it my purpose to tire the reader
-by these abstractions when I began to say a few words about Rodin's
-opinions concerning the antique. It must be understood, then, that the
-_Balzac_ and even the _Hugo_, as well as some figures, were the result
-of all these preceding reflections. "When I saw my _Balzac_ brought
-into the yard from the storehouse of the statues in order to go to
-the Salon," says Rodin, "I had it purposely placed beside _The Kiss,_
-which had been finished rather earlier. I was not dissatisfied with the
-simplified vigour of that group, to which I had already applied these
-experiments. But I saw that it looked slack, that it did not hold its
-place beside the _Balzac_ as Michael Angelo's torso does beside a fine
-antique, and then I understood that I was in the right path. I have
-had hesitations, you know, pangs that I do not speak of. And then,
-little by little, as I looked at nature, as I came to understand it
-better and to throw aside my prejudices more frankly, I took courage.
-It seemed to me that I was doing better. When I began I did skilful
-things, things that were smartly done, but they were thin and dry, but
-I felt there was something beyond, and that something is amplification.
-I only ventured on it when I was over fifty years old, but do you not
-think I have a right now to disregard the objections of the mob and the
-newspapers? I have taken time to know why I was doing as I did. The
-essential things of my modelling are there, and they would be there
-in less degree if I 'finished' more. As to polishing or repolishing a
-toe or a curl, I find no interest in it; it impairs the large line,
-the soul of what I desired to do, and I have nothing more to say to
-the public on that point. There the line of demarcation comes between
-the confidence that the public ought to have in me and the concessions
-that I ought not to make to the public." To this firm and discreet
-resolution Rodin has kept in all the works wrought out by him since
-1898.
-
-[Illustration: PRIMITIVE MAN.]
-
-I cannot better set forth his opinions about the antique than by
-quoting the following fragments from two articles that he wrote for
-the _Musée_, a review of ancient art, in January and February, 1904;
-for Rodin sometimes writes, quite unpretentiously, but with the same
-lucidity of thought that he shows in his familiar conversation. One of
-these articles refers to a Greek statuette in the Museum of Naples, the
-other to the lesson that the ancients give us.
-
-"In the first place, the Antique is Life itself. Nothing is more alive,
-and no style in the world has rendered life as it has. The ancients
-were the greatest, most serious, and most admirable observers of nature
-who have ever existed. The antique was able to render life because
-the ancients saw the essential thing in it--large blocks. They confined
-themselves to the large shadows cast by these large blocks, and as
-truth itself lies in that, their figures being so made could never be
-feeble. Moreover, the antique is simple, and that gives it astonishing
-energy. And then there is much more study in it than appears; that
-was brought home to me once. When I had finished my _Age of Brass_, I
-went to Italy and I found an Apollo whose leg was in exactly the same
-position as one in _The Age of Brass_ that had taken me six months'
-work. Then I saw that though on the surface everything seems to be done
-at a stroke, in reality all the muscles are built up and one sees the
-details come to light one by one. That is because the ancients studied
-everything in its successive profiles, because in any figure and every
-part of a figure no profile is like another; when each has been studied
-separately the whole appears simple and alive.
-
-"The great error of the neo-Greek school is really this: it is not
-_type_ that is antique, but modelling. For want of having understood
-that, the neo-Greek school has produced nothing but papier-mâché. It
-is bad to put the antique before beginners; one should end, not begin
-with it. If you wanted to teach someone to eat, you would give him
-fresh food, that he might learn to chew; it would never occur to you
-to give him food already triturated to exercise his teeth upon. Well,
-when you want to teach sculpture to anyone, set him face to face with
-nature, and when he has gained plenty of power to deal with nature,
-then say to him: 'Now, here is what the antique has done.' And that
-will give him a new source of energy. Whereas if you give the antique
-to the beginner who has never struggled with nature, he does not
-understand anything about it, and loses his individuality over it.
-You make a plagiarist of him, and instead of making his own prayer to
-nature he will repeat the prayer of the antique without understanding
-the words of it. He will die an old pupil; he will not die a man.
-
-"To teach the antique at the outset of a man's studies is to render
-the antique incomprehensible. In the first place, no one can teach the
-antique, it is not possible; that art of truth and simplicity cannot
-be taught. The sculptor works from nature, and afterwards he goes to
-look, in the galleries, and see how the antique rendered what he has
-been trying for from the life. But if he goes straight to the antique,
-shutting his eyes to nature, as the antique has always been done from
-nature, our sculptor will only be able to carry that vision into his
-own work in a factitious way; he will be neither antique nor modern,
-but bad.
-
-"A man may do antique work in our day, not in the false sense of
-producing the _antique type,_ but in the true sense of _modelling
-like the antique._ Such a man (painter, etcher, or sculptor) will
-take nature, and if he has the power of the antique he will produce
-antique work, which will entirely disagree with what is taught as
-such, but will agree with that in the museums. The 'École' begins
-at the end; when a man begins with nature, he may go on to the most
-improbable inventions; the antiques themselves show that. Do you know
-of anything more impossible than the centaur? But is there anything
-finer in Olympia? The ancients knew nature so well that they became her
-fellow-workers and created, not phantoms, but beings that were alive in
-spite of physical impossibilities. To my mind it would be better not
-to study the antique than to study it wrong. It is not the artist's
-alphabet, but the reward of his work. The command which it gives us is
-not to copy it, but to do like it.
-
-[Illustration: YOUNG WOMAN BETWEEN GOOD AND EVIL COUNCIL.]
-
-"To say that the antiques, which portray the plain marvel of life,
-are beautiful is a superficial sort of praise. Beauty is not the
-starting-point, but the point of arrival; a thing can only be beautiful
-if it is true. Truth itself is only a complete harmony, and harmony
-is finally only a bundle of utilities. The miracle of life could not
-be perpetuated but for the constant renewal of universal balance. The
-ancients felt that vast rhythm, and their art, being modelled upon it,
-appears to us as a natural and sublime expression of beauty.... One
-of the ancients made a statue. How did he set about it? It is useless
-to bring in rules that only grew up in the brains of commentators
-dissecting a series of works, centuries afterwards. The antique remains
-uncomprehended because we have not a simple enough spirit. It is not
-by studying the antique that we shall learn its secret; in order to
-understand, not its nomenclature, but its spirit, we must begin by
-studying nature. Rembrandt cannot be understood by copying him at the
-Louvre, he can only be understood when we travel through nature to him.
-Well, nature is always there, waiting patiently for antiques to be
-made afresh; the model is there waiting for someone to come at last,
-no matter whence. For it is an error to think the antique comes from
-the south: it comes from everywhere. The antique can be produced from a
-Dutch woman or an American woman; the type is nothing, the modelling is
-everything.
-
-"What makes the strength of the antique is the plan, the connection of
-all the profiles. The neo-Greeks say: 'The antiques are _line,_ and
-their works, in which all the lines, except two, dance about, show
-their error. The antiques, we will say, are _lines_ or rather _plan._
-Look at an antique; you can guess the full face from the profile.
-The eye cannot grasp the shape on the opposite side to that which it
-beholds, but it deduces it from this side: walk round, and the study
-of the profiles will afford you an _irrefragable_ proof by _rule of
-three._ The sculptor swells the half-tones by slight exaggerations, so
-as to heighten the light by a tone. The drapery lives; like the body
-that it hides, it receives life from that body without needing the
-subterfuge of wetted drapery.'[7]
-
-"There is in the antiques an astonishing mystery of life which causes
-all idea of dimension to disappear. A figure an inch or two high
-might just as well be life-size; when a thing is well organised, the
-greatness is in the modelling and not in the size. If one were to
-photograph a Tanagra figure and the Eiffel Tower, and were to show the
-two photographs to some person unacquainted with either object, I am
-sure he would declare the Tanagra figure to be larger than the tower. A
-pear or an apple, from the point of view of modelling, is as large as
-the celestial sphere. Thus the splendour of truth is such that finding
-no word to render it, we have called it 'Ideal.'"
-
-These quotations will suffice, I hope, to show Rodin's inmost thought.
-These judgments are implicit condemnations of the "École"; they are
-also definitions of his classical art, which is by no means "literary,"
-and which is governed, even in its lyrical and tragic developments,
-by good sense, that is to say, by an inborn taste for balance in the
-midst of boldness. If I am anxious to insist so strongly upon Rodin's
-profound _normality_, this is, I repeat, in order to forewarn the
-public against the declamations of some of his untoward admirers, who
-reckon one of his merits to be an "originality" which they confound
-with that exaggeration, that emphasis and eccentricity that never mark
-the great artist. Whatever tragic or passionate subject a great artist
-may treat, to whatever height of strangeness his imagination may rise,
-beauty of form will, if he is, like Rodin, a master of _technique_,
-confer upon _t_ him an exalted and permanent serenity. Rembrandt and
-Delacroix come from the depth of their vastly differing worlds to meet
-Raphael and Watteau in that conciliatory region where we admire the
-great masters--and Rodin is already placed in that region.
-
-
-[1] Rodin has never forgotten Falguière's loyalty at the time of _The
-Age of Brass_ affair.
-
-[2] A recent example in Paris is the double statue of the chemists
-who invented quinine. When will people understand that a discovery
-of this kind, however honourable, is nevertheless quite incapable of
-being associated with any plastic idea? The same thing is true of the
-statues of Chappe and Lavoisier, flanked by instruments of telegraphy
-and chemistry. These are ridiculous signboards, melancholy compliments
-translated by a tradesman's art that renders our streets hideous.
-
-[3] _Revue des Revues_ (of Paris), June 15th, 1898.
-
-[4] I find myself underlining-: it is not Rodin whose voice makes this
-emphasis. But I am attempting to mark out in this way the formulas
-which spring up in his conversation, and which, collected together,
-will give the public an idea of his instinctive synthesis, deduced from
-life.
-
-[5] The word _exalté_ has in this use no precise equivalent in English.
-"Enthusiast," as the eighteenth century knew the word--that is, with
-the infusion of a touch of lunacy--conies perhaps nearest.--TRANS.
-
-[6] An observation noted by Mlle. Judith Cladel in her curious volume,
-_Rodin, drawn from life._ (Éditions de La Plume, 1903.)
-
-[7] Loïe Fuller has obtained, by means of stuffs not wetted, the
-effects that the 'École' loves, because her plastic dance is logically
-derived from nature.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-WORKS SINCE THE "BALZAC"--SMALL WORKS IN MARBLE--PLAN OF THE MONUMENT
-TO LABOUR--DRAWINGS AND ETCHINGS
-
-
-"I shun father and mother and wife and brother, when my genius calls
-me. I would write on the lintels of the door-post, _Whim._ I hope it
-is somewhat better than whim at last, but we cannot spend the day in
-explanation.... Whoso would be a man must be a nonconformist ... must
-not be hindered by the name of goodness, but must inquire if it be
-goodness. Nothing is at last sacred but the integrity of our own mind.
-Absolve you to yourself, and you shall have the suffrage of the world."
-
-I quoted these high-minded words of Emerson's to Rodin at the time of
-the _Balzac_ incident. "They are," I said to him, "the very epigraph
-of your whole life." Nor have they ceased to epitomise the man and
-the artist. From the time of the _Balzac_ Rodin's work has proceeded
-very regularly and on the same principles. The _Victor Hugo_ is being
-finished in marble, in its two versions, in the studio of the Rue de
-l'Université. The group in which Hugo, his extended arm commanding
-silence of the waves, sits surrounded by Muses is almost ready; the
-other, in which Hugo, dreamily listening to the counsels of Iris,
-stands on the edge of a rock washed by waves, amid which Nereids are
-entwined, is not quite so far advanced. _The Gate of Hell_ is ready
-to receive its finally chosen and ordered figures. In the Salon of
-1902 Rodin exhibited the three _Shades_ from its summit, inspired by
-the celebrated _Lasciate ogni speransa._ In 1900 Rodin only showed
-two or three old productions at the Universal Exhibition, because his
-work was collected in a special pavilion at the Rond-point de l'Alma,
-the concession of which pavilion was made uncomfortable for him by
-his colleagues, so much so that the artist was obliged to remove on
-the very day of closing, with less delay and consideration allowed to
-him than to the most unimportant industrial exhibitor. This special
-exhibition was, nevertheless, a great international success for Rodin,
-and the amazing development of his fame may be said to date from it.
-Before 1900 Rodin stood in the position of an exceptional artist,
-celebrated but envied, isolated and challenged, whose relations with
-the Government were strained, whom a minority upheld, but on whom the
-official world looked coldly. Since that time his eminence is so firmly
-established that he now holds the rank that Puvis de Chavannes held
-in the estimation of all artists. His triumphant journey to Prague
-(1901-2), London's enthusiastic reception, and Rodin's recent election
-to be President of the Society over which Whistler presided, have
-finally given him the acknowledgment so long looked for. In 1903 his
-marble bust of Hugo aroused enthusiasm, and at the Salon of 1904 the
-colossal bronze _Thinker_ had a most flattering reception, and disarmed
-the last of his former detractors.
-
-A woman's bust accompanied _The Thinker_ to the Salon. Rodin, who does
-portraits now and again, had previously made an admirable one of Mme.
-Fenaille, wife of the art-patron who had been of such great service
-to him; and he is attempting a curious variation of it. He has just
-finished a bust of a helmeted Minerva, as impressive as a Donatello,
-and this, too, is a portrait.
-
-Various works have been produced by Rodin since the _Balzac,_ in
-addition to the _Monument of President Sarmiento,_ which shows an
-admirable bas-relief of a radiant Apollo. These works are nearly all
-in marble, and small. It is almost impossible to describe and classify
-them; a much larger book would be required, and my main purpose here
-has been to give a general idea of Rodin's art and an explanation
-of principles. I have spoken about some of his poems of the flesh,
-especially that _Eternal Idol_, which will be the glory of thought
-in modern sculpture. Rodin's recent works in marble have the same
-inspiration. Some demand special notice: _The Hand of God,_ a gigantic
-hand, between the fingers of which, and amid a handful of clay, two
-beings are tenderly embracing; _Icarus,_ falling from the sky to be
-crushed on the earth amid his whirling wings; several groups of lovers,
-entwined, and breathing immeasurable tenderness, the most celebrated
-of which is _Spring_ or _Love and Psyche._ Another _Psyche,_ alone,
-is discovering Love asleep, with extraordinary restrained emotion;
-and there are several attempts at _Poets and Muses,_ embracing or
-consoling one another, as well as a splendid sketch of the _Magdalen
-wiping Christ's Body with her Hair._ Rodin has thus sometimes touched
-religious subjects, but with an undogmatic symbolism, philosophic
-and wide. We may also enumerate another version in marble of the
-_Nereids_ of the Hugo monument, a winged _Inspiration_ coming to
-breathe upon the sleeping poet, and holding back the tips of her
-wings with one hand lest she should make a sound in closing them; a
-faun drawing towards him a nymph, who struggles in silent, fierce
-resistance; two high-reliefs of _Summer_ and _Autumn_ in stone; tall
-women with children, intended for the town of Evian, where Baron
-Vitta is accumulating treasures of modern art; _Pygmalion_ beholding
-his statue come to life, who, as soon as she feels herself live,
-turns from him with a surprising movement of coquetry and aversion.
-Such works as these cannot be described in words. In them Rodin has
-excelled to an unparalleled degree in rendering the profoundest
-psychological complexities, refined intentions, and the hesitations
-of feeling. I will further note a sketch of _Sappho_, seated at
-rest, with her arms leaning upon two little naked women, which is a
-work inspired equally by the Greeks and by the eighteenth century;
-it bears witness to the artist's wish of avoiding the massive, and
-making as many holes as possible within the general block, so as to
-give lightness and to allow a circulation of light, as the Greeks
-did in works that were meant to stand against a background of sea or
-of sky. Many studies of men and women crouching, or squatting, in
-curious attitudes, recall the art of the Japanese bronzes, which Rodin
-immensely admires. We must further note some groups of _Women Damned,_
-in which Rodin's art attains the highest point of voluptuous tension,
-audacious suggestiveness, and tragic eagerness of the flesh aspiring
-to impossible delight. This whole world of figures is ruled by the
-same lyrical and poetic imagination, the same symbolism incarnated
-in impeccable forms. Everywhere we find the same nervous art,
-agitating, sad, and ardent in its voluptuous character, expressing the
-insatiability of human souls; the aspiration of a troubled time towards
-an ideality which would deliver it from the solicitations of pessimism;
-the hope of escape by the way of desire; and love sought for in the
-over-excitement of neurosis. Rodin, gloomy psychologist of passion,
-understands the disease of the age, and at the same time pities it; a
-true thinker, he extracts its mournful beauty without ceasing to retain
-faith, admiration, and affection for the human creature. Bending over
-life and over his work, he is himself his own _Thinker_, attentive and
-reverent before an unknown and terrible divinity. Never did any other
-sculptor attempt to vivify his art with such intellectual superiority
-and by such meditations, and Rodin is at once the most realistic and
-most metaphysical of poets in stone and bronze.
-
-[Illustration: ISIS]
-
-Two or three works of more important dimensions stand out from his
-recent productions; besides a nude female torso (in bronze) of
-startling truthfulness, and two plaster studies that astonished at
-the Salons, and besides _The Christian Martyr_, so masterly in its
-modelling, Rodin has continued to work at his _Ugolino,_ taken out of
-_The Gate of Hell_, and has put the finishing touch to two plans. One
-of these is the _Monument to Labour_, a grand conception, which one may
-dream of seeing carried out and rising up in some square of busy Paris,
-but which want of money will prevent from ever being realised. It is a
-column upon a vast rectangular base, with a crypt in it. Two colossal
-figures of _Night_ and _Day_ would stand at the entrance. In the crypt
-would be shown, in bas-relief, different subterranean works--mining,
-etc. Around the column would run a covered spiral staircase, and upon
-the column itself would be figured in bas-reliefs all the various
-manifestations of labour, so that as one ascended the stairs all the
-divers phases of human genius could be successively studied. On the
-top would hover the _Benedictions_, two--winged spirits, descended
-from heaven, which are already executed in marble on a small scale,
-and are among Rodin's finest conceptions. This colossal project was
-conceived as long ago as 1897. The rough model is in the studio at
-Meudon-Val-Fleury.
-
-[Illustration: NUDE STUDY]
-
-The monument to Puvis de Chavannes was entrusted to his friend Rodin,
-and is already finished. Rodin conceived it in an original and charming
-way. Instead of making the customary statue, he considered the purely
-Greek quality of Puvis' genius and chose to pay homage to him in a form
-reproduced from the antique. The bust of the great painter is placed
-on a plain table, as the ancients placed those of their dead upon
-little domestic altars. A fine tree loaded with fruit bends over and
-shades the head. Leaning on the table behind the bust is a beautiful
-naked youth, who sits dreaming in a well-chosen supple attitude. The
-whole design is intimate, gentle, and pure. Placed on the ground in a
-garden this votive monument would show how much delicacy and caressing
-lightness sometimes lies in Rodin's sombre and pathetic thoughts.
-
-Another important group is that of _Orpheus and Eurydice._ Orpheus has
-fallen on one knee and is lifting his great lyre towards the gods whom
-he has just implored. Above him, almost on his back, suspended in a
-way that would appear to contradict the laws of equilibrium and the
-material conditions of sculpture, soars Eurydice, compassionate and
-almost vaporous, truly an immaterial shade, with a smile of despair.
-I regret that the unfinished condition of this model does not allow
-me to publish a photograph of it, for nothing would give a clearer
-impression of Rodin's originality in the matter of contour and in the
-mutual relation of figures. The extreme freedom of his attitudes and
-his caprices of balance are, indeed, the newest features that he has
-brought into his art and are not to be found in anyone else in any
-country or time. In these is his true signature, and by them his work
-might be recognised among a hundred statues of all periods. As to the
-expressive beauty of the faces and bodies, that is supreme. No one has
-better comprehended than Rodin all that can be rendered by the naked
-human body and all the intellectual significations that it can hide.
-The nude is to Rodin a whole language.
-
-In his latest spiritualised works there is something Correggio-like
-in the vibration of light upon the softened forms and amplified
-surfaces. They suggest the _Antiope,_ at once soft and muscular, and
-Rodin often speaks of "morbidezza" as a quality which he no longer
-distrusts, whereas he formerly banished it from his ascetic, sinewy,
-and dry figures. He gives his women the pulpy flesh of fruits. The
-lines of landscape seem to him to correspond to the planes of the body;
-he lately said to me that since he has lived at Meudon, opposite the
-flowing Seine, the wooded hills and the fields, he has found useful
-resemblances between the modelling of the body and that of a horizon. I
-have even once suggested to him the title of "The Hill" for the body of
-a young man reclining, the outline of which did in truth resemble the
-undulations of a hill, and he retained the name and the analogy, for he
-delights in everything that binds the human being to the earth, and,
-like a true metaphysician, conceives of nothing isolated or distinct in
-nature.
-
-I come now to Rodin's drawings, drawings which were not made to be
-shown, but which, having nevertheless become known, have surprised
-and puzzled people. Rodin's drawings, like some other drawings by
-sculptors, are not themselves works of art; they are thoughts noted
-down, and are not comprehensible unless they are seen with the statues
-of which they indicate the first idea, or some variation.
-
-Rodin has published some of his sketches; and has produced some
-dry-points (in particular the _Ronde_,[1] _Antonin Proust_, the three
-portraits of Henry Becque, full face and two profiles upon the same
-sheet, and two heads of Hugo), some drawings for books by M. Mirbeau
-and M. Bergerat, and a complete set of illustrations of the _Fleurs
-du Mal,_ in the form of marginal drawings for a unique copy belonging
-to M. Gallimard. Many drawings in black or colour have been published
-(by the clever lithographer Clot), and M. Fenaille has superintended
-an admirable _edition de luxe_ of 142 drawings by Rodin.[2]
-Notwithstanding this partial publicity, these works must be considered
-as _standing apart;_ and to consider them by themselves would actually
-be to injure Rodin with the public at large, since they form an
-integral part of his statues. For this reason I have not chosen to
-reproduce any of them here, studies so purely professional not seeming
-to fall within the scope of a work intended to give a general idea of
-an artist's work.
-
-Having said so much, I wish to dwell upon the great beauty of these
-drawings--a special and terrible beauty. Many deal with Dante. Rodin
-did some painting under Lecoq de Boisbaudron, landscapes, a portrait
-of his father, and sketches after Rubens; but there has never been
-any danger of painting intruding upon his vocation, and his sketches
-rapidly became nothing but notes for sculpture. The objective reality
-of his Dantesque figures is vague, if their subjective reality is
-intense. Rodin, anxious to note down his impressions, and not to
-_illustrate_, made his sketches into a sort of passionate writing, only
-devoting himself to the scheme and to the contrasts of black and white,
-and neglecting every detail. In these violent washes, these pencillings
-and pen-scribbles, the spectator who is not forewarned sees nothing,
-but the lover of art, who knows beforehand what to seek, follows the
-creative thought. Nothing can be less like what is generally known as
-"a drawing." After the regular drawings, the "painter's drawings" of
-his first period, which have but a restricted interest, and which are
-no longer known, those of his second manner are confusions of light and
-shadow, and show fantastically. I will quote at this point a passage
-from an essay by M. Clément Jasmin, a discerning critic, whose noisy
-rivals do not give him his due place, and who has described these works
-excellently.
-
-"These sketches are altogether the work of a sculptor, even in their
-colour, which seems to have sunk into plaster or clay, and especially
-in the firmness of their modelling, which is imparted by shaded touches
-of body-colour, on grey paper, or rendered by spaces left white. These
-blanks, these white spaces, are the extreme point of the modelling,
-the 'high light' of some projection, which lower down is wrapped in
-half-tints that carry the eye to the shadows of the inflections or
-the hollows. There is a constant relation between the contour and
-the interior modelling. A thrill is communicated by the fantastic
-lighting of some sketches. Rodin adds further strength to this dramatic
-distribution of lights and shadows by one or two tones that accentuate
-the impression or fix a plan. Often his ink will become blue or yellow,
-(water-colours, sepia, or coloured inks being employed), in order to
-settle a value or intensify a feeling. Such is the case in the Fenaille
-publication, with the gloomy red in the face of the Ugolino, of the
-Dantesque Mahomet, whose entrails are hanging out, and of some other
-figures dashed in, in black, on a violet background. One plainly feels
-the material in which the work, of which the sketch is the first idea,
-will be executed. It is always a sculptor who is at work, even when he
-exchanges the chisel for the pen or the brush."
-
-Painters would scorn these drawings. They commonly believe that
-sculptors cannot express upon a plane surface the mass and movement of
-a body. In reality a painter's sketch and a sculptor's sketch differ
-in intention and execution. Rodin's are translations of movements,
-in no way decorative and not attempting to express either modelling
-or detail, but, if we may say so, the abstract geometry, the thought
-that commands the movement. The use of coloured inks, which are solely
-meant to modify certain values that black or white would not express to
-Rodin's mind, has given rise to mistakes. These colours are not there
-to express real tints, as is the case in ordinary drawings thus touched
-up; inaccurate things have been said about these colourings, and about
-the fantastic and almost Japanese appearance of some of the plates.
-Rodin is certainly not thinking of prints in colour. He makes these
-notes instinctively, and displays not so much a deliberate thought as a
-natural faculty of transcription.
-
-In his early drawings Rodin _refers to_--for I must insist upon the
-point that the drawings do not _represent_ things--many of Dante's
-persons and many fanciful animals, and later, to his statues. Now he
-does not draw at all from literary impressions, but solely from the
-living model. He uses ordinary cheap paper, a pencil or a pen; he
-makes his model take some transitory, absolutely free position, often
-in the rest between two sittings, and rapidly draws contour without
-taking his eyes from the model and without looking at his sketch.
-Sometimes the stroke will fall upon emptiness, the sheet of paper will
-be too small, a head or a limb will fail to find its place. Naturally
-this instantaneous sketch will be deformed in the most unexpected
-way; the proportions are false, but the scheme of the contour and the
-modelling of each piece are true. Often the hurrying pencil will miss
-the curve of a breast or a leg. Then the artist will return to that
-point with hasty, intermingled, impatient strokes that play around the
-true line. His only concern is to fix the first view, the absolutely
-living impression. Afterwards, in tracing his sketch, he rectifies,
-but his chief aim is to amplify the impression of the life, taken
-spontaneously, according to his principle of enlarging the form, in
-order to place it better in the atmosphere (about in the proportion of
-5/4 instead of 4/4). Then he connects the contours and further enlarges
-the modelling, filling the outline with a wash of burnt-sienna, which
-gives the general value, or sometimes with blue or red water-colour.
-Rodin likes this practice in catching movements, and he has in his
-studio hundreds of drawings of this kind that differ from his early
-ones. Those aimed at the imaginative transcription of tragic and
-literary elements under strange illuminations, and were almost like the
-drawings of Odilon Redon; the later ones are merely graphic notes of
-movements, and are incapable of having any direct aim or meaning.
-
-I must add a few words upon a delicate point of which I should not
-have spoken if others had not spoken mistakenly upon the subject.
-Rodin's drawings, especially those of the present time, have shocked
-some people who have seen them by their licentious character. Why
-should we assume embarrassment in explaining this? In all Rodin's work
-there is a profound and violent sense of the voluptuous, and the stern
-painter of the vices and damnations of hell does not need to think of
-prudery. The elevation and dramatic character of his conceptions clothe
-the most daring attitudes with the severe chastity of the beautiful.
-In his sketches, made for himself alone, and in the privacy of his
-studio, Rodin no more fears erotic positions than did Hokusai. Beneath
-the original animality he perceives nature; and feminine sexuality,
-its movements, and impulses interest him, because therein woman is
-psychologically revealed. Everything, in physical desire, that exalts,
-maddens, contorts, and fevers the human body is, for the sculptor, the
-object of an intensely interested study that he does not communicate
-to the general public; nor is he the only one among the great artists
-of form whom the erotic has interested from this point of view. Only
-mediocre minds and minds capable of low intentions see anything low in
-the movements of life. Rodin's studies from the model, naked and free,
-without spectators, in the serious presence of work, never sully his
-grand and melancholy inspiration; and his daring art is assuredly that
-which most leads away the beholder from erotic ideas, because it notes
-in every human being the melancholy of the insatiable, and makes the
-pleasure of the senses a suffering of the flesh and the spirit. By this
-point he touches the profound morality of art, and his consciousness is
-free from any equivocation. The recent drawings in which he catches the
-animal attitudes of the model are thus no more questionable, from the
-delicate point of view of which I am speaking, than anatomical plates,
-or the sad immodesties of a post-mortem examination. He adds to them
-the power of expressing passion with which he is endowed, but since he
-only shows these drawings to friends and artists in whom nudity does
-not arouse silly thoughts, this concerns no one else. A comparison
-cannot even be ventured between these drawings and the masterly
-etchings of Rops, which are deliberate illustrations of licentious
-subjects, relieved only by beauty of execution, and which should only
-be shown with express reservations. Rodin admires certain bronzes in
-the secret museum at Naples, and certain Japanese prints, because in
-these, too, art has done its work by expressing a secret and essential
-spring of the nervous and psychological life of humanity; a fierce
-and serious subject which only fools consider laughable or indecent,
-because their minds approach it with indecorum and ridicule. But I
-do not know that Rodin ever even yielded to the fancy of modelling
-one of these subjects for himself, as Rubens and many others did not
-forbid themselves to do. It is time, therefore, to have done with this
-question in regard to the great French sculptor. I do not know for whom
-he intends these recent drawings, a whole framed collection of which
-occupies one of the storerooms of his country house. Perhaps he will
-have them destroyed; in any case, they are but studies of movements and
-masses, and in no way direct representations of life.
-
-Rodin's drawings are "rough drafts" to be compared with those of
-a writer. Some are very impressive, and all constitute precious
-evidence of his psychological preoccupations and of his desire for
-simplification. But they remain on the margin of his work, and neither
-the public nor the critics have those rights over them that belong to
-biographers and friends. That is a point to be plainly specified, and
-I desire to repeat that that is the reason this book contains none of
-them.
-
-
-[1] This word may mean either a certain sort of dance, or the "round"
-of a patrol.--TRANS.
-
-[2] Album of 142 sketches, reproduced in heliogravure by M. Manzi and
-published by Goupil, 1897. These sketches in wash or colour have been
-selected according to the advice of M. Fenaille, their owner, who lent
-them, from the most imaginative of Rodin's drawings in his second
-manner.
-
-
-
-
-V.
-
-
-RODIN'S PRIVATE LIFE--HIS PERSON, STUDIO, AND HOME--HIS INFLUENCE;
-SCULPTORS INSPIRED BY HIS IDEAS--RODIN'S PLACE IN THE FRENCH
-SCHOOL--HIS PRESENT POSITION IN RESPECT TO ACADEMIC SCULPTURE
-
-
-Auguste Rodin is in person a man of middle height, with an enormous
-head upon a massive torso. At first sight one sees nothing of him but
-this leonine bust, the head with its strong nose, flowing grey beard,
-and small, keen, light-coloured eyes, slightly veiled by short sight
-and by a gentle irony. The impression of power is accentuated by the
-rolling gait, the rocky aspect of the troubled brow under the rough
-brush of hair, the bony thickness of the aquiline nose and the ample
-curls of beard. But the first impression is partly contradicted by
-the reticent line of the mouth, the quick look, penetrating, simple,
-and arch, (one of the most composite glances I have ever seen), and
-especially by the voice, which is hollow, not easily modulated, with
-deep inflections and sudden returns to a dental pronunciation, and
-of which the meaning and intention are further modified by certain
-very expressive tossings of the head. He appears simple, precise,
-reserved, courteous, and cordial, without liveliness. Little by little
-his shyness gives place to a calm and remarkable tone of authority.
-He is neither emphatic nor awkward, and would seem rather dispirited
-than inspired. An immense energy breathes in his sober and measured
-gestures. The slowness and apparent embarrassment of his speech and
-the pauses in his conversation give especial significance to what he
-says; moreover, Rodin has acquired of late years a genuine case as a
-talker and even as a writer, which previously he did not possess. I was
-intimately acquainted with Stéphane Mallarmé, who, measured by Rodin,
-was incomparably eloquent, and I often associate these two men in my
-thoughts. The voices were alike, and Rodin, too, with his improvised
-phrases, has the same veiled circumspect way of speech, hitting
-suddenly upon words that illuminate the idea.
-
-[Illustration: AUGUSTE RODIN]
-
-Rodin, in speaking of any work of his, has a way of explaining it that
-is very elliptical, but very clear, and which has caused some brilliant
-chatterers to say, because he did not offer a prolix commentary, that
-he did not know what he had done. In reality he utters the essential,
-and his gesture, which seems to model his thought in space, completes
-his words. He looks lovingly on his creations, and sometimes seems to
-meditate in astonishment at the idea of having created them; he speaks
-of them as though they existed apart from himself.
-
-Gradually, beneath Rodin's essential simplicity, one discovers features
-that were at first hidden; he is ironical, sensuous, nervous, proud.
-He contains as possibilities all the passions that he expresses with
-so vibrating a magnificence, and one begins to perceive the secret
-links between this calm, almost cheerful man and the art that he
-reveals. At certain moments his clear and rather vague eyes become
-full of phosphorescent points, the face grows sardonic and almost
-faunlike; at others it saddens and discloses a sickness for infinity.
-This man is the comrade of his dumb white creatures; he loves them,
-follows their abstract life, has moral obligations towards them.
-Fundamentally the one thing with which Rodin is really concerned is
-the life of permanent forms. Of late celebrity, age, and experience
-have disposed him to become an adviser, a master, and he has begun
-to talk aesthetics. But his ideas and opinions are restricted. He
-perceives human beings only very summarily, his cordiality is a way
-of fulfilling his social duties hastily. He has, if I may venture the
-expression, very fine moral antennae, and they serve to recognise the
-persons whom he will like. Very capable of friendship, Rodin reduces
-friendship to tacit agreements upon the essential subjects of thought,
-and it is only if one meets him upon one of these points that one
-takes a place in his remembrance or his liking. He does not put his
-faith in individuals, but in general ideas. He loves nothing but his
-work, and endures everything else with civil boredom. He has a horror
-of debates and disturbances. I have never heard him speak ill of bad
-artists; he neglects, but does not criticise. He has a silent humour
-which leads him to make busts of official and mediocre sculptors, with
-an amusing good grace. Uncompromising in everything that touches his
-art, Rodin has throughout his whole career endured severe struggles
-and grave injustices, and, too proud to dispute, has never shown his
-secret revolts. At the time when the _Balzac_ was refused all Rodin's
-friends said to him: "Resist, force your work upon them; you ought,
-for the work's sake, and a court would surely decide for you, for your
-agreement is definitely in your favour." He listened and thanked them,
-always good-tempered, and then withdrew his statue without saying
-anything.
-
-It is not weakness, for Rodin has had an excessively hard life and
-is strong and patient; it is dignity of the inner life and profound
-indifference for the life about him. Rodin is a high dignitary of
-the Legion of Honour, a president of the judges of sculpture of an
-important society of artists (the Société Nationale), he is honoured
-all over Europe, has been received in England as a genius, and has
-succeeded Whistler as the head of a chosen band of artists; but he
-remains the man that he was when he was unknown and poor in his
-solitude at Brussels.
-
-He likes few things, but likes those thoroughly. He reads little, but
-what he reads strikes home to him as to no one else; Baudelaire and
-Rousseau, in whom he delights, are instances. He is passionately fond
-of music, especially of Gluck, but seldom speaks of it. He simplifies
-everything, sees only the main lines in morality as in art, lives by
-two or three principles, and has an aversion for everything that is
-not essential.
-
-[Illustration: A CORNER OF RODIN'S STUDIO AT MEUDON]
-
-When one knows Rodin well one ceases to be able to separate him from
-his work. He can no longer think otherwise than symbolically by slow
-deposits of accumulated sensation which work on in the deep strata of
-his consciousness and suddenly blossom and take a name. His statues are
-states of the soul. He is himself a representative being, surprised at
-his own immanence, and his intelligence is outdone by his instinct.
-That is how it comes about that he does not always know how to name
-the beings that he has discovered, as we discover, by means of pain,
-corners of our consciousness that we had not suspected. In the same way
-that Rodin seems to break away the fragments of a block from around
-an already existing statue hidden in it, he is himself a sort of rock
-concealing shapes within it and embracing in its secret recesses
-immense crystallised arborescences. With a simple enough personal
-psychology he expresses infinite shades and inflexions of emotion. His
-thought is like the monad of Leibnitz; it seems, when one sees the man,
-to have no window to the outer world.
-
-Rodin's opinions upon social life are vague. He contents himself with
-repeating that work lovingly done is the secret of all order and all
-happiness. To love life and natural forms, and to attempt nothing
-disobedient to Nature or her aims, that is his whole morality.
-
-He sees very few people and visits nobody. He would baffle visitors
-accustomed to elegant, literary, well-informed, brilliant artists. His
-studio in the Rue de l'Université, at the end of an old yard encumbered
-by blocks of marble and shaded by aged chestnut trees, is like the
-work-place of a poor beginner. Neither a carpet nor an ornament is
-to be seen; the stone floor, the bare walls, a few rush chairs, some
-modelling stands, some cloths, a shabby deal table loaded with papers,
-sketches piled up on shelves, blouses hanging on nails, a cast-iron
-stove--these and nothing more are found by the many foreign admirers
-who come to see Rodin, and whom he receives with invariable amiability
-amid his assistants at work upon the Hugo monument or upon some smaller
-piece of marble.
-
-[Illustration: A CORNER OF RODIN'S STUDIO AT MEUDON]
-
-Setting aside his journeys to London and Prague and his travels in
-Germany and Italy, Rodin leads an extremely retired life in Paris, and
-is rarely to be met. He invariably lunches at his own house at Meudon,
-then goes to the Rue de L'Université to work, and goes home again to
-dinner. Formerly, before he had his house at Meudon, he used to lunch
-at a _café_ in the Place de L'Alma, where he was to be seen for twenty
-years, and to which people used to go to see him, rather as people
-go to see Ibsen in Christiania. The house, of a sixteenth-century
-style, that Rodin has inhabited at Meudon since 1900, is situated amid
-vineyards, and stands alone at the end of a sort of cliff, overlooking
-all Paris, the Seine, and the Bois de Boulogne, and facing the wooded
-heights of Saint Cloud and Bellevue. The site is open and fine; Rodin
-enjoys immense expanses of sky, sunsets, storms, and moonlight nights
-that delight him. The house is spacious, light, furnished with extreme
-simplicity, and adorned by a few pictures, the works of friends (in
-particular his portraits by Sargent and Legros). Rodin has added to
-it the pavilion in iron and glass, in which he exhibited all his
-work, at the Rond-point de l'Alma, in the exhibition of 1900. This
-pavilion, rebuilt and full of brilliant sunlight, contains all the
-artist's statuary. There are also several small studios, in which
-Rodin has his marble rough-hewn, keeps the casts of his statues or
-accumulates the collections of bronzes, marbles, antique or Gothic,
-and fragments which he is never tired of finding out and buying. In
-this place, which, after a life of difficulties and worries, Rodin has
-been able to purchase, he leads a life that fully suits his tastes,
-among beautiful trees and flowers, with a majestic landscape before
-him. It is touching to see the man, here, amid the enormous mass of
-his work, a whole world of statues, with which he lives and which sums
-up all his labours and all his existence. A photograph which I am able
-to add to the illustrations of this volume will give a partial idea
-of that surprising and imposing cohort of figures in clay, marble,
-and bronze--that impassioned or tragic throng. Rodin receives very
-few visitors at Meudon--hardly any but old friends, and he spends his
-mornings in his garden or in his light and cheerful studio drawing or
-superintending his workmen. It is chiefly at Meudon that he prepares
-his rough drafts, the main lines of his compositions; and in order to
-see an effect he will often hastily put together with clay some of
-the plaster limbs that he keeps in a number of glass cases--quite an
-anatomical museum in fact, filling a whole storey, and containing
-hundreds of pieces and of attitudes piled together.
-
-[Illustration: STUDY (IN BRONZE) FOR THE "BALZAC"]
-
-Rodin appears to stand alone in his own time; first, by his genius;
-and secondly, by the special character of his artistic conception.
-This solitude, however, is only apparent. Rodin's ideas, as opposed
-to the teaching of the "École," form a body of logical principles
-which are slowly attracting the adhesion of young artists. The long
-struggle of impressionism against academism has now entered upon its
-last phase: the return to the French tradition, to national affiliation
-in opposition to the Roman neo-classicism. That idea, which is the
-programme of all independent and interesting critical intelligence in
-our country, finds in Rodin its perfect demonstration, and the only
-one afforded by contemporary sculpture. Until now Rodin has preached
-only by example, and we know how slow the critics and the public are in
-extracting from a work the ideas that it contains. But the extraction
-is now begun, and Rodin himself speaks with undisputed authority. Since
-the exhibition of 1900 his moral position stands ten times higher.
-Youth greets him as a chieftain and his detractors are silent. While
-the synthetic and symbolic mind of Rodin arouses the enthusiasm and
-inspires the thoughts of writers, the theory of the amplification of
-the modelling is making its way in the studios of sculptors. "Rodin has
-opened a large window in the pale house of contemporary sculpture,"
-declares Pierre Roche, the sculptor; "out of the timid and much
-impaired craft that was before his day he has shown that a bold art
-full of hope can be made." This opinion of one of the most delicate
-artists of our generation is precisely that of many independent
-sculptors. Among these we must quote Emile Bourdelle, Rodin's pupil
-and friend, an impassioned, vibrating, and generous artist, whose
-works are among those first looked for in each Salon. Others are the
-two brothers Gaston and Lucien Schnegg, the latter of whom exhibited
-in the Salon of 1904 so beautiful a head of Aphrodite, almost worthy
-in the mysterious and vaporous beauty of its planes, of the ancients,
-and of Rodin; Jules Desbois, of the first rank in technical skill and
-of a violently original temperament; Alexandre Charpentier, a former
-collaborator of Rodin's, whose success in applied art has not turned
-him aside from his expressive and vigorous work in statuary; Mlle.
-Camille Claudel, Rodin's pupil, who is the first woman sculptor of
-existing-art in France, and whose name has appeared upon admirable
-works; and finally, Pierre Roche, although his supple and decorative
-fancy denies itself the expression of the tragic. The Swiss sculptor
-Niederhausern-Rodo, George Minne, the sculptor of Ghent, who has a
-powerful creative genius, not understood, and the Italian sculptor
-Rosso, are also partisans of Rodin's art, and so is the Englishman
-Bartlett. In another direction it is very interesting to note the
-curious reciprocal influence of Auguste Rodin and Eugène Carrière,
-who are united by friendship and by the same aesthetic creed. Eugène
-Carrière, the most profound painter of the inner life existing in the
-French school of to-day, has great analogies with Rodin, both as a man
-and as an artist. He, too, reduces his art to essentials, to the main
-lines and the deliberate amplification of surfaces. Thus his figures,
-bathed in shadow, are akin to Rodin's statues, while the latter, bathed
-with dewy light, seem to be pictures by Carrière. The painter becomes
-massive and powerful, the sculptor becomes vaporous. Rodin seeks the
-bland, half-shadows of Correggio, and Carrière desires that his figures
-should have the powerful relief of bronze. The painter sacrifices
-colour to the sole study of values, and by his black-and-white comes
-back to sculpture. Very curious is this point of junction between
-two great artists. Rodin is beginning to explain himself with the
-pen; and Eugène Carrière has, for some years past, been writing--too
-rarely--passages upon art of which the style is admirable and the
-concentration of thought astonishing, passages which recall Mallarmé
-and Baudelaire, and leave far behind the commonplaces of journalistic
-criticism. Rodin and Carrière have their school, their circle of chosen
-admirers, and their double influence may soon be the most decisive, if
-not the most brilliant and the noisiest, in French art of to-day.
-
-NUDE FIGURE (PHOTOGRAPHED IN THE OPEN AIR AT TWILIGHT IN THE GARDEN AT
-MEUDON)
-
-The prevailing note of opinion about Rodin among his friends and his
-detractors is that he is like no one else, and that no statue can, in a
-manner, be looked at beside his, so individual is the conception from
-which they spring. By the mere fact that they exist, they compel us to
-choose between them and the others. Their silhouettes, their planes,
-the quality of their shadows, and their lights, make them technically
-works apart. If such a man understands sculpture thus, either he is
-right, against everybody, or he is totally mistaken; we cannot like him
-and also approve of ordinary statuary. His psychological and tragic
-genius conquers the admiration even of those who oppose his material
-execution. Rodin does not set himself up as a chief, nor recognise
-followers; yet he is a chief by his very work.
-
-He is the greatest living French artist, and one of the most complex
-and powerful movers of thought in modern art. He does not found a
-school, but he influences the soul of a generation. He remains alone,
-not susceptible of imitation; but if he did not exist sculpture would
-be deprived of its greatest regenerator.[1] By inscribing passions
-in symbols, he touches the sensibilities of all, and is a master
-to poets as much as to sculptors, because his subjects are moral,
-affecting, never commanded by an anecdote, bathed in the universally
-lyric. Attempts have been made to blame him because of the admiration
-of writers; it has been said, with an inflexion of scorn (especially
-in the circles of his fellow-artists), "he is a _littéraire_." An
-injustice easily committed at a time when the intellect of painters
-and sculptors seems to blush at itself, and when they make it a sort
-of false merit to show that their eye and hand are separate from their
-brain. Rodin's splendid technical power annuls the reproach and retains
-the praise. Resting firmly upon nature, his symbols may rise high.
-Rodin delights poets because he makes the infinite emanate from the
-most finite of arts.
-
-Everything has been patiently meditated by him. He dares, but is never
-overbold; his balance and his taste are those of a classic, despite
-the uncomprehending astonishment of the academic sculptors, hypnotised
-by the sophistry of _finish_ and _elegance_, and confusing the _exact_
-with the _true._ There is a synthesized form, that corresponds to
-reality synthesized in symbols, a _second truth;_ and that proportion
-is observed by very few artists. Most of them, contenting themselves
-with an immediate, momentary, anecdotic truth, translate it by
-picturesque observation, or by minutely detailed copying. This attempt
-of a sterile cleverness to transcribe the instantaneous is the very
-contrary of art, the first character of which is to display the laws
-of vital permanence underlying fugitive aspects. Herein lies the reason
-why sculptors become uneasy over Rodin, while writers, more familiar
-with general ideas, become enthusiastic. The impressionist crisis--the
-study, that is to say, of instantaneous lights and actions--hardly got
-over, he brings in this _second truth,_ the transcription of general
-and permanent feelings into a form that speaks as much to the mind as
-to the senses. Such a man dominates impressionism as much as he does
-academism.
-
-A whole order of curious and fundamental relations between nervous
-sensibility and thought has arisen out of his work. Rodin's personality
-is specially representative in the line of French sculptors. He goes
-back, as I have said, to the Egyptians and the Greeks in the matter
-of technical ideas. In his tragic feeling he proceeds directly from
-the Gothic artists. It is from them that he descends, and especially
-from the sculptors of the French Renascence, in particular Germain
-Pilon; and he blends his Greek remembrances, passed through an Italian
-influence, with a conception altogether national, vigorous, and
-decorative. Rodin's actual part is to take up sculpture exactly at
-the moment of the French evolution.[2] Since that time we have had
-some great masters; native genius has been triumphantly upheld, in
-opposition to the false school that came from the Alps, by Coysevox,
-Houdon, Puget, Pajou, Pigalle, Clodion, Falconet, Couston, Rude,
-Carpeaux, and Barye, a line of splendid inventors of shapes, all of
-whom, in contradistinction to the official school, have represented
-the inmost qualities of their race. All these men Rodin emulates by
-the importance of his work; perhaps the future may regard him as
-the magnificent outcome of their efforts carried on through three
-centuries. In this succession of artists, Puget, Rude, and Barye are
-those with whom his technical relations are closest.[3] But he has been
-less decorative than Puget and less hampered by the themes imposed
-upon him; he has gone further than the great Rude in the expression of
-inward emotion, and he surpasses even Barye in power of modelling and
-boldness of silhouette. He has created a world which is fully his own,
-a feeling and a pathos not to be found elsewhere, which are the very
-soul of his time.
-
-Rodin, then, can be set only beside Puget and Rude. Like Puget, he is
-overflowing with vitality and with passionate frenzy; he worships power
-and heroic beings; but his are sad, and nearer to Gothic asceticism
-and to the nervous derangement of Baudelaire than to the resplendent
-pomp of the seventeenth century, into which Puget transposed his
-heroes of Rome and of Corneille. Like Rude, he is attracted by deep
-things, by soul tragedies; but he is more abstract than the creator
-of the _Napoleon Awakening to Immortality_, the _Joan of Arc,_ or
-the _Marseillaise._ Rodin is more general, more synthetic; he turns
-his mind to permanent symbols, outside of ages and races. Taking up,
-as if in challenge, the mythological subjects that the "École" had
-most spoiled, he has shown how a great mind can renew all things and
-impress upon them the magic of its vision. He is the most symbolic
-of our men of genius; and if the modelling of the Greeks, Gothic
-austerity, the strength of Puget and of Rude, have helped Rodin to
-make up his personality, the fusion of these elements and the addition
-of a personal imagination and an extraordinary contemplative faculty
-have enabled him, like Wagner, who descended from Bach, Beethoven, and
-Liszt, to create, after and apart from all of them, work that resumes
-them and forgets them, to become in its turn an initiator. The point
-in which Rodin is inimitable is the expression of the voluptuous with
-all its latent woes; and this point strongly recalls to memory _Tristan
-and Isolde_, which is such a paroxysm as might touch the most perilous
-region of exceptional art; but Rodin is kept within the bounds of the
-normal, and protected from the audacities of his strange and troubled
-imagination, by his imperturbable technical certainty and by his
-admiration for some few masters. As was the case with Baudelaire and
-with Poe, his purity and grandeur of form save him; like Dante, this
-lover of gloomy beauty hangs over the verge of passion's hell without
-falling into it.
-
-Rodin's art is healthy because it feeds upon natural truth and general
-logic. He is the supreme painter of man bowed by intense, melancholic,
-feverish, constricting thought; but also, with a candid tenderness
-unknown to Wagner, he is the caressing creator of women in love, the
-poet of youth, embracing and radiant. Only a genius can have the
-diversity of mind that produces _The Burghers of Calais_, ascetic
-and mediæval, the spasmodic _Hell_, the almost abstract _Balzac_,
-the bronze busts worthy of Donatello, and the images of women carved
-in the radiant and golden marble of Attica by a sensuous and subtle
-enthusiast who has rediscovered the soul of Hellenic beauty. This union
-of technical skill, evolved according to the secrets of the antique
-with a power of expressing all human sentiments from gentleness to
-lewdness, from the mystic to the pathetic, from nervous disorganisation
-to carnal frankness, this union of contraries and this universality are
-not to be found in any of our forerunners. Not Puget, nor Rude, nor
-any of our masters has had such intellectual ubiquity, such strength
-of condensation; in these points it is allowable, even in our own day,
-to acknowledge Rodin as supreme in the rich French school, and thus to
-anticipate the judgment of the future, in whose eyes he will loom yet
-larger.
-
-In any case it was high time he should appear; he has been as useful
-as was Manet by his intervention in French art. In spite of Dalou,
-sculpture had fallen very low after the death of Carpeaux and Barye;
-the deplorable school of the Second Empire had brought it into
-degeneracy, and we could reckon no one in sculpture to correspond
-to the great impressionists. Such men as Dujalbert, Chapu, Mercié,
-Frémiet, Saint Marceaux, and Falguière, are but sham great sculptors,
-nothing of whose work will last; the "École" group, from Paul Dubois
-to Barrias, Aube and Guillaume, is a mere example of pretentious
-insignificance. The few vigorous temperaments, or workers of genuine
-technical merit, like Denys Puech, Jean Dampt, Gardet, Camille
-Lefèvre, Devillez, and Jean Bassier, did not know how to put together
-their efforts in such a way as to found a real school. They produced
-without attaining a cohesion of thought capable of guiding a fresh
-generation. Bartholomé, thoughtful, pure, dreamy, and proud, stands
-apart. Mme. Besnard and M. Théodore Rivière are charming, but without
-influence. I have spoken of the group that has spontaneously placed
-itself around Rodin. Amid this interesting, unequal, and scattered
-sculpture he appeared with the authority of a master and a prophet;
-his work set the question upon its true basis again, showing whence we
-came, what was to be avoided, and whither we were to go; and all this
-with such clearness of evidence that the appearance of Rodin becomes,
-in like degree with that of Goujon and that of Puget, a capital date
-in the history of the French school, I declared in the Preface my
-intention to avoid any extravagant eulogy of Rodin, and have uttered
-my dislike of the idolatry by which some people think it necessary
-publicly to emphasise their admiration, with its snobbish accretions.
-But I should fall into the opposite fault if I did not declare the
-truth and the importance of what such an artist brings to his art, and
-did not mark his exact place in the line of his country's sculpture.
-Henley has called Rodin the Michael Angelo of the modern world. That
-opinion of a foreign critic, a critic justly esteemed one of the most
-upright in contemporary literature, France may justly make her own,
-far from extravagant and puerile praises, and in the face of the work
-accomplished. I shall be but too happy if I have contributed to make
-clearer to the public certain secret reasons, certain inner frameworks,
-of that logical and beautiful work.
-
-
-[1] A vehement but indiscriminating critic, M. Octave Mirbeau, has seen
-good to write, by way of affirming that Rodin's art moved him strongly:
-"A style takes rise from him." I have neither the space nor the wish to
-recriminate; but it would be dangerous to let such artistic heresies
-pass without protest. Rodin is an admirable example, but to say that
-a style arises from him is to say that he may become the creator of a
-perishable formula, and to understand nothing about his art.
-
-[2] Some surprise may be felt at my having failed to insist upon the
-name of Michael Angelo. Everybody has hit upon the obvious comparison.
-It is the exceeding obviousness that leads me to distrust it. Rodin is
-much nearer to Puget than to Michael Angelo, who is muscular strength
-carried to heroic proportions. Rodin, like Puget, and more than Puget,
-is nervous strength. Rodin appears much more akin to Michael Angelo
-than he really is. Careful study causes us more and more to leave
-behind that preliminary likeness which has sufficed so many critics.
-
-[3] We might perhaps say the same in regard to the great Carpeaux, too,
-who carried the art of movement and expression to so high a degree, and
-who did the same liberal work against the "École" as Rodin was to do at
-a later time. But their visions, aims, and minds differ profoundly.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-APPENDIX--CHRONOLOGICAL LIST OF RODIN'S PRINCIPAL WORKS--LIST OF THE
-PRINCIPAL BOOKS OR ARTICLES WRITTEN ABOUT HIM--QUOTATIONS REFERRING TO
-HIM--AN OPINION OF EUGÈNE CARRIÈRE'S; AN OPINION OF HENLEY'S--VARIOUS
-NOTES
-
-
-Chronological catalogue of Rodin's works is almost impossible to draw
-up. I do not think Rodin himself could do it. It must be remembered
-that before 1877 he made a quantity of studies which he destroyed,
-and such a producer as he is willing to neglect things of which
-others would keep count. In his poor and wandering days Rodin must
-have abandoned many things. How would it be possible to recount the
-figures that were retouched or even executed at Carrier-Belleuse's,
-the earliest independent works, the characters executed by him at
-Brussels, the statues that were planned and left unfinished for lack
-of money, those that were broken or that failed--all the immense store
-of work accomplished in the course of twenty years by a man who worked
-every day? How would it be possible even to enumerate the sketches
-and varied renderings of different subjects piled up in the studio at
-Meudon, in the Clos Payen, in the Rue des Fourneaux, and at Vaugirard?
-It is a whole world. I will confine myself, therefore, to a statement
-of known and exhibited works: and these, indeed, are what is essential.
-
-
-LIST OF THE PRINCIPAL EXHIBITED WORKS
-
-1864. _The Man with a Broken Nose._
-
-1865-70. Works in the studio of Carrier-Belleuse.
-
-1872-77. Friezes upon the Bourse and various works at Brussels.
-
-1877. _The Primitive Man (The Age of Brass)._ Decorative work on the
-Trocadéro.
-
-1878-80. _Saint Jerome. Saint John the Baptist._ Works in the
-manufactory of Sèvres. Competition for the National Defence Monument.
-
-1881. _Adam_ (destroyed). _Eve._
-
-1882. _Ugolino_ (a sketch taken up again later). Busts of _Alphonse
-Legros_ and _IV. E. Henley._ Studies for _The Gate of Hell._
-
-1883. _Bellona. General Lynch_ (equestrian statue). _The Genius of
-War._
-
-1884. Monument of _President Vicunha. Bust of a Young Woman._
-
-1885. _The Man and the Serpent._ Busts of _Dalou, Hugo,_ and _Antonin
-Proust._
-
-1886. First sketch of the Hugo monument. Drawings dealing with _The
-Gate of Hell._ Bust of _Henry Becque. The Kiss_ (a small group).
-
-1887. _Perseus and the Gorgon. Head of St. John beheaded._
-
-1888. _The Danaid. Alan Walking._ Nude study for one of the _Burghers
-of Calais._ Several little groups.
-
-1889. Studies for the _Gate of Hell_ and the monument to _Claude
-Lorraine. Torso of a Woman._ Group of _The Dream. The Dream of Life.
-Women Damned_ (in marble). _Hecuba._ Bust of _Roger Marx. Destitution.
-Thought_ (in marble).
-
-1890. _Bust of a Young Woman_ (in silver). _Torso of Saint John.
-Brother and Sister._
-
-1891. _The Caryatid. The Young Mother. A Nymph._
-
-1892. Busts of _Puvis de Chavannes_ and _Henri Rochefort. Grief.
-Claude Lorraine. The Burghers of Calais._
-
-1893. _The Death of Adonis._ Medallion of _César Franck. Galatea._
-Bust of _Séverine. The Crest and the Wave. Resurrection. The Child
-Achilles_ (group in clay).
-
-1894. _Eternal Spring. Hope_ (a reclining figure in back view.)
-_Orpheus and Eurydice_ (first version). _Christ and Magdalen._
-
-1895. Inauguration of _The Burghers of Calais. Illusion,_ the _Daughter
-of Icarus._ Medallion of _Octave Mirbeau._ Nude studies for the
-_Balzac. Man Crouching._
-
-1896. _The Inner Voice. The Muse of Anger_ (for the Hugo monument).
-_The Conqueror. Minerva. The Poet and the Life of Contemplation. Women
-Bathing._ Studies for the _Balzac._
-
-1897. _Victor Hugo. Balzac._ Monument of _President_ _Sarmiento._
-
-1898. Statue of _Balzac._ Bust of a _Young American._ Bust of _Madame
-F._ Statue of _Sarmiento,_ with a high relief of Apollo in marble.
-Monument of _Labour. The Benedictions_ (marble). _Twilight. Clouds._
-_The Parcæ and the Young Girl._
-
-1899. Works for the Hugo monument.
-
-1900. Marble groups. Exhibition at the Rond-point de l'Alma.
-
-1901. _Shades_ (for _The Gate of Hell)._
-
-1902. Groups in marble. _The Hand of God._ Busts.
-
-1903. Bust of _Hugo. The Poet and the Muse._ Various sketches.
-_Ugolino_ (fresh version). _The Prodigal Son._
-
-1904. _The Thinker_, and various works in marble in process of
-execution.[1]
-
-The work of Rodin may thus be estimated at about ten works on a grand
-scale, forty groups or statues, some thirty important busts, and
-perhaps two hundred figures or portraits, without counting sketches,
-from 1877 to 1904.
-
-I come now to the mention of some significant writings that deal with
-his aesthetic theory or with his work; and, as may be supposed, I leave
-out of question a quantity of valueless articles, for Rodin has been
-directly or indirectly the pretext for a great mass of writings, and
-is the modern French artist who has been most talked of, justly or
-unjustly. The works quoted are such as may be consulted with advantage.
-
-
-[1] To these may be added, in 1905, a bust of the Rt. Hon. _George
-Wyndham_, and _The Hand of God._
-
-
-
-
-ARTICLES OR BOOKS RELATING TO RODIN
-
-"Balzac and Rodin," by Roger Marx (_Le Voltaire,_ March, 1892).
-
-"Claude Lorraine," by Roger Marx (_Le Voltaire,_ June, 1892).
-(Excellent studies in the criticism of sculpture.)
-
-"Auguste Rodin," by Roger Marx (_Pan,_ and _The Image,_ September,
-1897).
-
-Drawings by Rodin, 129 plates, containing 142 heliogravures (Goupil and
-Co., 1897), from the suggestions and loans of M. Fenaille.
-
-"Rodin's Studio," by Edouard Rod (_Gazette des Beaux Arts,_ May, 1898).
-
-"Rodin," by Gabriel Mourey (_Revue illustrée,_ October, 1899)
-
-_Exhibition of 1900: Rodin's Works,_ with four prefaces by Eugène
-Carrière, Jean Paul Laurens, Claude Monet, and Albert Besnard.
-
-"Rodin and Legros," by Arsène Alexandre (_Figaro,_ June, 1900).
-
-"The Gate of Hell," by Anatole France (_Figaro,_ June 1st, 1900).
-
-_La Revue des Beaux Arts et des Lettres,_ January 1st, 1900.
-
-_La Plume,_ 1900. Special number.
-
-_Les Maîtres Artistes,_ special number, October 15th, 1903.
-(Illustrated collections, containing a certain number of critical
-studies by various authors.)
-
-_Rodin,_ by Léon Riotor: a pamphlet, reproducing in French, German,
-English, Italian, Spanish, and Russian, a study that appeared in the
-_Revue populaire des Beaux Arts,_ April 8th, 1899.
-
-_Rodin, the Sculptor,_ a volume of criticism, illustrated; by Léon
-Maillard (Floury); 1899.
-
-_The Sculptor Rodin, drawn from life._ A volume by Mlle. Judith Cladel
-(_La Plume_ office, 1903).
-
-_Rodin,_ a study by L. Brieger-Wasser (Vogel. Strassburg; 1903).
-
-_Rodin,_ by George Treu (_Jahrbuch der bildenden Kunst._ Berlin,
-Marstersteig, 1903).
-
-_Rodin,_ by R. M. Rilke (Berlin, Bard, 1903).
-
-"Rodin." Articles upon, by W. E. Henley, 1890; D. S. MacColl, 1902;
-Henri Duhem, 1890; Karel B. Made (Prague); Vittorio Pica (Rome).
-
-Of these various writings devoted to Rodin, those of Roger Marx should
-be particularly noted, on account of their technical understanding;
-Léon Maillard's volume is a sincere, well-informed, well-illustrated
-book, produced by a man who comprehends. The book by Mlle. Judith
-Cladel, daughter of the distinguished novelist, is an originally
-conceived volume, the only one that relates certain conversations, and
-attempts, with charming acuteness, to present Rodin in his private
-character. It is a work that deserves to be much better known and
-appreciated, and of which Rodin's first panegyrists, jealous of being
-the only "inventors" of the artist, have been very careful not to
-speak. The article by the graceful painter, Henri Duhem, is likewise
-excellent; and I consider Mr. MacColl's very remarkable, on account of
-its elevation and precision of judgment. The others have such value
-as belongs to admiring articles written hurriedly in newspapers: they
-express sympathetic feelings, or comment in a poetical way upon the
-subjects, but their critical value is négligeable, and there is nothing
-to be quoted from them for the information of my readers. The _Balzac_
-gave rise to a shoal of newspaper articles. Georges, Rodenbach, and
-France, on that occasion, said the acute and witty thing's about
-Rodin that they say about all manifestations of thought, and M.
-Mirbeau made Rodin the theme of some of those polemical variations,
-conjoining hyperbolical praise with abuse of his adversaries, which
-he is accustomed to offer as art-criticisms, and which have gained
-him a reputation of a certain kind. There is nothing to note in these
-pamphlets mixed with eulogistic effusions, the whole of which do not
-contain the substance of twenty lines by Henley or of Eugène Carrière's
-admirable Preface, which I am desirous of reproducing here because it
-is a masterpiece of synthetic divination.[1]
-
-
-[1] Preface to the Catalogue of the Rodin exhibition in the Pavillon
-de l'Alma, 1900. (The work mentioned above; other prefaces by Claude
-Monet, A. Besnard, and J. P. Laurens.)
-
-
-
-"THE ART OF RODIN
-
-
-"Rodin's art comes from the earth and returns to it, like those giant
-blocks--rocks or dolmens--which mark deserts, and in the heroic
-grandeur of which man recognises himself.
-
-"The transmission of thought by art, like the transmission of life, is
-the work of passion and of love.
-
-"Passion, whose obedient servant Rodin is, makes him discover the laws
-that serve to express it; she it is that gives him the sense of volumes
-and proportions, the choice of the expressive prominence.
-
-"Thus the earth projects external apparent forms, images, and statues
-that fill us with a sense of its internal life.
-
-"These terrestrial forms were the real guides of Rodin. They have set
-him free from scholastic traditions, in them he found his being and the
-creative instinct of men whom humanity celebrates.
-
-"Trees and plants revealed to him their likeness to those fair women,
-with sleek limbs rising, like delicate columns, to the moving torso and
-swelling breast, above which the head hangs heavily in the company of a
-strong and supple neck, even as a fine fruit full of savour weighs down
-its branch.
-
-"The massive brow overshadows the eyes, and the cheek brings the lip
-softly to the lover's entreaty.
-
-"Forms seek and meet in voluptuous desires of violence and of
-resignation, rebellious and obedient to laws from which nothing
-escapes; everywhere conscious logic triumphs.
-
-"The generalising spirit of Rodin has imposed solitude upon him. It
-has not been his lot to work upon the cathedral that is not, but his
-desire of humanity links him to the eternal forms of nature."
-
-After such a passage, in which every word is significant and eloquent,
-and is a great artist's reflection, everything seems pale. I will not,
-however, confine myself to a mere dry mention of the essay by Vittorio
-Pica, the great Italian critic, who generously arranged for Rodin's
-participation in the Venetian Exhibition (Gallery of Modern Art, 1897),
-and I should have liked to quote Anatole France's fine article, and
-some assertions of Mr. MacColl's, who very logically recalls to our
-memory the sculptor Auguste Préault, who is too much forgotten, and
-who was, indeed, a sort of imperfect precursor of Rodin. I must at
-least transcribe a few lines from W. E. Henley, who was, from the very
-beginning, a clear-sighted admirer of Rodin, and who spoke of him with
-eloquence and passion:--
-
-"M. Dalou ... has declared that when the century goes out it will
-remember the aforesaid doors" (i.e. _The Gate of Hell_) "as its heroic
-achievement in sculpture. And if that be true--as I believe it to be
-true--then where, between himself and Michael Angelo, is there so
-lofty a head as Rodin's?... His busts alone were enough to place him
-in the future, the style of them is so complete, the treatment so
-large and so distinguished, the effect so personal, yet so absolute in
-art.... Here, if you will, are a thousand hints of the possibilities of
-human passion: from Paolo and Francesca melting into each other:
-
- "'La bocca mi bacio tutta tremante'
-
-as no man and woman have done in sculpture since sculpture began....
-Here is sculpture in its essence.... You may read into it as much
-literature as you please, or as you can; but the interpolation is
-not Rodin's, but your own.... It is not literature in relief, nor
-literature in the round; it is sculpture pure and simple.... Passion is
-with him wholly a matter of form and surface and line, and exists not
-apart from these.... He is our Michael Angelo; and if he had not been
-that, he might have been our Donatello. And with Phidias and Lysippus
-all these some-and-twenty centuries afar, what more is left to say of
-the man of genius whose art is theirs?"
-
-We see that Henley's admiration returns to the comparison of Michael
-Angelo and Rodin. I persist in thinking that the resemblance rather
-lies in moral identity, in conception than in technicalities. The
-muscular enlargement of the Italian hero is not Rodin's amplification
-nor his expressiveness, _which is altogether nervous._ It is none the
-less true that these two men are the only ones who have imagined and
-realised a sculpturesque conception of so vast a reach. Not even Puget
-and Rude, who came between them, ventured such wholes as _The Tomb of
-the Medici_ or _The Gate of Hell._
-
-
-MUSEUMS
-
-Rodin has in the Luxembourg Museum (Paris) the following works:--
-
-_The Age of Brass,_ originally placed in the Luxembourg Gardens near
-the School of Mines.
-
-_The Danaid_ (marble).
-
-_Thought_ (marble).
-
-_St. John the Baptist Preaching_ (bronze).
-
-_The Fair Helmet-maker_ (bronze).
-
-Bust of _Jean Paul Laurens_ (bronze).
-
-_The Kiss_ (marble).
-
-Bust of _Mme. V._ (marble).
-
-At the Petit Palais (Ville de Paris), one work.
-
-At Beziers, Cognac, Dijon, Douai, Lille, and Lyons, several works.
-
-At Brussels, one work.
-
-At Copenhagen, several works.
-
-At New York, Boston, Chicago, and Philadelphia, works. At Helsingfors,
-one work.
-
-At Rotterdam, one work.
-
-At Geneva (Rath Museum), three works.
-
-At Venice, Christiania, St. Petersburg, Stockholm, Düsseldorf, Munich,
-Weimar, Vienna, Prague (town hall), one work in each town.
-
-At Hamburg, three works.
-
-At Hagen, three works.
-
-At Berlin (new gallery of Charlottenburg), five works.
-
-At Crefeld, two works.
-
-At Buda-Pest, five works.
-
-In London (Victoria and Albert Museum), two works; (British Museum),
-one work.
-
-At Glasgow, one work.
-
-Museum of Marseilles, _The Inner Voice_ (clay).
-
-The new works in these various museums are originals or casts.
-
-
-PRIVATE COLLECTIONS
-
-M. Vever (_Eve,_ in marble).
-
-M. Pontremoli (the _National Defence._)
-
-M. Antony Roux (_The Kiss_).
-
-M. Roger Marx (bust, _The Young Mother_).
-
-M. Blanc (_The Eternal Idol._)
-
-M. Desmarais (the _Idyll._)
-
-Mme. Durand (_Thought_, in marble, given to the Luxembourg).
-
-M. Peytel (various groups).
-
-Mme. Russell (_Minerva._)
-
-M. Fenaille (_The Spring, Bust of Mme. F., The Poet and the Life of
-Contemplation,_ a twisted column with figures, surmounted by a mask).
-
-Baron Vitta (high-reliefs in stone).
-
-The Marquise de Carcano (_Head of St. John beheaded,_ marble).
-
-This, of course, is a very cursory list, and includes only collections
-in Paris.
-
-I must add separately to the works published about Rodin those for
-which I am responsible: (1) a study, called "The Art of M. Rodin,"
-_Revue des Revues,_ 15th June, 1898; this has been approved by the
-artist, and very frequently reproduced. (2) A lecture delivered on
-the 31st of July, 1900, at the Rodin exhibition, and published by
-_La Plume_, with four unpublished drawings. (3) An essay upon the
-surroundings, personality, and influence of Rodin, which appeared in
-the _Revue Universelle_ in 1901, and has likewise been reprinted,
-particularly in the _Maîtres Artistes_ (special number, 15th October,
-1903).
-
-The high price of the work published by Messrs. Goupil (_A Hundred
-and Fort-two Drawings by Rodin_) prevents that fine volume from being
-accessible to the public. The amateur photographer Druet has taken
-photographs of all Rodin's work, which are rather misty, but which
-render admirably the caressing touch of light on the main planes, and
-which in a measure reproduce the artistic atmosphere of the statues.
-Messrs. Haweis and Coles have likewise taken some beautiful and curious
-proofs. More classic, but also more definite, are the fine photographs
-which the art publisher Buloz has recently taken, and which have been
-employed to illustrate this volume.
-
-
-PORTRAITS
-
-There is a remarkable portrait of Rodin by Mr. John Sargent (dating
-from about twenty years ago). Another, by M. Alphonse Legros (a
-profile), is more of a fancy head, and wears a sort of tiara. A more
-recent portrait has been produced by Mr. Alexander. There is a very
-forcible bust by Mile. Camille Claudel, as well as a bust by J.
-Desbois, a lithograph by Eugène Carrière, and some amusing studio
-sketches by Mile. Cladel. An interesting lithograph of "Rodin in his
-Studio," by W. Rothenstein, appeared in the _Artist-Engraver,_ April,
-1904.
-
-A curious photograph, taken by M. Steichen; a poster for the Rodin
-exhibition, containing a portrait, and drawn by Carrière; and some
-excellent photographs taken at Prague (of which the one here reproduced
-is astonishingly faithful) complete this list of likenesses.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
- _Achilles, The Education of_
- _Adam_ (destroyed)
- _Adonis, The Death of_
- _Age of Brass, The_
- Antiope (of Correggio), The
- Antique, The, influence of, on Rodin
- Rodin's analysis of
- its right use
- its truth and beauty
- Aphrodite (by Lucien Schnegg)
- _Apollo,_ the two reliefs
- Aube
- _Autumn_ (stone)
- _Avarice and Lewdness_
-
- _Balzac, Statue of_
- Barrias; his monument to Hugo
- Bartholomé
- Bartlett
- Barye
- Bassier, Jean
- _Bastien-Lepage, Statue of_
- Baudelaire
- Beauvais
- _Becque, Henry, Bust of_
- dry-point portraits of
- _Bellona_
- _Benedictions, The_
- Bergerat, M., Rodin's drawings for his book
- Besnard, Mme.
- Boisbaudron, Lecoq de
- Boucher, the sculptor
- Bourdelle, Emile
- _Broken Nose, The Man with the_
- _Brother and Sister_
- Brussels
- _Burghers of Calais, The_
- Burgundian sculptors, 38
- Busts, Rodin's portrait, 17, 18, 21, 29, 31, 33, 84
-
- Carcano, Marchioness of
- Carpeaux
- Carrier-Belleuse
- Carrière, Eugène
- his opinion of Rodin's art
- _Caryatid, The_
- Celtic genius, The
- Chaplin
- Chappe, A statue of
- Chapu
- Charpentier, Alexandre
- Chartres, The cathedral of
- _Christ and the Magdalen_
- _Christian Martyr, The_
- Cladel, Mlle.
- Classicism, Rodin's
- Clodion
- Clot, lithographer
- _Conqueror, A, holding a Statue of Victory_
- Corneille
- Correggio
- Costume in sculpture, The question of
- Couston
- Coysevox
- _Crouching Man, The_
- Dalou; Rodin's bust of
- Dampt, Jean
- _Danaid, The_
- Dante
- David of Angers
- Devillez
- _Day_
- Delacroix
- Delaplanche
- Desbois
- Donatello
- Drawings and sketches, Rodin's
- _Dream-Group_
- Dry-points, Rodin's
- Dubois, Paul
- Duhem, Henri
- Dujalbert
- Dutch painting
-
- Egyptian sculpture
- Eiffel Tower
- Emerson quoted
- Erotic subjects, Rodin's treatment of
- Etchings, Rodin's
- _Eternal Idol, The_
- _Eve_
- Exhibited works
- Exhibition with Claude Monet, the
-
- Fagel
- Falconet
- Falguière
- his "Balzac"
- Rodin's bust of
- _Faun and Nymph
- Fauns and Bacchantes_
- _Fenaille, Bust of Mme._
- Fenaille, M.; his edition of
- Rodin's drawings
- _Fiennes, Jean de,_
- Finish, False notions of
- Flemish primitives
- Fleurs du Mal, Baudelaire's
- Rodin's illustrations to
- Florence Baptistery Gates, as model of _The Gate of Hell_
- France, Anatole
- _Franck, Medallion of Cæsar_
- Frémiet
- Fuller, Loïe
-
- _Galatea_
- Gallé, Emile
- Gallimard, M.
- Gardet
- _Gate of Hell, The_
- _Genius of War, The_
- Gluck, 105
- Gothic sculptures, Rodin's study of
- Goujon
- Greek sculpture
- Guillaume
-
- _Hand of God, The_
- _Hecuba_
- _Helmet-maker, The Fair_
- Henley, W. E.
- his opinion of Rodin's art
- Hokusai
- Houdon
- _Hugo, Victor, Bust of_
- dry-point portraits of
- the _Monument to_
-
- _Icarus_
- _Illusion, the Daughter of Icarus_
- _Inferno,_ Dante's
- Inspiration
- _Iris_
- Italy, Rodin's travels in
-
- Japanese bronzes and prints, Rodin's admiration of
- Jasmin, Clément
- Joan of Arc, Rude's
-
- _Kiss, The_
-
- _Labour, Monument to_
- Lamartine
- _Laurens, Jean Paul, Bust of_
- Lavoisier, A statue of
- Lefèvre, Camille
- Legros, Alphonse; bust of
- _Lorraine, Claude, The Monument to_
- Louvre, the
- _Love and Psyche_
- _Lovers, Groups of_
- Luxembourg, The
- _Lynch, Statue of_
-
- MacColl, D. S.
- _Magdalen, The_
- _Mahomet_ (drawing)
- Mallarmé, Stéphane
- Manet
- _Man Walking_
- _Man with the Broken Nose, The_ (clay head)
- (marble)
- Marseillaise, Rude's
- Marx, Roger
- bust of
- _Meditation_
- Meudon, Rodin's house and studio at
- Michael Angelo
- _Minerva_ (helmeted bust)
- (marble and silver)
- Minne, George
- Mirbeau, Octave
- bust of
- medallion of
- Rodin's drawings for his books
- Monet, Claude
- _Monument to the Defenders of the Nation_
- Morbidezza
- _Mother, The Young_
- _Muse of Anger_
-
- _Muse of the Inner Voice_
- Museums
-
- Nancy
- Naples Museum
- Napoleon Awakening to Immortality,
- Rude's
- Neo-Greek School, Errors and defects of
- _Nereids, The_
- Niederhausern-Rodo
- _Night,_
- Nude, The
- _Nymph, A,_
-
- _Orpheus and Eurydice_
-
- Paintings, Rodin's
- Pajou
- Pantheon, The
- _Perseus and the Gorgon_
- Pica, Vittorio
- Pigalle
- Pilon, Germain
- Poe
- _Poet and the Life of Contemplation, The_
- _Poets and Muses_
- Préault, Auguste
- Private Collections
- _Proust, Antonin, Bust of_
- dry-point of
- _Psyche_
- Puech, Denys
- Puget
- Puvis de Chavannes; bust of
- monument to
- _Pygmalion_
-
- Raphael
- Redon, Odilon
- Rembrandt
- Renascence, Rodin's admiration for the, 63-5
- _Rimini, Paolo and Francesca da_
- Rivière, Théodore
- _Rochefort, Bust of_
- Roche, Pierre, in
- Rodin, Auguste, birth, parentage, and schooling
- early art-training
- under Barye
- works for ornament-maker
- in Carrier-Belleuse's studio
- early works in sculpture
- goes to Brussels; work there
- friendship with Legros
- takes painting lessons from Lecoq de Boisbaudron
- accepted at Salon
- accused of casting from life
- his first sale
- cleared of accusations
- sudden emergence from obscurity
- slow development
- attitude to academic art
- his originality and power noticed
- studios granted him by Government
- works at Sèvres
- his stay in Brussels a formative time
- deeply impressed by Dante and Baudelaire (and see under these names)
- monument to Hugo described
- impatience of officialism
- _Gate of Hell_ described
- exhibition with Claude Monet in 1889
- monument to Claude Lorraine described
- _Burghers of Calais_ described
- friendship with M. Fenaille
- the _Balzac_ and the controversy it excited
- visits to Italy; articles
- in the _Musée_ quoted at length
- at the Paris Exhibition of 1900
- visit to Prague, 84; welcomed in London
- elected President of the International Society
- honours
- personal appearance
- portraits of him
- private life and home
- house and studios
- tastes
- travels
- as a talker
- social opinions
- influence
- friends and pupils
- characteristics of his art
- artistic descent and affinities
- place in the French school
- lost works
- paintings
- dry-points
- drawings and treatment of voluptuous subjects
- photographs of his works
- essentially a poet; as thinker
- classicism, his
- his symbolism
- his composition
- his conception of his art analysed
- fondness for small groups
- his treatment of costume
- his treatment of flesh
- his principles of portraiture
- his endeavour to give atmosphere
- his works treated to be viewed from all sides
- his modelling
- his study and power of representing movement
- dynamic character of his art
- his synthetic power
- his veracity
- his favourite type of woman, 42;
- influence and value of the antique
- _Ronde, The_ (dry-point)
- Rops
- Rosso
- Rousseau
- Rubens
- Rude
-
- _St. John Baptist_
- _St. John Baptist_ (torso)
- _St. John, Head of the Beheaded_ (marble)
- Saint Marceaux
- _St. Pierre, Eustacede_
- Salon, the
- _Sappho_
- Sargent
- _Sarmiento, Monument to President_
- Schnegg, Gaston and Lucien
- _Séverine, Bust of Madame_
- Sèvres
- _Shades, The_
- Société des Gens de Lettres
- _Spring, Eternal_
- _Spring_
- _Summer_
-
- Tanagra figures
- _Thinker, The_
- Thomas
- _Thought,_
- _Torso_ (nude female bronze)
- Turquet
-
- _Ugolino_
- (drawing)
-
- Values in painting and sculpture
- Van der Meer
- Van Rasbourg
- _Venus and Adonis_
- _Vicunha, Monument to the President_
- Villon
-
- Wagner, 119, 120
- Watteau, 81
- _Wave, The_
- Whistler
- _Wissant, Jacques and Pierre de_
- _Woman, Bust of_
- _Woman, Bust of a Young_
- _Woman, Bust of a Young_ (silver)
- _Women and Children_
- _Women Bathing_
- _Women Damned_
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Auguste Rodin, by Camille Mauclair
-
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 50665 ***
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-
-<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 50665 ***</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<h1>AUGUSTE RODIN</h1>
-
-<h2>THE MAN&mdash;HIS IDEAS&mdash;HIS WORKS</h2>
-
-<h3>BY</h3>
-
-<h2>CAMILLE MAUCLAIR</h2>
-
-<h6>AUTHOR OF<br />
-"THE GREAT FRENCH PAINTERS AND THE EVOLUTION OF FRENCH PAINTING FROM 1830"<br />
-"THE FRENCH IMPRESSIONISTS," ETC.</h6>
-
-<h3>TRANSLATED BY</h3>
-
-<h4>CLEMENTINA BLACK</h4>
-
-<h4>WITH FORTY PLATES</h4>
-
-<h5>NEW YORK</h5>
-
-<h5>E. P. DUTTON &amp; CO.</h5>
-
-<h5>1905</h5>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 425px;">
-<a id="rodin001a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_001a.jpg" width="425" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">ETERNAL SPRING</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-<p><a href="#CONTENTS">Contents</a></p>
-
-
-<h6>TO</h6>
-
-<h5>EUGÈNE CARRIÈRE</h5>
-
-<h6>AND</h6>
-
-<h5>ROGER MARX</h5>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p class="block" style="margin-left: 15%;">MY DEAR FRIENDS,</p>
-
-<p class="block" style="margin-left: 15%;">One of you is a great painter, whose art and mind are
-fraternally akin to Rodin's. The other is the first French
-Art critic of our day, and has nobly defended Rodin from the
-outset.</p>
-
-<p class="block" style="margin-left: 15%;">For these reasons I felt it just and natural to dedicate
-this book to both of you, as a testimony of my affection,
-given in the presence of the English public, and under the
-auspices of a name that unites all three of us in the love
-of beauty.</p>
-<p class="block" style="font-size: 0.8em; margin-left: 75%;">C. M.</p></blockquote>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-<blockquote>
-<p class="block">The photographs used as illustrations to the present volume are kindly
-lent by M. Buloz, art publisher of Paris, to whom we offer our sincere
-thanks; and for five of them&mdash;very remarkable in their effect (the
-<i>Bellona,</i> the bust of <i>Hugo</i>, the two studies of torsos for the <i>St.
-John the Baptist,</i> and the <i>Fair Woman who was a Helmet-maker</i>) we are
-indebted to Messrs. Haweis and Coles, to whom we are no less grateful.
-The very faithful portrait of M. Rodin is the work of M. Eckert, of
-Prague.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[Pg ix]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h4><a name="PREFACE" id="PREFACE">PREFACE</a></h4>
-
-
-<p>Auguste Rodin is certainly the contemporary French artist about whom
-most has been written, especially during the last ten years. In
-addition to innumerable articles in newspapers and reviews, several
-books have been devoted to him. In offering the present work to the
-English public I think it desirable to define exactly the aim which I
-propose to myself. To begin with, as my limits of size are somewhat
-narrow, I shall endeavour to condense into a restricted space as many
-interesting details as I can give, and to neglect nothing that may
-contribute to a clear and precise presentment of Rodin's personality
-and work. But such details have already been collected in some French
-works; and if I were to content myself with presenting a new version of
-them to the public I should have fulfilled but half of my task and my
-duty.</p>
-
-<p>The other half interests me far more keenly. It seems to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[Pg x]</a></span> me that
-after having told the reader all that he ought to know about a man, a
-critic should then try to make a closer and deeper study of him&mdash;come
-into contact with his ideas and his soul, form an original judgment of
-him, and in short pass from the iconographie or biographic side to the
-artistic and psychological side of his work. I have tried, therefore,
-to begin where my fellow-workers have left off and to say exactly what
-they do not appear to me to have said.</p>
-
-<p>The things written about Rodin have been mainly literary compositions,
-admiring and lyrical passages, to which his favourite subjects have
-served as texts. Much less has been heard about his personal ideas upon
-the technical principles of sculpture, or about his methods of work.
-The reason of this is primarily a fear of fatiguing the public, to
-whom the technicalities of an art&mdash;which involve dry explanations&mdash;are
-less interesting than the results. Moreover, it must be owned that
-few writers understand these questions. In painting, as in sculpture,
-persons who do not practise these arts, or who are not sufficiently
-familiar with the brush and the chisel to understand the secrets of
-works of art, even if not to produce them, generally prefer to avoid
-these dangerous aspects and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[Pg xi]</a></span> keep to literary eulogy. A work is
-proclaimed great, and the reader is adjured to believe it so, but it is
-infinitely more difficult to give him a clear, technical explanation of
-why that work is great. Towards that quarter, therefore, I have chosen
-to turn, expecting to find there things to say that cannot be read
-elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p>Rodin has not merely created beautiful statues. He is an innovator, (or
-rather a renovator), in his methods of sculpture, and that fact has
-called down severe criticism on his head. A long-standing friendship,
-which I reckon as an honour, has allowed me to have numerous
-conversations with him upon the very basis of his art, upon the manner
-in which he practises it, and upon his ideas in relation to his own
-work and to ancient and modern sculpture. To these ideas the synthetic
-mind of Rodin imparts so much vigour that they are the motives of his
-work and cannot be separated from it. My desire has been to present
-them; and instead of giving the public my own opinions, in passages of
-more or less brilliancy, I wished to give those&mdash;so infinitely more
-interesting&mdash;which have been uttered by the artist himself. Often,
-in the course of this book, I shall be merely the transcriber while
-he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[Pg xii]</a></span> speaks, and I think my readers will be grateful to me for that.
-Furthermore, in regard to technical points and to the way in which
-Rodin conceives composition and modelling, I may&mdash;and even, in order to
-inspire a just and necessary confidence, I should&mdash;say that when Rodin
-exhibited his <i>Balzac</i> his first innovation in his present manner, he
-had so much faith in my friendship and in my critical powers that he
-entrusted to me the duty of explaining these delicate points in the
-French reviews,<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> and in a later lecture given at the Paris Exhibition
-of 1900, in the pavilion where he was exhibiting the whole of his
-works. These explanations, in their main lines, I have rewritten here.
-In that portion I have endeavoured to do original critical work, after
-having satisfied the biographical demands of the reader. I have avoided
-discussions of too abstract an æstheticism; I believe that everything
-can be said simply and in simple forms; I believe also that even in the
-most subtle questions of art there is an inner light that renders them
-accessible to all whose minds are sincere, and whose hearts are open to
-emotion. But I hope that, in reading<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiii" id="Page_xiii">[Pg xiii]</a></span> this book, people will understand
-very exactly why a statue by Rodin is different from any other statue,
-and why he made it so&mdash;a matter which too few writers have explained.
-It is not so much my business to display abundantly the admiration
-which I feel, but which, no more than my friendship, shall induce me to
-turn my essay into a hymn of praise.</p>
-
-<p>Rodin himself is the first man to be wearied by some praises, and a
-just observation upon his methods gives him much more pleasure. Like
-every man of high intelligence, he would rather be understood than
-praised.</p>
-
-<p>I believe myself to be filling a gap and satisfying a wish by giving
-at the end of this volume some remarks upon the artists whom Rodin has
-influenced. He is commonly treated as "a force of nature"; "an isolated
-phenomenon"; people affect to consider him as a sort of immense
-unconscious producer. These are absurd hyperboles. Rodin is a man of
-strong will, logical, and conscious of what he is doing, and strongly
-linked to the Greeks and to the Gothic school; he has very definite
-theories, and several sculptors, of whom Rodin's extreme admirers do
-not speak, preferring to leave their divinity alone in the clouds, draw
-their inspiration from his views. I shall<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiv" id="Page_xiv">[Pg xiv]</a></span> name some men to whom Rodin
-is much attached and in whose work he takes pleasure in following the
-development of his principles, for he knows what he wishes, whence
-he comes and whither he goes, and has a horror of being thought a
-visionary&mdash;a phenomenon, as people say in their indiscreet zeal; on the
-contrary, he holds himself to be a real classical artist, whose example
-cannot possibly be harmful. I have thought it well, also, to conclude
-by a summary of the principal works or essays dealing with Rodin, at
-least in France; and by a chronological list of his statues&mdash;that is to
-say, of course, an approximate list, for many fragments of this great
-mass of work have been destroyed by Rodin himself, especially in the
-earlier part of his career, before 1877. No such list has ever been
-made, and it may add to the interest of the present volume; I give
-it under the artist's authorisation, for I made it in his house and
-according to his advice.</p>
-
-<p>It is bad to repeat oneself. Yet I am anxious to say once more&mdash;and my
-insistence will be understood&mdash;that my long friendship and personal
-admiration for Auguste Rodin and my gratitude for the affectionate
-regard that he shows me count for nothing here. A study is asked
-of me, not a panegyric.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xv" id="Page_xv">[Pg xv]</a></span> When I have reckoned up the vast quantity
-of work, the maker's life, theories, talks, doings, and influence,
-very little room will be left for compliments. It will be for the
-reader to think them. Many people who would have had a difficulty
-in talking of sculpture have found Rodin a convenient subject for
-literary declamations&mdash;too many for me to wish to imitate them. Such a
-course would be pleasing neither to the artist nor to the public, and
-would content them no more than it would content me. Precise details
-about the man, the work, and the iconography; clear explanations of
-technicalities and ideas&mdash;these form all my ambition. The statement of
-facts will be enough to arouse love and admiration for Rodin; louder
-than all praises and with a stronger claim speaks the work of thirty
-years.</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 75%; font-size: 0.8em;">C. M.</p>
-
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> "The Art of Rodin," <i>Revue des Revues,</i> Paris, 15th June,
-1898; and lecture, 31st July, 1900.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xvii" id="Page_xvii">[Pg xvii]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h4><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS</a></h4>
-
-
-<p class="block">PREFACE</p>
-
-<p class="block">I. YOUTH AND EARLY WORK OF RODIN&mdash;HIS FIRST ATTEMPTS; HIS TIME AT
-CARRIER'S&mdash;HIS STAY IN BRUSSELS AND WORK THERE&mdash;"THE AGE OF BRASS" AT
-THE SALON OF 1877; THE INCIDENT ARISING IN REGARD TO IT&mdash;THE "ST. JOHN
-THE BAPTIST"; BEGINNING OF RODIN'S REPUTATION <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_1">1</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="block">II. RODIN'S STUDIO&mdash;HIS WORKS FROM 1880 TO 1889&mdash;"EVE"; SOME BUSTS;
-THE MONUMENT TO VICTOR HUGO&mdash;"THE GATE OF HELL"&mdash;"THE DANAID"&mdash;THE
-"THOUGHT"&mdash;THE EXHIBITION OF CLAUDE MONET AND RODIN, IN 1889&mdash;THE
-MONUMENT TO CLAUDE LORRAINE AT NANCY (1892)&mdash;"THE BURGHERS OF CALAIS"
-(1888-1895) <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_13">13</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="block">III. RODIN'S WORK FROM 1895 TO 1898&mdash;SMALL GROUPS&mdash;THE STATUE OF
-"BALZAC"&mdash;THE INCIDENT OF THE SOCIÉTÉ DES GENS DE LETTRES&mdash;THE
-"TECHNIQUE" OF THE "BALZAC"&mdash;RODIN'S IDEAS UPON MODELLING AND
-COMPOSITION&mdash;HIS OPINIONS ABOUT THE GREEKS, THE GOTHIC STYLE,
-CLASSICISM, AND MYTHOLOGICAL SUBJECTS&mdash;RODIN'S "ANTIQUE" PERIOD <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_40">40</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="block">IV. WORKS SINCE THE "BALZAC"&mdash;SMALL WORKS IN MARBLE&mdash;PLAN OF THE
-MONUMENT TO LABOUR&mdash;DRAWINGS AND ETCHINGS <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_82">82</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xviii" id="Page_xviii">[Pg xviii]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="block">V. RODIN'S PRIVATE LIFE&mdash;HIS PERSON, STUDIO, AND HOME&mdash;HIS INFLUENCE;
-SCULPTORS INSPIRED BY HIS IDEAS&mdash;RODIN'S PLACE IN THE FRENCH
-SCHOOL&mdash;HIS PRESENT POSITION IN RESPECT TO ACADEMIC SCULPTURE <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_101">101</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="block">VI. APPENDIX&mdash;CHRONOLOGICAL LIST OF RODIN'S PRINCIPAL WORKS&mdash;LIST
-OF THE PRINCIPAL BOOKS OR ARTICLES WRITTEN ABOUT HIM&mdash;QUOTATIONS
-REFERRING TO HIM&mdash;AN OPINION OF EUGÈNE CARRIÈRE'S; AN OPINION OF
-HENLEY'S&mdash;VARIOUS NOTES <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_123">123</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="block">INDEX <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_141">141</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xix" id="Page_xix">[Pg xix]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-<p class="block" style="font-weight: bold;">LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</p>
-
-<p class="block">
-ETERNAL SPRING (photogravure) <span class="tabnum"><i><a href="#rodin001a">Frontispiece</a></i></span><br />
-THE AGE OF BRASS <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin002a">6</a></span><br />
-THE AGE OF BRASS <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin003a">9</a></span><br />
-ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST PREACHING <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin004a">10</a></span><br />
-EVE <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin005a">12</a></span><br />
-SKETCH FOR THE MONUMENT TO THE DEFENDERS OF THE NATION <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin006a">14</a></span><br />
-UGOLINO AND HIS CHILDREN <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin007a">16</a></span><br />
-BELLONA <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin008a">17</a></span><br />
-BELLONA <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin009a">17</a></span><br />
-VICTOR HUGO (dry-point) <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin010a">18</a></span><br />
-VICTOR HUGO (dry-point) <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin011a">18</a></span><br />
-BUST OF VICTOR HUGO <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin012a">21</a></span><br />
-MONUMENT TO VICTOR HUGO (fragment) <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin013a">21</a></span><br />
-VICTOR HUGO (fragment) <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin014a">21</a></span><br />
-NEREIDS (group at base of the Victor Hugo monument) <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin015a">24</a></span><br />
-SHADES (for the top of <i>The Gate of Hell</i>) <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin016a">25</a></span><br />
-THE THINKER <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin017a">27</a></span><br />
-DANAID <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin018a">28</a></span><br />
-DANAID <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin019a">28</a></span><br />
-THOUGHT <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin020a">28</a></span><br />
-THE FAIR HELMET-MAKER <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin021a">29</a></span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xx" id="Page_xx">[Pg xx]</a></span>
-A NYMPH (bronze) <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin022a">30</a></span><br />
-PUVIS DE CHAVANNES <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin023a">33</a></span><br />
-JEAN PAUL LAURENS <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin024a">33</a></span><br />
-BUST OF MADAME V. <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin025a">34</a></span><br />
-THE BURGHERS OF CALAIS <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin026a">36</a></span><br />
-A BURGHER OF CALAIS <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin027a">39</a></span><br />
-A BURGHER OF CALAIS <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin028a">39</a></span><br />
-A BURGHER OF CALAIS <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin029a">39</a></span><br />
-BALZAC <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin030a">47</a></span><br />
-BALZAC <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin031a">49</a></span><br />
-PRIMITIVE MAN <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin032a">74</a></span><br />
-YOUNG WOMAN BETWEEN GOOD AND EVIL COUNSEL <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin033a">78</a></span><br />
-IRIS <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin034a">88</a></span><br />
-NUDE STUDY <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin035a">89</a></span><br />
-AUGUSTE RODIN <span class="tabnum"><a href="#rodin036a">102</a></span><br />
-CORNER OF RODIN'S STUDIO AT MEUDON <span class="tabnum"><a href="#rodin037a">106</a></span><br />
-CORNER OF RODIN'S STUDIO AT MEUDON <span class="tabnum"><a href="#rodin038a">107</a></span><br />
-STUDY IN BRONZE FOR THE "BALZAC" <span class="tabnum"><a href="#rodin039a">110</a></span><br />
-NUDE FIGURE (photographed in the open air, at twilight,
-in the garden in Meudon) <span class="tabnum"><a href="#rodin040a">113</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h3><a name="AUGUSTE_RODIN" id="AUGUSTE_RODIN">AUGUSTE RODIN</a></h3>
-
-
-<h4><a id="I"></a>I</h4>
-
-<p class="block">YOUTH AND EARLY WORK OF RODIN&mdash;HIS FIRST ATTEMPTS; HIS TIME AT
-CARRIER'S&mdash;HIS STAY IN BRUSSELS AND WORK THERE&mdash;"THE AGE OF BRASS" AT
-THE SALON OF 1877; THE INCIDENT ARISING IN REGARD TO IT&mdash;THE "ST. JOHN
-THE BAPTIST"; BEGINNING OF RODIN'S REPUTATION</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>Auguste Rodin was born in Paris, in the Val de Grâce quarter, on the
-14th of November, 1840, of a family of humble employés. The child
-at first attended a day-school in the Rue Saint Jacques, then went
-to a boarding-school at Beauvais, kept by his uncle. At fourteen he
-returned to Paris and entered the school of art in the Rue de l'École
-de Médecine. A period of desperate industry at once set in for him.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to the lessons of this little school, where from eight
-to twelve young Rodin learned the elements of drawing, and later on
-of modelling, copied drawings in crayons and reliefs in the Louis
-XVI. style, he went twice a week to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span> Barye's classes at the Jardin
-des Plantes; "Barye," he says, "did not teach us much; he was always
-worried and tired when he came, and always told us that it was very
-good." But Rodin, together with Barye's son and some other lads, had
-arranged a sort of studio for themselves in a cellar of the museum,
-making seats of tree-trunks, and already attempting sculpture. At
-six in the morning he used to go to draw animals, then he copied the
-anatomical objects in the Museum. He remembers that, being too poor to
-buy an anatomy of the horse, he copied it piece by piece. After Barye's
-class, or the classes of the Rue de l'École de Médecine, he would lunch
-on a bit of bread and some chocolate and hasten to the Louvre, and
-in the evenings he would go to draw and study at the Gobelins. Then
-he worked for a maker of ornaments, since it was necessary to earn a
-living. From fourteen to seventeen years old Rodin led this fevered
-existence. "In those three years," he has often repeated to me, "I came
-to understand the meaning of a drawing from the life, the synthesis of
-my art, and the rhythm of animals. I remember that a companion of those
-days,<a name="FNanchor_1_2" id="FNanchor_1_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_2" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> of whom I have since lost sight, made me see,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span> in a couple
-of hours, on a very true and simple principle, an observation of the
-necessary equilibria of movement not taught in the schools, the secret
-of the plans of a figure. That lesson has influenced my whole life. As
-for the ornament-maker, in whose workshop I earned a scanty wage, I
-long deplored being constrained to do so, but I have since thought with
-affection of it, understanding that there are as many sources of beauty
-in ornament as in the face."</p>
-
-<p>His work at the ornament-maker's allowed Rodin to earn his living as an
-art-worker and as a strenuous and silent student; and he vegetated in
-this manner until he attained his twenty-fourth year, never ceasing,
-in spite of his poverty and of his daily labour, to work at sculpture.
-Then he offered himself as an assistant and pupil at the studio of
-Carrier-Belleuse. Carrier-Belleuse was then at the full height of his
-reputation as an elegant sculptor, whose real gifts of spontaneous
-invention were being rendered insipid by his desire to please. Rodin
-remained six years at Carrier-Belleuse's, and worked there without
-gaining much instruction. But he meditated and taught himself. From his
-twenty-fourth year dates the head known as <i>The Man with the Broken
-Nose</i>, which is a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span> masterly work, strongly inspired by the antique,
-and already foreshadowing all his future. This clay head, which the
-young man sent to the Salon of 1864, was refused. From time to time
-Rodin tried to compete for admission to the École des Beaux Arts; he
-was thrice refused. This disgusted him with the usual career upon which
-his lack of any income invited him to enter. His ideas, his independent
-temper, his presentiments, and his love of an art personal to himself,
-showed him that he would never gain anything, and never have the
-academic discipline necessary to succeed. He took advantage of an
-opportunity. Carrier-Belleuse had a commission at Brussels and did not
-care to execute it; Rodin got permission from his master, who esteemed
-him, to undertake it in his name, and, after having spent six years
-in the fashionable sculptor's studio, he went to Brussels, where Rude
-had already spent a considerable time. He was destined to remain there
-until 1877, working with the Belgian sculptor, Van Rasbourg, at the
-pediment of the Bourse, where his sign manual may still be seen, as it
-may upon some caryatids of a house on the Boulevard d'Anspach and upon
-some other works.</p>
-
-<p>Of this exile at Brussels we know that the artist retains<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span> only kindly
-memories, but he is too sparing of personal details to enable us to
-analyse with any certainty this part of the life of a tenacious,
-concentrated man who, entirely occupied with his dreams, with
-indefatigable study, the anxieties of poverty, and his lonely pride,
-had no desire to be known.</p>
-
-<p>"I worked very hard over there," he says, to sum up the matter. It
-is certain that Rodin was at this time already in possession of
-that formidable will which led to his success, and also of that
-disdainful obstinacy which prefers obscurity and lack of success to
-any compromise. He speaks little or not at all of the drama that was
-being worked out in him at this time, or of the way in which he refined
-and cultivated his perceptions, nor of the painting lessons that he
-took of Lecoq de Boisbaudron, in company of Alphonse Legros, who
-became his intimate friend; but this influence of Lecoq de Boisbaudron
-must not pass unnoted. It does great honour to that master teacher
-who has formed so many eminent modern artists. His seven years' stay
-at Brussels allowed Rodin to live modestly but decently, amid quiet
-surroundings, to reflect, and to shape himself intellectually; it was a
-sort of spiritual retreat that did him good, apart from the fact that
-he gained<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span> a thorough knowledge of the Flemish Primitives and of the
-Gothic masters who were so strongly to influence him. No biography,
-however, could render comprehensible the way in which, for example, the
-brain of a low-born and poor child was able, amid poverty and incessant
-manual labour, to grow into the wide and deep brain of a thinker
-familiar with the synthesis of art; these things are the secrets of
-personality.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 475px;">
-<a id="rodin002a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_002a.jpg" width="475" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">THE AGE OF BRASS</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>Rodin was destined to emerge suddenly from obscurity at the age of
-thirty-seven, that is to say, at a time of life when many men think
-themselves hopelessly sacrificed, and when he had already produced
-much and suffered much; for it may be said that the whole of his work
-from 1855-75 is unknown and lost, and yet what labour it represents!
-Except <i>The Man with the Broken Nose</i>, none of it is ever mentioned;
-the pediment of the Bourse at Brussels is crumbling away, time is
-devouring Rodin's work upon it no less than Van Rasbourg's; he will not
-speak of the many figures that he made to the order of Carrier-Belleuse
-and interpreted according to his own free inspiration; and he only
-occasionally alludes to a large figure that was broken in a household
-removal, and was, in his opinion, one of the best he ever made in his
-life. In 1876<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span> <i>The Man with the Broken Nose,</i> in marble, was admitted
-to the Salon. This determined Rodin in 1877 to send in his statue, <i>The
-Age of Brass,</i> and this gave rise to an incident, the very injustice of
-which was to bring him into notice.</p>
-
-<p>The jury,<a name="FNanchor_2_3" id="FNanchor_2_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_3" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> astonished by this work, admitted it, but accused the
-artist of having taken a cast from life, so perfect was the modelling.
-The practice of taking a cast from the life is unhappily frequent,
-and we know he praised academicians who employ this artistic fraud
-without any scruple. Rodin protested. He had had a Belgian soldier for
-his model in Brussels: he had photographs taken of him and sent them
-to the jury, who did not even open the packet, and persisted in the
-allegations. Three sculptors, however, Desbois, Fagel, and Lefèvre, who
-thenceforward became Rodin's friends, protested in his favour, some
-critics spoke of the affair, and Rodin's work made so much impression
-that the secretary of the Fine Arts, Turquet, bought <i>The Age of Brass</i>
-(which stood for a long time in the Luxembourg Gardens and is now in
-the museum).</p>
-
-<p>Rodin waited until 1880 to exhibit <i>St. John the Baptist</i>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span> Meanwhile
-Turquet had conceived a friendship for him and wished to wipe out the
-unjust accusation brought against <i>The Age of Brass.</i> The inspectors
-of the Fine Arts department disowned the purchase of that work and
-declared it cast from life. Rodin, discouraged, remained silent; a
-chance saved him. As he was continuing to look for work in order to
-support his young wife and himself, and to defray the expenses of his
-art, he chanced to be executing a group of children in a composition
-for the sculptor Boucher. His facility was prodigious; Boucher saw
-him improvise the group in a few hours and went, thunderstruck, to
-tell some of his friends. He had the honesty to declare that such
-a man, having done thus before his own eyes, was capable of making
-<i>The Age of Brass.</i> Chapu, Thomas, Falguière, Delaplanche, Chaplin,
-Carrier-Belleuse, and Paul Dubois insisted loyally, and Rodin's cause
-was won. Turquet, delighted, and free to act, bought the <i>St. John the
-Baptist</i> and gave Rodin a commission. Then the artist answered: "I
-am ready to fulfil it. But to prove surely that I do not take casts
-from the life I will make little bas-reliefs&mdash;an immense work with
-small figures, and I think of taking the subject from Dante." This
-was the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span> origin of that celebrated <i>Gate of Hell</i>, which is not yet
-completed, and which, continually handled afresh, has finally become
-the central motive of all Rodin's dreams, the storehouse of his ideas
-and researches.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 475px;">
-<a id="rodin003a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_003a.jpg" width="475" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">THE AGE OF BRASS</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>From that time forward (1880) Rodin was what he is to-day; he had
-emerged, once for all, from obscurity, and went on to display without
-interruption and without hesitation the succession of works that have
-rendered him celebrated. He knew his path, his method, his field of
-thought. From the age of sixteen to that of forty he had, by unknown
-persistent labour, been ripening his individuality. And his work,
-from <i>The Age of Brass</i> to the <i>Balzac</i>, is but a visible development
-of that hidden period. The period from the <i>Balzac</i> to our own day
-testifies to a new theory that he has framed. But one may say that
-the Rodin of the years from 1877 to 1897 was entirely contained in
-the unknown man of the preceding period. It was, indeed, that slow
-preparation that gave to the revelation of the works that appearance
-of certainty, of sudden mastery, which so struck people's minds. We
-are accustomed to see artists make youthful successes with works of
-brilliant promise, then we follow their course and see them growing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>
-greater. Rodin came to light in twenty-four hours. He was thought to
-be a young beginner; his past struggle was unknown; people were aware
-of him only when he had done with scruples and had, as he says, "made
-peace with himself." From this fact came his prestige. From it came
-also his well-defined attitude in regard to academic art.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<a id="rodin004a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_004a.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST PREACHING</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>We need to recall the graceful, effeminate, and conventional statuary
-of the generation from 1865 to 1875 in order to comprehend fully
-what <i>The Age of Brass</i> and <i>St. John the Baptist</i> brought into the
-exhibitions when they made their appearance there. Rough truth, a sense
-of movement, an intense realism, an absolute scorn of the pleasing, a
-lofty style, a deep feeling of organic life, power due to the eager
-love of form, of muscular formation and physical activity; all these
-things inevitably shocked the gentle sculptors who were enamoured of
-the academic style and of mythology. Moreover, Rodin was unknown;
-he had no claim, knew nobody, had never asked for anything, and was
-a son of the people. That Carrier-Belleuse's former workman should
-take upon himself to make statues all by himself aroused scorn. His
-technical skill was so great that there could be no possibility<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span> of
-denying it. Therefore, in spite, the accusation of casting from the
-life was invented. The accusers did not reflect upon the splendid
-testimonial that would be given to the artist if he should succeed in
-proving that his skill alone had created this perfection. The amusing
-thing is that the same people who declared this skill too great to be
-anything but a reproduction, accused Rodin, twenty years later, over
-his <i>Balzac</i>, of not knowing his craft! Apart from this question of
-fact, and these professional jealousies, the style of these works could
-not fail to displease. In them there was already a sort of symbolic
-and savage beauty, which has become a characteristic of Rodin's art.
-The pained, awakening movement of the man in <i>The Age of Brass</i>, the
-gesture of <i>St. John the Baptist</i>, and still more his wild face with
-its open mouth, were so much outside the usual conventions as to make
-everybody feel that here was an artist resolved to take no account of
-the "École" and its principles. These two splendid studies of the nude
-already contained a very special thought. Rodin, therefore, was hated
-in the first place as a man who would be revolutionary. He was hated
-because he was powerful, because he emerged suddenly from obscurity,
-and because he was felt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span> to possess an obstinate individuality. It was
-also for these very reasons that warm sympathies went out to Rodin
-from among artists opposed to the spirit of the "École," and from
-independent writers who divined in him a man capable of expressing in
-his art thoughts and emotions that had ceased to be found in art.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<a id="rodin005a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_005a.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">EVE.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_2" id="Footnote_1_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_2"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> This unknown student was called Constant Simon. Rodin
-remembers him as a remarkable man.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_3" id="Footnote_2_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_3"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> The hanging committee of the Salon is called a
-"jury."&mdash;TRANS.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h4><a name="II" id="II">II</a></h4>
-
-
-<p class="block">RODIN'S STUDIO&mdash;HIS WORKS FROM 1880 TO 1889&mdash;"EVE"; SOME BUSTS;
-THE MONUMENT TO VICTOR HUGO&mdash;"THE GATE OF HELL"&mdash;"THE DANAID"&mdash;THE
-"THOUGHT"&mdash;THE EXHIBITION OF CLAUDE MONET AND RODIN, IN 1889&mdash;THE
-MONUMENT TO CLAUDE LORRAINE AT NANCY (1892)&mdash;"THE BURGHERS OF CALAIS"
-(1888-1895)</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>Rodin's previous works, from 1881 to 1889, had been produced in modest
-abodes in the Rue des Fourneaux and the Boulevard de Vaugirard, and
-later, in a little studio, granted by the Government, at the Dépôt des
-Marbres, in the Rue de l'Université, where a certain number of studios
-are given to sculptors. From 1889 onwards the Government granted Rodin
-two larger studios there, which he still occupies. At a later date
-he also had, at his own expense, a studio in an odd corner of the
-Boulevard d'Italie, at a place called the Clos Payen, besides a house
-at Sèvres, and eventually one at Meudon, in which he still lives and of
-which I shall speak again. Among these<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span> were distributed his studies
-and his finished works: <i>The Gate of Hell</i> was sketched in at the Rue
-de l'Université, and there, too, Rodin's assistants are at work upon
-his present groups.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
-<a id="rodin006a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_006a.jpg" width="400" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">SKETCH FOR A COMPETITION. MONUMENT TO THE DEFENDERS OF
-THE COUNTRY</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>From 1879 Rodin worked at Sèvres, having been introduced by
-Carrier-Belleuse, and a vase decorated by him may be seen there.
-In 1880 he made a fine competitive design for the <i>Monument to the
-Defenders of the Nation,</i> which was not accepted. In 1881 he made a
-figure of <i>Adam</i>, which he destroyed, and an <i>Eve,</i> which must be
-reckoned among his noblest creations&mdash;an <i>Eve</i> ashamed of her faults,
-bowed down by terror, vaguely tormented less by remorse for her sin
-than by the idea of having created beings for future sorrow. This
-<i>Eve</i> is a bronze of formidable appearance and all Rodin breathes in
-it. As in the <i>St. John the Baptist,</i> we feel the effect of a definite
-conception of sculpture, but here the design is more spiritual and the
-scheme of modelling simpler and larger. From that time onward we shall
-find the artist producing regularly, putting forth a peaceful power,
-and working in complete possession of himself, not free certainly
-from doubts and searchings, but allowing nothing of the sort to be
-seen. Rodin's way of working<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span> is very peculiar; he does not begin one
-piece of work, carry it to its conclusion, and then devote himself to
-another. He has had from the outset a certain number of thoughts that
-correspond to forms, and although he has only shown his works one after
-another, he has nevertheless elaborated them side by side, working at
-them simultaneously and modifying them one by another. Thus <i>The Gate
-of Hell</i> has been made and remade for more than twenty years; thus
-the monument to Hugo, not yet handed over, goes back, by the sketches
-for it, to 1886; while the studies for <i>The Burghers of Calais</i> date
-from 1888, though the monument was only completed in 1895; thus, too,
-among the little groups on which Rodin is still at work, are many that
-have grown out of rough sketches made fifteen years ago. Rodin has a
-store of ideas and emotions dear to him, upon which he has patiently
-meditated, which he has promised himself to execute, and which he
-brings to ripeness in silence, remaining throughout long years without
-appearing to concern himself with them. "Strength and patience" might
-be his characteristic motto. Like all great artists, he thought out
-the essential lines of his work at once, lines that I shall define at
-the end of this book. His is a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span> synthetic and generalising mind, which
-can only begin its active course after slow meditation, and conceives
-no isolated thing; spontaneous and at the same time prudent. He had
-that time of meditation at Brussels, not hastening to produce, not
-permitting himself to express an idea until he had prepared in detail
-the technical expression, the necessities of the craftsman.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<a id="rodin007a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_007a.jpg" width="600" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">UGOLINO AND HIS CHILDREN</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>The <i>Ugolino</i>, a cast, of which Rodin exhibited the first sketch in
-1882, is the first sign of that preoccupation with Dante, which was to
-be shown in all his later work. He has read comparatively few things,
-and that designedly; he attaches himself strongly to a few great and
-profound works, and meditates upon them indefatigably. His whole
-symbolic imagination has been fed by Dante and his whole sensuous
-imagination by Baudelaire. These two gloomy poets have impressed him,
-and it may be said that he has absorbed them. Almost all Rodin's great
-symbolic figures refer to the <i>Inferno</i>, and all his little groups of
-lovers have the neurotic subtlety, the refined, homesick melancholy
-of the <i>Fleurs du Mal.</i> He has a constant need to evolve from realism
-to general ideas, from thought to delight or sorrow, and the ideal of
-Dante<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span> or of Baudelaire is strangely mingled in him with love of the
-antique and worship of mythology. It is, indeed, this quite individual
-fusion that forms the basis of his personality. The <i>Ugolino</i>, which
-was exhibited, first alone and then with his dying children, over
-whom he is crouching, haggard and already almost like a wild beast,
-is a tragic and powerful work. The same year Rodin produced the bust
-of Alphonse Legros, which has taken so high a place in England in
-the opinion of the best judges, and in that of the lamented W. E.
-Henley, whose penetrating criticism paid homage from the first to our
-sculptor's art.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="rodin008a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_008a.jpg" width="550" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">BELLONA</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="rodin009a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_009a.jpg" width="550" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">BELLONA</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p><i>The Genius of War,</i> the <i>Monument to General Lynch</i>, and the very
-curious <i>Bellona,</i> date from 1883; the <i>President Vicunha</i><a name="FNanchor_1_4" id="FNanchor_1_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_4" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> and a
-<i>Bust of a Young Woman</i>, from 1884. This was rather a period of groping
-than of production; Rodin was continuing his studies, and becoming
-more confirmed in his technical methods. We must go on to the year
-1885 to reach the revelation of three of his finest sculptures&mdash;the
-three busts<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span> of <i>Dalou</i>, <i>Victor Hugo,</i> and <i>Antonin Proust</i>, which
-powerfully declare his personality. These are works that are not
-disputable, that cannot be accused of having a "literary" intention,
-mere bits of sculpture giving evidence of mastery and showing surfaces,
-planes, and high lights worthy of the very finest busts of the French
-school. As time goes by, the ideas, the philosophy, the symbolism,
-the "dramatisation" of Rodin's compositions may come to be disputed,
-or exact comprehension of them may be lost; but works like these will
-always, by their mere professional worth, bear witness for him. Life,
-thought, strength, and character are carried as far as is possible. The
-bust of Hugo was the outcome of some few studies that the artist was
-able to make from the life. Hugo declared David of Angers to have made
-so good a bust of him that he considered it unnecessary ever to sit
-again. Rodin wished to obtain sittings, but failed; the poet admitted
-him to his table, and merely said to him, "Come when you like, observe
-me ... and do what you can." At table Rodin took sketches of Hugo in
-cigarette-paper books; he had a stand and some clay in the ante-room,
-and from time to time he would run in to note down anything that had
-just struck him.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<a id="rodin010a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_010a.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">VICTOR HUGO. (DRY POINT)</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<a id="rodin011a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_011a.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">VICTOR HUGO. (DRY-POINT)</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In this manner was that admirable bust completed, which (with the two
-etchings here reproduced) was the only material of which Rodin could
-make use for the Hugo with the bowed head of his future monument, the
-commission for which was given him by the Government after the death of
-the national poet in 1883, and which is on the eve of completion.</p>
-
-<p>The next year (1886) Rodin exhibited the scheme of the monument itself,
-which has since undergone several variations, but of which the central
-theme is always as follows: Hugo, naked and half-draped, like a god,
-is seated on a rock at the edge of the sea. With his outstretched left
-arm he makes a silencing gesture towards the sea and the Nereids,
-and thus begs them to let him listen to the Muse of his Inner Voice,
-who rises, pensively, behind him, and to the Muse of Anger, who,
-crouched on a rock above his head, seems ready to fly up into the
-sky. This Muse may also be interpreted as an Ins, the messenger of
-the voices of the elements, and the Muse of the Inner Voice is also
-called Meditation. She is of the greatest beauty; hers is one of the
-figures in which, before the <i>Balzac</i>, Rodin indicates his new method
-of amplifying the relief and systematically altering the proportions,
-in order&mdash;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>according to an idea which I shall analyse in detail in
-the next chapter&mdash;to secure a decorative effect. Nothing can be more
-expressive and more supernatural than the harmonious sadness of this
-great drooping shape; it is really a soul incarnated in a movement of
-modesty and secret contemplation that disturbs and moves us as we gaze.
-The Hugo himself is truly Olympian in the majesty of his gesture, the
-vastness of his heroic nudity, and the magic of the shadow that bathes
-his face bowed partly down over his breast; and the monument as a whole
-is of magnificent decorative unity. There are to be two monuments
-to Victor Hugo, one for the Pantheon, the other for the Luxembourg
-Gardens, and they are to have slight variations, not in the attitude
-of Hugo himself, but in the significance and style of the adjacent
-figures. These two monuments, however, have not been accepted without
-great difficulties caused by the very nature of Rodin's conception; and
-the fact that they are accepted has not prevented the Place Victor Hugo
-from being disfigured by a hideous and gigantic monument, the work of
-Barrias, which fills the place of those that Rodin had not completed.
-Rodin's slowness, which arises from the scrupulous circumspection<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
-of his mind&mdash;never satisfied with itself&mdash;and from his habit of working
-simultaneously at several subjects, has always contributed towards
-driving away official commissions from him; while the jealousy of
-his fellows and the exceptional character of his work have further
-helped to bring about strained relations between him and the official
-circle. Rodin does not care about pleasing or about being understood
-by everybody, and he has no idea of concessions. Thus almost all his
-important works have given rise to incidents likely to disturb his
-peace and hinder his work.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<a id="rodin012a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_012a.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">BUST OF VICTOR HUGO.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="rodin013a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_013a.jpg" width="550" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">VICTOR HUGO MONUMENT. (A FRAGMENT)</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="rodin014a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_014a.jpg" width="550" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">VICTOR HUGO. (A FRAGMENT)</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>Together with the sketch of the Hugo monument, a bust of Henry Becque,
-and a curious etching made from it, Rodin exhibited in 1886 the first
-drawings belonging to <i>The Gate of Hell</i>, or at least to the work which
-people have agreed to call by that title. I have already related the
-origin of that Government commission. In the beginning Rodin had been
-asked to make a door in high-relief, intended for the Musée des Arts
-Décoratifs. But the sculptor's imagination, beset by ideas of Dante,
-soon deviated from the original scheme. The door really exists in the
-studio of the Rue de l'Université, under the aspect of a vast rough
-model in plaster and beams, in the very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span> simple shape of a two-leaved
-door 19 ½ feet high, with a frieze, a tympanum, and two lateral
-capitals. It was, at first, to have been surmounted by the two figures
-of Adam and Eve, but Rodin gave them up. He now seems determined to
-place the <i>Shades</i>, here reproduced, in the highest plane.<a name="FNanchor_2_5" id="FNanchor_2_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_5" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> On the
-uppermost beam <i>The Thinker</i> is to be seated. In the panels of the door
-and upon the wide uprights are enshrined figures&mdash;to the number of over
-a hundred&mdash;detached in high-relief, exactly as upon the gates of the
-Baptistery in Florence, which Rodin has, quite simply, taken as his
-model. These figures were, at first, direct interpretations from Dante,
-in particular Paolo and Francesca da Rimini and divers inhabitants
-of the Inferno. Then Rodin intermingled figures due solely to his
-inspirations from Baudelaire and to his own sharp perception of tragic
-perversity. He enlarged Dante's conception as he modernised it, and
-has ended by making this door into what he smilingly calls "my Noah's
-Ark." That means that he is continually putting in little figures which
-replace others; there, plastered into the niches left by unfinished
-figures, he places everything
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>that he improvises, everything that seems to him to correspond in
-character and subject with that vast confusion of human passions. The
-size of these figures is greatly restricted; the largest scarcely
-exceed thirty-nine inches in height. The dimensions of the final
-rendering, however, still remain to be fixed. The splendid figure
-called <i>The Thinker</i> is carried out in bronze larger than life, and
-Rodin is credited with an intention of bringing up all the other
-figures to the same dimensions, which would represent an unheard-of
-outlay and a gate nearly a hundred feet high&mdash;a Cyclopean work indeed!
-<i>The Thinker</i>, who has been so called on account of the likeness
-between his attitude and that of Michael Angelo's <i>Pensieroso</i>, is
-much more truly an image, with his stunted body and a primitive man's
-face, of the cave-dweller, the prognathous savage beholding the crimes
-and passions of his progeny unroll themselves below him. Immediately
-beneath him may be seen the most celebrated characters of the Dante
-cycle, notably the lovers of Rimini entwined and falling into hell.<a name="FNanchor_3_6" id="FNanchor_3_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_6" class="fnanchor">[3]</a>
-Then as we descend towards the ground the figures <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>become more
-independent of the subject, more personally invented by the artist, and
-at the foot we find "women damned," such as Baudelaire conceived, amid
-characters from heathen mythology.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<a id="rodin015a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_015a.jpg" width="600" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">NEREIDS (Group at the base of the Victor Hugo monument.)</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>It may thus be said that, although, perhaps, the celebrated doorway
-may never be finished, it is a storehouse of Rodin's creations. It
-stands by him as a theme for inspirations, and he brings into it a
-whole category of thoughts and works, never troubling himself about the
-architecture or the actual scheme. He will be for ever improvising some
-little figure, shaping the notation of some feeling, idea, or form, and
-this he plants in his door, studies it against the other figures, then
-takes it out again, and if need be, breaks it up and uses the fragments
-for other attempts. Many of these little figures have developed into
-important separate groups. Rodin is ruled primarily by the need to
-create and to satisfy an irresistible vocation; he cares little what
-may be the ultimate transformation of his inventions, and his sculpture
-is, furthermore, so conceived that it may be executed on a large scale
-or a small; this is indeed so much the case that it is often impossible
-to judge from a photograph what are the dimensions.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<a id="rodin016a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_016a.jpg" width="600" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">SHADES (For the top of "The Gate of Hell".)</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p><i>The Gate of Hell</i> might therefore better be called "the Pandemonium,"
-or some quite other name. If it were to be carried out it could not
-contain all the figures destined for it by the artist. There they
-stand, innumerable, ranged on shelves beside the rough model of the
-door, representing the entire evolution of Rodin's inspiration, and
-forming what I call, with his consent, "the diary of his life as a
-sculptor." To enumerate these figures and groups would take too long;
-suffice to say that the larger part of Rodin's small marbles and
-bronzes are but completions of these sketches, and that on account of
-the essentially decorative character of the outlines and the intense
-originality of the proportion and balance of the figures, they can
-be conceived either as statuettes or as lifesized works. Such as it
-is, <i>The Gate of Hell</i> is the plan of a piece of work unique in the
-sculpture of modern days, a plan slowly elaborated, and of which every
-detail has been foreseen and analysed for years. No one has dared to
-undertake so audacious an assemblage of figures upon such a scheme, and
-the scheme is present to Rodin in its entirety. He by no means forgets
-the decorative effect nor the harmonious aspects, the concords that the
-gate should have, and if ever<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span> Government should require him to deliver
-his work he would be able to do so without delay. Twenty years in the
-studio have matured it in his mind. The work that Dante inspired has
-assumed a more general significance. Low-relief, high-relief, figures
-standing free, groups, single figures, all the styles of sculpture are
-gathered into the symphony of a throng, lost amid whirling mists of
-hell and converging towards the figure of the Thinker. The conception
-embraces centuries. Ugolino is there, and so are centaurs, female
-fauns, satyrs, and creatures dreamed of by Baudelaire, abstract
-personifications of vices&mdash;in particular, there is the extraordinary
-group of the miser dying of hunger over his treasure beside a
-prostitute <i>(Avarice and Lewdness).</i> The Thinker, in his austere nudity
-and pensive strength, is at one and the same time the alarmed Adam,
-the implacable Dante, and the compassionate Virgil of this frightful
-unrestrained humanity, but he is, above all, the ancestor, the first
-man, simple and unconscious, looking down on what he has begotten. The
-symbolism and philosophy of the artist are independent of any religious
-doctrine; his spiritual ardour excels in setting free the symbols of
-the various creeds, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span> he is supported mainly by deep and incessant
-consultation of nature, and by his exceptional sense of expression
-in movements. He attains the decorative harmony of his work not by
-additions, but by systematic suppressions, as the Gothic artists and
-those of the Renascence did.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="rodin017a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_017a.jpg" width="550" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">THE THINKER</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p><i>The Gate of Hell</i> is the outcome of studies made by Rodin from the
-Gothic sculptors, during his stay in Brussels. In this, and in <i>The
-Burghers of Calais</i>, he resumes the deep influence that he there
-underwent. As to the influence that the antique had upon him, that only
-showed itself later, in his smaller works in marble, and especially
-in the <i>Balzac</i> and recent productions. The <i>Gate</i> corresponds to the
-period in which Rodin's great aim was to create, through intensity
-of movement and originality of attitude and outline, a <i>new system
-of the dramatic</i> in his art, which the taste of the day had frozen
-into a false "neo-Greek nobility," obtained by immobility, by inertia
-of outline, and by a fear of seeing too living a movement break the
-general harmony. To seek a fresh harmony in the very study of movement,
-to create, side by side with <i>static</i> art, a <i>dynamic</i> art, such, in a
-brief formula, was Rodin's idea.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He was shortly to exhibit a work which was still more significant of
-the thoughts with which he was busy. For, though I have spoken at once
-of that famous <i>Gate,</i> which is the <i>leit-motiv</i> of Rodin's art, it
-must be remembered that in 1886 nothing was known of it but drawings.
-Only by degrees have groups and fragments of it been seen, and the
-work itself has never left the studio in the Rue de l'Université. It
-was <i>The Burghers of Calais</i> which revealed most clearly to the public
-Rodin's capabilities in the way of style and of composing a whole work,
-and I will speak of the <i>Burghers</i> in this chapter, although the work
-was not completed until 1892 and was not set up in Calais until 1895.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<a id="rodin018a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_018a.jpg" width="600" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">DANAID</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<a id="rodin019a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_019a.jpg" width="600" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">DANAID</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<a id="rodin020a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_020a.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">THOUGHT</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>In 1887 we may note <i>Perseus and the Gorgon</i>, and a marble <i>Head of
-the beheaded St. John</i>, which belongs to the Marchioness of Carcano.
-In 1888 was exhibited the exquisite <i>Danaid,</i> one of the most tender
-female figures that were ever lovingly moulded by this sculptor of
-the energetic, and one which has a subtle delicacy of soul that seems
-strangely placed between two works of power. At the same time a naked
-figure was also shown at the Exposition des Beaux Arts, in Brussels&mdash;a
-<i>Man Walking</i>, which was no other than<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span> one of the <i>Burghers,</i> and
-of which the robust execution made an impression. The year 1889 marked
-an increase of the artist's activity. He was busy upon preparatory work
-for the monument of Claude Lorraine, which he had been commissioned to
-make for Nancy. He was going on with <i>The Gate of Hell.</i> He completed a
-statue of Bastien-Lepage for the cemetery of Damvilliers. He began upon
-the busts of the art critics, Octave Mirbeau and Roger Marx, finished
-an admirable little <i>Dream-Group</i> in marble, in which a young man is
-lying back and trying to hold fast a sphinx-woman who takes flight,
-wild and fateful. An impressionist sketch of <i>Hecuba</i>, crouching down
-and shrieking, and <i>Thought</i>, in marble, completed the record of this
-well-filled year. <i>Thought,</i> a proud, sweet head rising from a block,
-is one of Rodin's best known works and the very symbol of his art.
-It occupies a place in the Museum of the Luxembourg, where it is in
-company with <i>The Danaid,</i> the <i>St. John, The Kiss,</i> a masterly female
-bust, and a bronze statuette. <i>The Fair Helmet-Maker,</i> from Villon's
-poem, is a work on a very small scale, but containing the depth and
-strength of tragedy&mdash;the whole drama of a human body's ruin.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="rodin021a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_021a.jpg" width="550" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">THE FAIR HELMET-MAKER</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
-In 1889 Rodin and Claude Monet together held, in the George Petit
-gallery, an exhibition which has remained famous and which united
-our two greatest artists. Rodin sent to it the <i>Women Damned</i>, the
-<i>Beheaded St. John</i>, some <i>Fauns</i> and <i>Bacchantes</i>, <i>Bastien-Lepage,</i>
-in all some thirty works, among which was <i>The Burghers of Calais</i>,
-shown complete for the first time. The sensation produced was immense.
-Rodin now tasted unmistakable fame, and his reputation spread all over
-the world. This fame, however, did not disarm the official circle, and
-not until the last three or four years have the critics been unanimous
-in their praise of the great French sculptor, whose every important
-work has given occasion to a battle, because its beauty arose from
-principles opposed to the whole system taught in the schools.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<a id="rodin022a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_022a.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">A NYMPH (BRONZE)</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>The five following years were marked by various works which did not,
-however, interfere with the threefold parallel continuation of the
-<i>Victor Hugo, The Burghers of Calais,</i> and <i>The Gate of Hell</i>, which
-were exhibited in various states in the Salon. Rodin considers it his
-duty, indeed, to submit to the public the phases of his work, rough
-attempts, clay, marbles,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span> or bronzes, before the final completion; and
-understanding very well that his style is, or seems to be difficult,
-he thus explains himself to the public in the exhibitions, and allows
-people to follow the stages through which his thought passes. In
-addition to these works may be noted, for the year 1890, the bust
-of a young woman, in silver, <i>Brother and Sister</i>, bronze, and the
-<i>Torso</i> of St. John the Baptist. In 1891, <i>The Caryatid</i>, a marble
-figure of a young woman with a stone upon her shoulder, the group of
-<i>The Young Mother</i> (first bronze and then marble), and <i>A Nymph.</i> In
-1892, the busts of <i>Rochefort</i> and of <i>Puvis de Chavannes,</i> which, with
-those of <i>Dalou, Jean Paul Laurens</i>, <i>Hugo</i>, and <i>Falguière,</i> form
-an incomparable series from Rodin's hand of portraits that surpass
-all modern French sculpture, and are admirable alike in execution and
-expression. The <i>Puvis de Chavannes</i> is perhaps the finest; it is a
-work that does not pall even beside Donatello himself. In 1892 the
-<i>Burghers</i> and the <i>Claude Lorraine</i> were completed. The <i>Burghers</i>
-waited three years for their setting up, but the monument to Lorraine
-was inaugurated immediately, thanks to the devoted efforts of that
-great art-worker in glass, Émile Gallé, and of Roger Marx,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span> who by
-his writings and his incessant activity has had a most noble effect
-upon modern French art. These two eminent men, both natives of Nancy,
-enforced the acceptance of the work. The monument consists of a statue
-of Lorraine, standing, palette in hand, his head raised eagerly towards
-the east, and of a pedestal from which Apollo and his rearing horses
-stand out in splendid high-relief. Thus did Rodin seek to pay homage
-to the master-painter who adored movement in light, by acclaiming
-both these in his turn. Fault has been found with the importance of
-the pedestal in comparison with the statue, the objectors failing to
-understand that this allegory of Apollo incarnated the very soul of
-the great artist whose effigy towered over the whole work, and that
-this whole could not be dissevered. The idea animating this composition
-was criticised by the authorities. Here, once more, Rodin with his
-symbolic vision, his tendency to bold simplifications of the general,
-synthetic idea, was found disturbing. He was asked for the <i>sculptured
-portrait</i> of a man, and he preferred to give prominence to a symbol
-that expressed the dream and the essential genius of that man, the
-sun-painter&mdash;an idea which was logical, but which ran counter to
-the received prejudice<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span> as to portrait statues. The propagandist
-persistence of Gallé and Roger Marx, however, convinced the people of
-Nancy, who are now very proud of their monument. The horses and the
-Apollo are the most living, palpitating, and lyrical things that Rodin
-has produced.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<a id="rodin023a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_023a.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">PUVIS DE CHAVANNES</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<a id="rodin024a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_024a.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">JEAN-PAUL LAURENS</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>In 1893 Rodin made the bust of Madame <i>Séverine,</i> the medallion of
-<i>César Franck,</i> and several works in marble; <i>Galatea, The Death of
-Adonis, The Education of Achilles,</i> and <i>The Wave.</i> From 1894 date
-the <i>Eternal Spring,</i> one of his tenderest and purest works, besides
-an <i>Orpheus and Eurydice,</i> an <i>Adonis and Venus,</i> and finally <i>Christ
-and the Magdalen.</i> For, by degrees, he was returning to religious and
-mythological subjects, after having expressed only general symbols
-or pieces of pure realism; and I shall have to call attention at a
-later point to the original manner in which Rodin was bold enough to
-interpret these subjects which the academic classicism seemed to have
-worn out and left insipid for ever.</p>
-
-<p>The year 1895 at last beheld the inauguration, on the 3rd of June, of
-<i>The Burghers of Calais</i> at Calais. To the same year belongs another
-fine work in marble: <i>Illusion, the Daughter of Icarus,</i> besides
-a vigorous bronze, <i>The Crouching<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span> Man,</i> a medallion of <i>Octave
-Mirbeau,</i> and&mdash;at this early date&mdash;some nude studies for the <i>Balzac,</i>
-for the <i>Balzac</i> was studied minutely in the nude, a point of which
-many people know nothing, before appearing draped in the famous
-dressing-gown which was destined, in 1898, to arouse so much clamour.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<a id="rodin025a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_025a.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">BUST OF MADAME V.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>The <i>Burghers</i> were set up, by subscription, in a square in Calais.<a name="FNanchor_4_7" id="FNanchor_4_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_7" class="fnanchor">[4]</a></p>
-
-<p>The monument is one in which Rodin has deliberately departed from
-all the rules of official art. These require that the effect should
-be pursued primarily by a compact grouping, the same thought being
-translated by the same gesture from all the persons. Rodin, on the
-contrary, desired to leave their full individuality to his six burghers
-going in their shirts and with halters on their necks to surrender
-themselves to King Edward, and he has isolated them on their one
-base. These six men are walking, one behind the other, two by two,
-half naked and miserable, with their emaciated faces&mdash;men besieged,
-sacrificed. One devotion unites them in the name of their town's
-salvation, but their characters and their thoughts<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span> remain distinct,
-and in each may be read a different drama of the conscience. They
-have not the factitious enthusiasm and the declamatory gesture with
-which an ordinary sculptor would have thought well to furnish them;
-they are simply citizens who have resolved to fulfil a fatal duty,
-and are going to perform it without cowardice, but nevertheless were,
-yesterday, trades-people and family-men with no pretensions to the
-heroic. They bear with them their regrets, their inner heartbreak, and
-are not thinking of striking an attitude in the eyes of history. They
-are the unknown, obscure heroes of a fatality such as often arose in
-their rough times; and of how many dead men, devoted like them, has
-history forgotten the deeds and names! There is Eustace de St. Pierre,
-with his shaven magistrate's face, stiff and controlled, carrying the
-key of the town; behind him Andrieux d'Andres, with his hands clenched
-over his sobbing face, turns back, this last time, towards the city.
-Jean de Fiennes, with his rough beard and weak, old man's shoulders, is
-listening to Jean d'Aire, who, younger than he, is murmuring words that
-perhaps confide to him his horror of death, and entreat from the old
-man encouragement in renunciation. But in front of all the others the
-two brothers,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span> Jacques and Pierre de Wissant, advance resolutely; and
-one turns back to hasten his friends, while one exhorts them, pointing
-with a restrained gesture towards heaven.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 650px;">
-<a id="rodin026a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_026a.jpg" width="650" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">THE BURGHERS OF CALAIS</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>The entire reality of these figures is no less striking than their
-ideality, just as is the case in the beautiful creations of the
-"Primitives." These are men whose absolutely real nakedness reveals
-itself beneath the coarse sacks that clothe them, a nakedness not
-harmonised into any style, but shown in all its veracity by an artist
-who has chosen models suitable to his characters without any care to
-arrange them or to give them that pretended <i>beauty</i> which would be
-merely a falsehood and an enfeeblement. These are six wretched men,
-shivering with cold and anguish. The scene is as close as possible
-to history, and the faces are real&mdash;ugly or ordinary. But an idea
-transfigures them. The tragedy of their sacrifice gives them a strange
-greatness, and they become fine because their soul is fine. We guess
-the gradation of their reflections: none faces his fate just like
-another, and the reason is that, though what they will is one, what
-they leave is different for each, and everything in them speaks, from
-their faces down to the least attitude of their limbs. Their expression
-is sober; a heavy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span> silence enwraps them; we follow them with our
-eyes as the dwellers in Calais must have done from the heights of
-their walls; and they are so grouped that from every point we see them
-separately, presenting a distinct aspect, and yet the one base unites
-and uplifts them. This is a marvel of psychological composition.</p>
-
-<p>Technical skill assists this composition; we find the power of the
-<i>St. John</i>, but more simplification. Only the essential lines attract
-the eye, the details are subsidiary to the whole. Admirable bits of
-flesh modelling are only noticed after long examination; the substance
-is scarcely thought of, so much is the mind held at first by the
-intellectual drama, and this was what Rodin desired. These six beings,
-side by side, are august in their sorrow, and they move us by means of
-their simplicity and by the absence of any theatrical gesture. We feel
-the bodies under the shirts, for Rodin made six complete models in the
-nude before he threw upon them these rags of stuff and knotted ropes.
-The feet are strongly attached to the earth; we guess that their limbs
-are heavy, because, though their will bids them walk, every step leads
-towards death. The impression is extraordinary and such as perhaps no
-sculpture<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span> ever gave before. This is a reality of all time: the epic of
-the sacrifice of the humble. As for the style, it recalls the Gothic
-sculptors by the rugged power of the moulding, the asceticism of the
-heads, and the strength of the knotty limbs. We are compelled to think
-of the Flemish "primitives," and especially of those genial Burgundian
-sculptors and image-makers of genius who produced the immortal figures
-of Philippe Pot's tomb in the Louvre. There is the same desire for
-expression in sculpture, which seeks beauty solely in intensity of
-character, and finds style in the sincere study of reality&mdash;all
-these things concurring towards the greater synthesis of the work's
-general thought. Rodin there shows himself an essentially French and
-northern artist, alien from all that the academies, hypnotised by the
-Italianism of the second Renascence, have chosen to invent as dogmas
-of beauty. <i>The Burghers of Calais</i> is a work of the true French
-classic tradition&mdash;of the national classicality which has nothing in
-common with that classicality imported from Italy in 1550 by which our
-indigenous artists have so long been oppressed, thanks to the "École
-de Rome." Standing before such a creation we recognise this truth
-sharply&mdash;this truth which is the secret of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span> Rodin's genius and of
-the enthusiasm that he aroused. Better than Rude, better than Barye,
-better even than Carpeaux, has he found the way to free himself, and to
-go back, by power of thought and mastery, to our true national lineage.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
-<a id="rodin027a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_027a.jpg" width="400" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">A BURGHER OF CALAIS</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:500px;">
-<a id="rodin028a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_028a.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">A BURGHER OF CALAIS</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 525px;">
-<a id="rodin029a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_029a.jpg" width="525" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">A BURGHER OF CALAIS</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>The <i>Burghers</i> ought, according to Rodin's idea, to be placed in front
-of the old Hotel de Ville of Calais, facing the sea; and he wished
-the group to be placed on a very high pedestal, so that the figures
-should stand out against the open sky, or else, on the other hand,
-almost on the level, so that everyone could walk round them, live with
-them, almost elbow them. A bad site has been chosen and a pedestal of
-moderate height and ordinary appearance. The <i>Burghers</i> are very fine
-all the same, and are certainly the most powerful piece of sculpture
-of the epoch. I have promised to be sober in my praises of Rodin, but
-I do not see why in speaking of such a work as this I should hide my
-convictions. Those who have seen it cannot fail to consider it, as I
-do, the work of a thinker and of an artist of genius.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_4" id="Footnote_1_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_4"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> It Is curious to recollect that the very fine equestrian
-statue of General Lynch and the monument to President Vicunha, sent to
-America by Rodin, were never paid for, and that, owing to revolutions,
-they actually disappeared, so that these works may be considered lost.
-Only the spoiled rough models and some photographs remain.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_5" id="Footnote_2_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_5"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> These <i>Shades</i> are a symbolic representation of men who
-are just dead, and who are bending down with folded hands in misery and
-terror gazing at the hellish crowd into which they are about to fall.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3_6" id="Footnote_3_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_6"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> The final version of this group has been treated by Rodin
-separately, and is known by the name of <i>The Kiss</i>. The marble group is
-in the Museum of the Luxembourg.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4_7" id="Footnote_4_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_7"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> A statue of Eustace de St. Pierre had been asked for.
-Rodin sent the six effigies of burghers, and this gave rise to fresh
-difficulties with the authorities.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h4><a name="III" id="III">III</a></h4>
-
-
-<p class="block">RODIN'S WORK FROM 1895 TO 1898&mdash;SMALL GROUPS&mdash;THE STATUE OF "BALZAC"
-&mdash;THE INCIDENT OF THE SOCIÉTÉ DES GENS DE LETTRES&mdash;THE "TECHNIQUE"
-OF THE "BALZAC"&mdash;RODIN'S IDEAS UPON MODELLING AND COMPOSITION&mdash;HIS
-OPINIONS ABOUT THE GREEKS, THE GOTHIC STYLE, CLASSICISM, AND
-MYTHOLOGICAL SUBJECTS&mdash;RODIN'S "ANTIQUE" PERIOD.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>The year 1896 was occupied by the continuation of work for the Hugo
-monument. The <i>Muse of Anger</i> and the <i>Muse of the Inna' Voice</i> were
-brought to their full completion. In addition to these Rodin made a
-very fine head of <i>Minerva,</i> in marble, with a silver helmet; a statue
-of a <i>Conqueror</i>, holding a statue of <i>Victory;</i> and two groups&mdash;<i>The
-Poet and the Life of Contemplation</i> (for M. Fenaille, the faithful
-admirer, who was, at a later date, to publish his sketches) and <i>The
-Eternal Idol,</i> a marvel of inspiration. A young naked woman is in a
-half-sitting posture, her head bent, her gaze lost in a dream. A man
-kneeling before her, his arms behind him and his desire restrained,
-puts<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span> his head gently forward and kisses the idol beneath the left
-breast over the heart, with mute fervour, and with a mystic, amorous
-concentration of his whole being. Rarely does sculpture allow of so
-much pulsating life and so much psychological emotion united to plastic
-perfection and originality of arrangement.</p>
-
-<p>From 1897 date the marble group of the <i>Women Bathing,</i> the last
-studies for the <i>Balzac,</i> and the studies for the <i>Monument to
-President Sarmiento</i>, a statue upon a pedestal in high-relief. Small
-groups in marble and in bronze are a form of which Rodin is fond. He
-has been led to devote himself largely to them on account of <i>The Gate
-of Hell,</i> the dimensions of which necessitated small figures. Moreover,
-Rodin reserves this form of art for certain categories of works that
-have a character of passion and intimacy. It should be possible to pass
-easily round them, to lean over them, almost to touch them and move
-them about; one should be able to live with them, as one cannot do with
-large figures meant to be looked at from below. The happy form of the
-small sculptured block, which the eighteenth century had employed to
-so much advantage, allows this constant communion of the spectator and
-the work of art. Rodin,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span> who executes his bigger figures in so large a
-style, reserves for these a style that is minute but never mannered.
-The outlines remain large, so much so, indeed, that the work would
-always bear an enlarged scale; but the modelling is wrought with an
-almost caressing touch and with a strange love of form. Here the rough
-sculptor, so Gothic in his austerity, fingers the marble with the care
-and the delicacy of a lover; he reveals himself as a fervent adorer of
-smooth, womanly flesh; he plays with the subtlest variations of light
-upon the inflexion of marble surfaces, and the man who is reproached
-with caring for nothing but "character" and with despising "beauty"
-creates arms, necks, knees, and bosoms of exquisite perfection. His
-favourite type of woman is the long, delicately made woman, with
-a small bust, largely curved hips, and a face full of will, the
-nervous, feline, voluptuous woman, of head rather than of heart, such
-as Baudelaire and Rops have imagined. The characteristic feature of
-Rodin's small groups is the seeking after new combinations of movement.
-I have said already that his essential idea was the production of
-<i>dynamic</i> art; that is to say that, finding himself face to face
-with an academic school that had grown inert owing to its care for
-pseudo-harmony,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span> he had determined to draw sculpture out of this blind
-alley and to show, before all things, how the expression of movement
-might lead to an entirely new conception of decorative outline. From
-this endeavour arose those little groups of lovers in which the
-attitudes are so infinitely varied, those curious presentments in
-which the arms and legs are placed as freely as in a painting. But the
-painting has the help of shadow, of backgrounds, and of values, which
-allow the light to be concentrated on a single point and the rest to be
-blurred. Rodin has attempted so to compose his most audacious movements
-that, in walking round, a new aspect of them is constantly presented,
-whereas ordinary sculpture, meant to be seen from a single point, does
-not allow the spectator to pass behind it. This difficulty and this
-main idea have led Rodin to treat modelling and composition in a way
-upon which I shall dwell more fully later on, and to invent a style of
-statuary which borrows some of the laws of painting.</p>
-
-<p>These thoughts had long been ripening in Rodin when at last he resolved
-to apply them to his <i>Balzac</i>, which was really not his first attempt
-in this direction, but the first that was seen in public. When this
-statue appeared in the Salon of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span> 1898, it created such a commotion that
-for a week the public forgot, over it, the events of that vast serial
-story, the Dreyfus affair. The clamour was extraordinary; some people
-raged at what they considered a scandalous practical joke, others
-warmly defended the new work. The Société des Gens de Lettres, already
-irritated by Rodin's delays in finishing the statue, declared plainly
-that it refused the <i>Balzac</i>, a decision which led to the resignation
-of the committee. Rodin might have brought an action and won it,
-for, strictly speaking, his agreement required the society to accept
-the work such as he delivered it. He preferred to withdraw his work
-without claiming its price or discussing the matter. Once again his art
-encountered violent opposition from the official camp&mdash;but to struggle
-is repugnant to his temper. Inflexible in his will as a producer, he is
-timid and proud in his attitude towards contradictions. Opportunity,
-moreover, offered him a roguish and witty revenge. Falguière was
-commissioned to make a <i>Balzac.</i> This put Falguière in a very awkward
-position; after all the fuss made about Rodin's statue, he must needs
-produce something finer, or at the very least equally interesting. He
-was certain of a bad reception at the hands of Rodin's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span> admirers and he
-was bound to please the others. Falguière only succeeded in producing a
-mediocre work. The <i>Balzac</i> that may be seen at the present time in the
-Avenue de Friedland is nothing but a half-hearted imitation of Rodin's;
-it is Rodin's <i>Balzac</i> seated, and without character or interest. This
-work appeared in 1900, at a time when opinion was already beginning
-to recognise the injustice done to Rodin, and it pleased nobody.
-Then Rodin, to show that the incident had in no way altered his
-friendly relations with Falguière,<a name="FNanchor_1_8" id="FNanchor_1_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_8" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> made an admirable bust of his
-fellow-worker, which was as fine as the second <i>Balzac</i> was poor, and
-thus gave to Falguière and to the public, also, a silent and ironical
-lesson.</p>
-
-<p>What, then, was this <i>Balzac</i> which was so much detested, and about
-which the most abusive and extraordinary things were written? Merely
-the image of the great writer, draped in a dressing-gown, with empty,
-hanging sleeves; he has risen in the night and is walking up and down,
-disturbed and sleepless, pursuing an idea that has suddenly presented
-itself. He is bent forward, his head thrown back, the eyes deep-set,
-and the mouth contracted in a smile of challenge. The powerful<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>
-neck&mdash;the neck indeed of a bull&mdash;emerges from the open wrapper. Rodin
-made use of various daguerreotypes, and especially of a celebrated
-portrait of Balzac, that shows him in shirt-sleeves with one brace,
-and folded arms. The enormous proportions of the head, the amazing
-strength of the thorax, the monstrous and leonine character of the face
-are all exact. "His was the countenance of an element," said Lamartine
-of Balzac, "with a torso that was joined to the head by an enormous
-neck, short legs, and short arms." These words absolutely justify the
-statue. Rodin had made studies for it in the nude (there are some fine
-clay models of the subject in his studio), then he clothed it with a
-gown (or to be more exact, with a bath-wrap, for that is what Balzac's
-famous monk's robe was), and proceeded to simplify the folds until
-he had left only the two or three essential ones. The result thus
-obtained, with the disproportion of body and legs, led Rodin to hide
-the short, ugly, useless arms under the drapery, and the figure thus
-assumed pretty much the appearance of a mummy, of a sort of monolith,
-from which nothing stood out but the one point of interest, the savage
-and magnificent animality of the head, with its darkened gaze and the
-bitterly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span> curved mouth, of which Rodin had made a separate small study
-in bronze. A great heave of the shoulders throws the body slightly
-backward, causing it to rest upon one leg, which is apparently bent,
-while the other is moved forward to walk.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="rodin030a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_030a.jpg" width="550" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">BALZAC</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>The whole work gives the impression of a <i>menhir</i>, a pagan dedicatory
-stone. Interest is concentrated solely upon the head. Rodin considered
-that the representation of a celebrated figure offered no corporeal
-interest. It is evident that a great error prevails on this subject.
-The ancients have transmitted to us naked or draped statues. It must
-be remembered that this homage was almost always paid to warriors,
-athletes, or courtesans; to represent these at full length was to
-express their fame. Their beautiful shape received fit homage. The gods
-were conceived as incarnations of moral beauty in physical beauty.
-But as time and morality have gradually brought us to honour men who
-are great in thought, the bodily representation of them has strayed
-into an extremely false path. Dress and physical exterior ceased to be
-of plastic interest, but the manner of our homage remained the same.
-Busts with pedestals commemorating in writing the deeds or the works
-would have been the right form of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span> celebration. But this, the only
-intelligent form, appeared to our modern statue-maniac ages too scanty.
-This heretical opinion has given birth to the gentlemen in frock-coats
-who disfigure our present towns and are hoisted upon pedestals in our
-public squares. To this absurd point have we come: in order to honour
-the soul we reproduce its husk, the body, which is destined to the
-nothingness of the grave, and we represent the shoes and coats as
-exactly as the head. We attempt in our pious regard for the essence
-of a thinker to represent that part of him which was transitory. The
-result is photography in bronze, a wretched artistic contradiction.
-Nevertheless, if we are to bow to custom and represent a man at full
-length of whom the head is the only important fact, we must indeed
-give him a body that is like reality; but the artist should try to
-concentrate interest as much as possible on the face. So illogical
-is this style in itself that the bodies and clothes are copied from
-chance models; the head of the person to be glorified is stuck on to
-them, and it is the merest bit of luck if it has been possible to shape
-this head itself from actual evidence! For plenty of statues represent
-individuals who never looked like them, and of whom no authentic
-likeness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span> exists, which is the height of absurdity and the very
-burlesque of an honour.<a name="FNanchor_2_9" id="FNanchor_2_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_9" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="rodin031a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_031a.jpg" width="550" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">BALZAC</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>In such cases an allegorical monument should be a matter of necessity;
-yet we behold hundreds of such statues, all the same, and our prejudice
-in favour of verisimilitude requires us to contemplate the embroidery
-of their doublets or the trimming of their coats.</p>
-
-<p>Rodin, for his part, to whom such ideas, which degrade his art to the
-lowest level, are revolting, believes that composition and expression
-should be so arranged as to make the spectator forget the <i>plastique</i>
-of the body. In his busts he neglects the inevitable linen collar,
-coat-collar, and necktie. The graceful dress of <i>Claude Lorraine</i>, the
-shirt and rope of <i>The Burghers of Calais,</i> had served his purpose
-well, and in the statues of <i>General Lynch</i> and <i>Bastien-Lepage</i> he
-had reduced the modern dress to large bronze reliefs without precise
-details. Especially in the image of a thinker he seeks<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span> to annul the
-costume. The Olympian character of Hugo allowed of the nude; for the
-massive deformity of Balzac the dressing-gown was appropriate. The
-majority of those who mocked did not even know that this careless
-costume was habitual to the author, and that Rodin chose to surprise
-him in his home and in the fever of work, instead of showing him in the
-street with a hat and stick, as they would no doubt have expected.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Balzac</i>, then, presents the aspect of a sheath of stone pushed out
-by a few twisting folds, which give it the appearance from behind of
-an upright sarcophagus. The size of the head, the abnormal largeness
-of the chest and neck, which have aroused mockery, are historic. Apart
-from these points, one honestly wonders what it is that can have
-shocked people in this bold and sincere work. The face is admirable in
-its pride, its strength of will, its haughty irony, and penetrating
-power of thought. The modelling and the leading lines are masterly.
-The rather ghostly look of the clay disappears in the bronze, as may
-be seen from the little head in that material, of which the monument
-was to be made. It is the freedom, the spontaneity, the life of the
-statue, which, as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span> in the case of the <i>Burghers,</i> gave a shock to the
-conventions of the official world and disturbed the ideas of the public
-at large.</p>
-
-<p>It is true, nevertheless, and is generally admitted even by its most
-active adversaries that this great figure possesses a strange haunting
-power; when one had seen it in the Salon one could see nothing else
-after it, and could not succeed in getting away from it. People
-returned to it, in order to attack it, but they did return to it
-inevitably. The same official sculptors who in 1877 had accused <i>The
-Age of Brass</i> of being cast from life because the figure was so exact
-did not shrink from accusing this same Rodin, matured by twenty years
-of work, of "not knowing the figure" and hiding his Balzac under a
-robe out of weakness. Besides these reproaches, which were made in
-bad faith, reproaches arose which exclaimed at Rodin's madness or
-hypocritically regretted that a man of so much talent should have made
-so great a mistake. But one thing which the <i>Bahac</i> never encountered
-was indifference; what was the spell which compelled everybody to
-regard it as an irritating puzzle, as a challenge, as a work out of the
-ordinary run? Plenty of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span> hostile faces were to be seen, but many of
-them showed a secret fear of being in the wrong, of misunderstanding a
-fine thing, a work which was a forerunner. This same fear might have
-been read as early as 1867 upon the faces of the detractors who stood
-in a ring around Manet's first works.</p>
-
-<p>The spell lay in the extreme simplification, the reduction of the
-elements to a powerful unity, according to a scheme with which Rodin
-had made experiments in silence and which he now revealed. And at
-this point I am led to a brief explanation of Rodin's ideas upon the
-technical part of his art.</p>
-
-<p>At the time of the <i>Balzac's</i> appearance I gave an account of the way
-by which Rodin had been led to a new conception of sculpture. This was
-in an article<a name="FNanchor_3_10" id="FNanchor_3_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_10" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> that has been reproduced more or less everywhere, and
-that Rodin has been good enough to consider as the emanation and direct
-expression of his artistic wishes. I cannot enter into all the details.
-The scale of this book would not allow of that, but the following are
-the principal points of that evolution.</p>
-
-<p>Rodin's is above all a temperament inclined to the expression of
-passionate and tragic character. Thence comes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span> his constant study of
-movement. As I said before, that study has led him to give unlooked-for
-values to the general outline and to produce works which may be viewed
-on all sides and which continually show a fresh and balanced aspect
-that explains the other aspects: otherwise the daring gestures and the
-bold combinations of the limbs would have given an air of absurdity
-to the groups. Rodin is at the same time very reflective and very
-instinctive. He matures a thought slowly, but he often passes by
-chance from that thought to its realisation. This is the predominant
-feature of his nature, and it explains his entire art. Rodin often
-appears unconscious, astonished at what he had in him and at what he
-has brought into existence, to such a degree that he explains it badly
-enough. He sees his thought in the whole of nature and finds it there
-again; that thought, indeed, is fed by general ideas, and is, if I may
-say so, almost "elemental." From this point of view Rodin's <i>genius</i>
-is independent of his <i>talent</i> as a sculptor. It sometimes happens to
-him to see a block of marble or a knob of wood, and the form of such an
-object will show him what he will make and the movement of the figure.
-He adapts to it one of the ideas which he always has in reserve: the
-aspect<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span> of the wood or the marble determines the passage of the thought
-to the material which will incarnate it. I said one day to Rodin: "One
-would say that you knew there was a figure in that block, and that you
-do nothing beyond breaking away the stone that hides it from us." He
-answered that that was exactly his feeling as he worked. Upon the naked
-figure Rodin has ideas that are peculiar to his nature as a mystic and
-a realist. He considers the body with its four limbs as a cypher, of
-which the combinations are infinite. That is an old idea that was held
-by primitive theologians of the Eastern religions. And it is the fact
-that Rodin has invented an immense series of attitudes and combinations
-that one would not have thought possible: he attaches little groups to
-the side of a block of marble with the freedom of a painter throwing
-a figure upon a background. He makes his people light, he makes them
-soar, he entwines them in surprising positions.</p>
-
-<p>It was therefore absolutely essential that he should find means to
-constitute a logical harmony <i>on every side</i> of his works. Scholastic
-statuary is opposed to this principle. Its tendency is to treat groups
-as bas-reliefs. The spectator must stand in front, at a certain spot,
-and whatever is behind<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span> is accessory: the decorative line produces its
-effect only from that point. So true is this that statues are very
-often so placed in public squares that people cannot pass round them.
-The academic sculptors treat a piece of sculpture like a picture; it
-has a right side and a wrong side. Rodin, shocked at this method, began
-by working in quite a different way. He made successive sketches of all
-the faces of his works, going constantly round them so as to obtain a
-series of views connected in a ring. Travels in Italy had led him to
-think that the ancients proceeded in this manner and that their great
-endeavour was to get the design of the outline by means of movement,
-which continually modifies the anatomy. Anatomy, indispensable to
-the artist, becomes the source of all the academic errors if once
-we forget that it is but inertia, the state of non-action, and
-consequently incapable of expressly teaching us about life and about
-the modifications that thought imposes upon flesh. The real value of
-a living figure is given by profiles studied successively in a full
-light. Rodin was delighted by this way of working. But his pictorial
-inclinations, his ideas about the possible formation of a <i>background</i>
-in sculpture as in painting, were not satisfied.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>When the academic school wishes to make use of a background to a figure
-it confines itself to a hollow or a relief. Rodin desired that a statue
-should stand free and should bear looking at from any point, but he
-desired nevertheless that it should remain in relation with light and
-with the surrounding atmosphere. He was struck by the hard, cut-out
-aspect of ordinary statues, and asked himself how an atmosphere might
-be given to them. Painting has two means to this end: of which the
-first is <i>values. Values</i> are independent of colour. Values, an element
-common to both arts, are in painting and sculpture <i>the relations as
-to opacity or transparence of an object and the background against
-which it is seen.</i> They may be dark on a light ground, light on a dark
-ground, or light upon a ground that is likewise light; but they are
-always the very life of the outline, and the important point is to fix
-that outline first of all. When we see a person placed between the
-sun and ourselves, against the light, we do not at first perceive the
-details within the outline, but we do see the general mass of the body,
-and that mass is filled with more or less intense colour, in which we
-presently distinguish details. Our perception at the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span> moment is as much
-sculptural as pictorial. Rodin, struck by the importance of this idea,
-devoted himself to obtaining, <i>at once and together,</i> the <i>volume;</i>
-that is to say, the equivalent in sculpture of the <i>value,</i> and the
-design of <i>successive views of one movement.</i></p>
-
-<p>But the second means in painting is the employment of intermediate
-tones encircling the figure and combining with the background. How
-could an equivalent be found for that? Logic led Rodin on to a step
-which alarmed him: he made experiments after examining the antiques
-very closely. He took fragments of his statues and began to raise them
-in certain places by layers of clay, intensifying the modelling and
-enlarging the lines. He observed that the light now played better upon
-these enlarged lines; the refraction of light upon these amplified
-surfaces was softer, the hardness of the cut-out outline vanished,
-and a radiant zone shaped itself around his figures and united them
-gradually with the atmosphere. In this way, therefore, by means of
-this systematic accentuation of the outlines, an intermediate tone, <i>a
-radiancy of the forms,</i> was produced.</p>
-
-<p>Rodin understood at once that he had found his way<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span> to the deepest
-secret of his art; that is to say, to the ideal limit where through its
-hidden laws a plastic art touches the other arts in a negation of all
-that is merely materialistic. The intermediate tones in painting, the
-radiating surfaces in sculpture, are the same principle as the nervous
-radiations noted in photographing a hand, where it may be seen that
-the fingers are prolonged by emanations. Nothing is fixed, limited,
-or finished in nature, and the radiating state is the only real one.
-But this was a dangerous discovery for a sculptor, since people would
-immediately exclaim upon the <i>deformation</i> <i>of what was seen</i>, the
-alteration of the fact, the falsification of anatomy. Therefore Rodin
-proceeded in silence and with very great prudence. The point was not,
-of course, <i>to enlarge</i> <i>all surfaces equally</i>, for that would have
-produced only an increase of scale. The thing was <i>to amplify</i>, with
-tact, <i>certain parts of the modelling</i>, the edges of which were swept
-by the light, so as to give a halo to the outline. At the same time,
-Rodin experimented in a series of drawings made on purpose, forbidding
-himself to give any detail, tracing only the outlines of bodies filled
-in with one wash of water-colour that gave the <i>value.</i> I shall return
-to these sketches. They<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span> cannot be understood without a knowledge of
-their original purpose.</p>
-
-<p>This theory, to which Rodin approved of my giving the name of
-<i>deliberate amplification of surfaces</i>, is simply the critical
-principle of Greek sculpture, which has been entirely misunderstood
-by the academic school. That school, which is supposed to honour the
-Greeks, is really false to their spirit and their teaching. Moreover,
-this principle, which belongs to all the primitive statuary that
-was made for the open air, is to be found among the Egyptians and
-the Assyrians. It calls in question the academic tradition whereby
-<i>exactitude</i> is confounded with <i>truth.</i> In reality it may be said
-to be a profoundly classic principle which has been denied by the
-academic school. Here, as in painting, classicism is opposed to the
-academic. Hence it should be concluded that in reality Rodin is by
-no means an <i>innovator</i> opposing himself to a school that retains
-classic traditions, but, speaking precisely, a classic, returning to
-nature, replacing himself in the state of mind of a Greek before his
-model, and opposing himself to a school that has overloaded art with
-methods, formulas, and expedients that change the character of antique
-and Gothic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span> art. Rodin has a horror of what is called "originality,"
-and an even greater horror of what is called "inspiration." He only
-trusts completely to work and to minute, sincere observation of nature.
-"Slowness is a beauty," he often says. He has the greatest antipathy
-for "sculpture with literary meanings," and has often been galled,
-without saying so, by certain praises, in which writers, reeling off
-pages of description about his works, have thought to please him by
-dwelling on the idea and not on the execution. "I invent nothing,"
-he says; "I rediscover. And the thing seems new because people have
-generally lost sight of the aim and the means of art; they take
-that for an innovation which is nothing but a return to the laws of
-the great sculpture of long ago. Obviously, I think; I like certain
-symbols, I see things in a synthetic way, but it is nature that gives
-me all that. I do not imitate the Greeks; I try to put myself in the
-spiritual state of the men who have left us the antique statues. The
-'École' copies their works; the thing that signifies is to <i>recover
-their method.</i> I began by showing close studies from nature like <i>The
-Age of Brass.</i> Afterwards I came to understand that art required a
-little more largeness, a little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span> exaggeration, and my whole aim, from
-the time of the <i>Burghers</i>, was to find a method of exaggerating
-logically: that method consists in the deliberate amplification of the
-modelling. It consists also in the constant reduction of the figure to
-a geometrical figure, and in the determination to sacrifice any part of
-a figure to the synthesis of its aspect. See what the Gothic sculptors
-did. Look at the cathedral of Chartres; one of the towers is massive
-and without ornament: they sacrificed it to give value to the exquisite
-delicacy of the other tower.</p>
-
-<p>"In sculpture the projection of the muscular <i>fasciculi</i> must be
-accentuated, the foreshortening forced, the hollows deepened; sculpture
-is the art of the hole and the lump, not of clear, well-smoothed,
-unmodelled figures. Ignorant people, when they see close-knitted true
-surfaces, say that 'it is not finished.' No notion is falser than that
-of <i>finish</i> unless it be that of <i>elegance</i>; by means of these two
-ideas people would kill our art. The way to obtain solidity and life is
-by work carried out to the fullest, not in the direction of achievement
-and of copying details, but in that of truth in the successive
-schemes. The public, perverted by academic prejudices, confounds art
-with neatness. The simplicity of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span> 'École' is a painted cardboard
-ideal. A cast from life is a copy, the exactest possible copy, and
-yet it has neither motion nor eloquence. Art intervenes to exaggerate
-certain surfaces, and also to fine down others. In sculpture everything
-depends upon the way in which the modelling is carried out with a
-constant thought of the main line of the scheme, upon the rendering of
-the hollows, of the projections and of their connections; thus it is
-that one may get fine lights, and especially fine shadows that are not
-opaque. Everything should be emphasised according to the accent that
-it is desired to render, and the degree of amplification is personal,
-according to the tact and the temperament of each sculptor; and for
-this reason there is no transmissible process, no studio recipe, but
-only a true law. I see it in the antique and in Michael Angelo. To work
-by the profiles, in depth not by surfaces, always thinking of the few
-geometrical forms from which all nature proceeds, and to make these
-eternal forms perceptible in the individual case of the object studied,
-that is my criterion. That is not idealism, it is a part of the
-handicraft. My ideas have nothing to do with it but for that method; my
-Danaids and my Dante figures would be weak, bad<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span> things. From the large
-design that I get your mind deduces ideas."</p>
-
-<p>Rodin, then, is convinced that he is classical, and rebels against the
-"École" which claims to be so. He has the greatest admiration for the
-Renascence, but declares that he does not so clearly understand the
-genius of the Gothic sculptors. He admires it, but has not thoroughly
-penetrated it. "I feel it, but I cannot express it," he says. "I cannot
-analyse the Celtic genius to my own satisfaction. In the Middle Ages
-art came from groups, not from individuals. It was anonymous; the
-sculptors of cathedrals no more put their names to their works than
-our workmen put theirs on the pavement that they lay. Ah! what an
-admirable scorn of notoriety! The signature is what destroys us. We do
-portraits, but what we do is not so great. These kings and queens, on
-the cathedrals, were not portraits. The fellow-workers stood for one
-another, and they interpreted; they did not copy. They made clothed
-figures; the nude and portraiture only date from the Renascence. And
-then those fellows cut with the tool's end into the block, that is why
-they were called sculptors. As for us, we are modellers. And<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span> what a
-disgraceful thing that casting from life is, which so many well-known
-sculptors do not blush to use! It is a mere swindling in art. Art was
-a vital function to the image-makers of the thirteenth century; they
-would have laughed at the idea of signing what they did, and never
-dreamed of honours and titles. When once their work was finished,
-they said no more about it, or else they talked among themselves.
-How curious it would have been to hear them, to be present at their
-gatherings, where they must have discussed in amusing phrases, and with
-simple, deep ideas!... Whenever the cathedrals disappear civilisation
-will go down one step. And even now we no longer understand them, we
-no longer know how to read their silent language. <i>We need to make
-excavations not in the earth, but towards heaven.</i>..." An admirable
-saying that Rodin has often repeated to me and that I have never heard
-without deep emotion! He has the secret of these true formulas, and
-his words, which are not eloquent, but, rather, obscure, are suddenly
-lighted up by them. His speech, like his sculpture, is born from
-sincere contact with the essence of nature. In regard to the Renascence
-and Michael Angelo, he reports that he received no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span> decisive lesson
-from either until after a journey to Italy in 1875. "I believed before
-that," he says, "that movement was the whole secret of this art, and
-I put my models into positions like those of Michael Angelo. But
-as I went on observing the free attitudes of my models I perceived
-that they possessed these <i>naturally</i>, and that Michael Angelo had
-not preconceived them, but merely transcribed them according to the
-personal inspiration of human beings moved by the need of action. I
-went to Rome to look for what may be found everywhere: <i>the latent
-heroic in every natural movement.</i> <a name="FNanchor_4_11" id="FNanchor_4_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_11" class="fnanchor">[4]</a></p>
-
-<p>"Then I gathered the elements of what people call my symbolism. I do
-not understand anything about long words and theories. But I am willing
-to be a symbolist, if that defines the ideas that Michael Angelo gave
-me, namely that the essence of sculpture is the modelling, the general
-scheme which alone enables us to render the intensity, the supple
-variety of movement and character. If we can imagine the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span> thought of
-God in creating the world, He thought first of the construction, which
-is the sole principle of nature, of living things and perhaps of the
-planets. Michael Angelo seems to me rather to derive from Donatello
-than from the ancients; Raphael proceeds from them. He understood that
-an architecture can be built up with the human body, and that, in
-order to possess volume and harmony, a statue or a group ought to be
-contained in a cube, a pyramid; or some simple figure. Let us look at a
-Dutch interior and at an interior painted by an artist of the present
-day. The latter no longer touches us, because it does not possess the
-qualities of depth and volume, the science of distances. The artist who
-paints it does not know how to reproduce a cube. An interior by Van
-der Meer is a cubic painting. The atmosphere is in it and the exact
-volume of the objects; the place of these objects has been respected,
-the modern painter places them, arranges them as models. The Dutchmen
-did not touch them, but set themselves to render the distances that
-separated them, that is, the depth. And then, if I go so far as to say
-that <i>cubic truth, not appearance, is the mistress of things,</i> if I
-add that the sight of the plains and woods and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span> country views gives me
-the principle of the plans that I employ on my statues, that I feel
-cubic truth everywhere, and that plan and volume appear to me as laws
-of all life and all beauty, will it be said that I am a symbolist, that
-I generalise, that I am a metaphysician? It seems to me that I have
-remained a sculptor and a realist. Unity oppresses and haunts me."</p>
-
-<p>"What," says Rodin again, "is the principle of my figures, and
-what is it that people like in them? It is the very pivot of art,
-it is balance; that is to say, the oppositions of volume produced
-by movement. That is the striking, material fact in art, with all
-due deference to those persons who conceive art as distinct from
-'brutal' reality. Art is like love. For many people it is a dream, a
-psychological complication, a palace, a perfume, a stage scene; but
-nothing of the sort! The essential of love is the pairing; all the
-rest is only detail, charming, and full of passion, but detail. It is
-the same in art: people come and praise my symbols and my expressions
-to me; but I know that the plans are the essential thing. Respect the
-plan, make it exact from every point; movement intervenes, displaces
-these volumes and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span> creates a fresh balance. The human body is like a
-<i>walking temple,</i> and like a temple it has a central point around which
-the volumes place and spread themselves. When one understands that,
-one has everything. It is simple, but it must be seen, and academism
-refuses to see it. Instead of recognising that that is the key to my
-method they prefer to say that I am a poet. That expression signifies
-that people feel, confusedly, the difference between an art resting
-on conventions and one derived from truth; only they think that the
-'poetic' art is the conventional one. They call that <i>inspiration.</i>
-That is the belief that has led to the theory of genius being madness.
-But men of genius are just those <i>who, by their trade-skill, carry the
-essential thing to perfection.</i> People say that my sculpture <i>is that
-of an 'exalté.'<a name="FNanchor_5_12" id="FNanchor_5_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_12" class="fnanchor">[5]</a></i></p>
-
-<p>"I do not deny that there is exaltation in my works; but that
-exaltation existed not in me, but in nature, in movement. The divine
-work is naturally exalted. As for me, all I do is to be true; my
-temperament is not 'exalted'; it is patient.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span> I am not a dreamer,
-but a mathematician; and if my sculpture is good it is because it is
-geometrical."</p>
-
-<p>From these fragments of conversation the reader will conceive how
-Rodin's generalising spirit leads him from the realism of his daily
-work to the synthesis of a sort of ideo-realistic metaphysical system.
-He has the sense (belonging only to genius) of the <i>continuity of
-the universe</i>, and he certainly had it at a time when, unlettered
-as he was, he would not have known how to explain it specifically
-to himself. He constantly formulates this metaphysical system, as I
-have seen it formulated by Stéphane Mallarmé, who could never see
-anything without instantly bringing together two ideas or images that
-no one would ever have thought of connecting. Spontaneous analogy
-is the mark of genius and the secret of all real poetry. This is
-why I consider Rodin as a very great poet&mdash;not in the sense that he
-dislikes, but on the contrary, by giving to the word "poet" its deep
-etymological significance according to the Greek, that of "making,
-creating, vivifying." We may understand, too, in how great a degree an
-intellectuality of this kind offers a living challenge to the ideas
-of the "École." The man who thinks thus is necessarily isolated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span> and
-has struggled all his life, never making a concession and saying
-nobly, "The artist, like the woman, has an honour to preserve." I will
-further quote from Rodin the following reflection<a name="FNanchor_6_13" id="FNanchor_6_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_13" class="fnanchor">[6]</a>: "Where you follow
-nature, you get everything. When I have a beautiful woman's body for
-a model the drawings that I make from it give me images of insects,
-birds, and fishes. That seems improbable, and I had no suspicion of
-it myself. Formerly I used to be seeking shapes for vases, either to
-use them at Sèvres, where I used to work, or elsewhere.... I never
-succeeding in finding a beauty of proportions and lines such as I had
-the feeling of, because I only founded my attempts upon <i>imagination.</i>
-Since that time I have drawn women's bodies, and one of these bodies
-gave me, in the synthesis of it, a magnificent shape for a vase, with
-true and harmonious lines. The point is not to create. Creation and
-improvisation are useless words. Genius only comes to the man who
-understands with his eye and his brain. Everything is in the things
-about us. Manufacture and ornamental art want reforming according to
-these ideas. I should have liked<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span> to see that. Everything-is contained
-in nature. There is an harmonious, continual, uninterrupted movement. A
-woman, a mountain, a horse, in conception they are all the same thing,
-they are made on the same principles. Young artists compose instead of
-following their models and understanding that therein lies infinity."
-Here Rodin directly touches a scientific truth&mdash;the relative monotony
-of Nature's productive forms. Nature does everything with very few
-forms: the variations are so infinite that there are no two leaves
-alike, but the nerves of a leaf, the lines of a vein, an artery, a
-bird's wing, a fishbone, a nerve-cell, are identical; multiplicity
-derives from identity and returns to it, so that everything is reduced
-to a fundamental geometry which perhaps is but the effect of a single
-cellular generation. In this respect the laws of art and of science
-are the same, even as among all the arts there is a synthesis of
-common laws, an identity where we seem to behold a difference. Recent
-work in science, by establishing the existence of states of radiation
-(Crookes, Röntgen, Hertz) is busy undermining our old conception of
-matter, showing us the identity of it with the immaterial, and thereby
-abolishing our preconceptions about the idea and the fact, music and
-sculpture,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span> considered as different manifestations. I remember that I
-one day kept Rodin's curiosity excited for a long time by explaining
-the details of this theory to him; he was not acquainted with it,
-and listened to me as to a writer in love with general ideas. But it
-was clear that in his mere province as a sculptor he knew far better
-and had penetrated far more deeply into this enthralling problem of
-identity. His is a luminous mind, of the same kind as the electric
-rays; it rather penetrates than surrounds what is obscure to it. On
-that day he was disturbed, and I was irritated by certain declamations
-which had been written about his "philosophy," and of which the author
-had assuredly not comprehended the logical consequences; and we came
-to the conclusion that it would be much better for Rodin's peace of
-mind to keep silent upon these points, for his "philosophy" could only
-be made comprehensible to those who could understand the method of his
-sculpture.</p>
-
-<p>It is time, however, to pause in this path and to return simply to
-the question of sculpture. Nor was it my purpose to tire the reader
-by these abstractions when I began to say a few words about Rodin's
-opinions concerning the antique. It must be understood, then, that the
-<i>Balzac</i> and even the <i>Hugo</i>,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span> as well as some figures, were the result
-of all these preceding reflections. "When I saw my <i>Balzac</i> brought
-into the yard from the storehouse of the statues in order to go to
-the Salon," says Rodin, "I had it purposely placed beside <i>The Kiss,</i>
-which had been finished rather earlier. I was not dissatisfied with the
-simplified vigour of that group, to which I had already applied these
-experiments. But I saw that it looked slack, that it did not hold its
-place beside the <i>Balzac</i> as Michael Angelo's torso does beside a fine
-antique, and then I understood that I was in the right path. I have
-had hesitations, you know, pangs that I do not speak of. And then,
-little by little, as I looked at nature, as I came to understand it
-better and to throw aside my prejudices more frankly, I took courage.
-It seemed to me that I was doing better. When I began I did skilful
-things, things that were smartly done, but they were thin and dry, but
-I felt there was something beyond, and that something is amplification.
-I only ventured on it when I was over fifty years old, but do you not
-think I have a right now to disregard the objections of the mob and the
-newspapers? I have taken time to know why I was doing as I did. The
-essential things of my modelling are there, and they would be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span> there
-in less degree if I 'finished' more. As to polishing or repolishing a
-toe or a curl, I find no interest in it; it impairs the large line,
-the soul of what I desired to do, and I have nothing more to say to
-the public on that point. There the line of demarcation comes between
-the confidence that the public ought to have in me and the concessions
-that I ought not to make to the public." To this firm and discreet
-resolution Rodin has kept in all the works wrought out by him since
-1898.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="rodin032a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_032a.jpg" width="550" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">PRIMITIVE MAN.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>I cannot better set forth his opinions about the antique than by
-quoting the following fragments from two articles that he wrote for
-the <i>Musée</i>, a review of ancient art, in January and February, 1904;
-for Rodin sometimes writes, quite unpretentiously, but with the same
-lucidity of thought that he shows in his familiar conversation. One of
-these articles refers to a Greek statuette in the Museum of Naples, the
-other to the lesson that the ancients give us.</p>
-
-<p>"In the first place, the Antique is Life itself. Nothing is more alive,
-and no style in the world has rendered life as it has. The ancients
-were the greatest, most serious, and most admirable observers of nature
-who have ever existed. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span> antique was able to render life because
-the ancients saw the essential thing in it&mdash;large blocks. They confined
-themselves to the large shadows cast by these large blocks, and as
-truth itself lies in that, their figures being so made could never be
-feeble. Moreover, the antique is simple, and that gives it astonishing
-energy. And then there is much more study in it than appears; that
-was brought home to me once. When I had finished my <i>Age of Brass</i>, I
-went to Italy and I found an Apollo whose leg was in exactly the same
-position as one in <i>The Age of Brass</i> that had taken me six months'
-work. Then I saw that though on the surface everything seems to be done
-at a stroke, in reality all the muscles are built up and one sees the
-details come to light one by one. That is because the ancients studied
-everything in its successive profiles, because in any figure and every
-part of a figure no profile is like another; when each has been studied
-separately the whole appears simple and alive.</p>
-
-<p>"The great error of the neo-Greek school is really this: it is not
-<i>type</i> that is antique, but modelling. For want of having understood
-that, the neo-Greek school has produced nothing but papier-mâché. It
-is bad to put the antique before<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span> beginners; one should end, not begin
-with it. If you wanted to teach someone to eat, you would give him
-fresh food, that he might learn to chew; it would never occur to you
-to give him food already triturated to exercise his teeth upon. Well,
-when you want to teach sculpture to anyone, set him face to face with
-nature, and when he has gained plenty of power to deal with nature,
-then say to him: 'Now, here is what the antique has done.' And that
-will give him a new source of energy. Whereas if you give the antique
-to the beginner who has never struggled with nature, he does not
-understand anything about it, and loses his individuality over it.
-You make a plagiarist of him, and instead of making his own prayer to
-nature he will repeat the prayer of the antique without understanding
-the words of it. He will die an old pupil; he will not die a man.</p>
-
-<p>"To teach the antique at the outset of a man's studies is to render
-the antique incomprehensible. In the first place, no one can teach the
-antique, it is not possible; that art of truth and simplicity cannot
-be taught. The sculptor works from nature, and afterwards he goes to
-look, in the galleries, and see how the antique rendered what he has
-been trying for from the life.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span> But if he goes straight to the antique,
-shutting his eyes to nature, as the antique has always been done from
-nature, our sculptor will only be able to carry that vision into his
-own work in a factitious way; he will be neither antique nor modern,
-but bad.</p>
-
-<p>"A man may do antique work in our day, not in the false sense of
-producing the <i>antique type,</i> but in the true sense of <i>modelling
-like the antique.</i> Such a man (painter, etcher, or sculptor) will
-take nature, and if he has the power of the antique he will produce
-antique work, which will entirely disagree with what is taught as
-such, but will agree with that in the museums. The 'École' begins
-at the end; when a man begins with nature, he may go on to the most
-improbable inventions; the antiques themselves show that. Do you know
-of anything more impossible than the centaur? But is there anything
-finer in Olympia? The ancients knew nature so well that they became her
-fellow-workers and created, not phantoms, but beings that were alive in
-spite of physical impossibilities. To my mind it would be better not
-to study the antique than to study it wrong. It is not the artist's
-alphabet, but the reward of his work. The command which it gives us is
-not to copy it, but to do like it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span></p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<a id="rodin033a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_033a.jpg" width="600" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">YOUNG WOMAN BETWEEN GOOD AND EVIL COUNCIL.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>"To say that the antiques, which portray the plain marvel of life,
-are beautiful is a superficial sort of praise. Beauty is not the
-starting-point, but the point of arrival; a thing can only be beautiful
-if it is true. Truth itself is only a complete harmony, and harmony
-is finally only a bundle of utilities. The miracle of life could not
-be perpetuated but for the constant renewal of universal balance. The
-ancients felt that vast rhythm, and their art, being modelled upon it,
-appears to us as a natural and sublime expression of beauty.... One
-of the ancients made a statue. How did he set about it? It is useless
-to bring in rules that only grew up in the brains of commentators
-dissecting a series of works, centuries afterwards. The antique remains
-uncomprehended because we have not a simple enough spirit. It is not
-by studying the antique that we shall learn its secret; in order to
-understand, not its nomenclature, but its spirit, we must begin by
-studying nature. Rembrandt cannot be understood by copying him at the
-Louvre, he can only be understood when we travel through nature to him.
-Well, nature is always there, waiting patiently for antiques to be
-made afresh; the model is there waiting for someone to come at last,
-no matter whence. For it is an error<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span> to think the antique comes from
-the south: it comes from everywhere. The antique can be produced from a
-Dutch woman or an American woman; the type is nothing, the modelling is
-everything.</p>
-
-<p>"What makes the strength of the antique is the plan, the connection of
-all the profiles. The neo-Greeks say: 'The antiques are <i>line,</i> and
-their works, in which all the lines, except two, dance about, show
-their error. The antiques, we will say, are <i>lines</i> or rather <i>plan.</i>
-Look at an antique; you can guess the full face from the profile.
-The eye cannot grasp the shape on the opposite side to that which it
-beholds, but it deduces it from this side: walk round, and the study
-of the profiles will afford you an <i>irrefragable</i> proof by <i>rule of
-three.</i> The sculptor swells the half-tones by slight exaggerations, so
-as to heighten the light by a tone. The drapery lives; like the body
-that it hides, it receives life from that body without needing the
-subterfuge of wetted drapery.'<a name="FNanchor_7_14" id="FNanchor_7_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_14" class="fnanchor">[7]</a></p>
-
-<p>"There is in the antiques an astonishing mystery of life which causes
-all idea of dimension to disappear. A figure an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span> inch or two high
-might just as well be life-size; when a thing is well organised, the
-greatness is in the modelling and not in the size. If one were to
-photograph a Tanagra figure and the Eiffel Tower, and were to show the
-two photographs to some person unacquainted with either object, I am
-sure he would declare the Tanagra figure to be larger than the tower. A
-pear or an apple, from the point of view of modelling, is as large as
-the celestial sphere. Thus the splendour of truth is such that finding
-no word to render it, we have called it 'Ideal.'"</p>
-
-<p>These quotations will suffice, I hope, to show Rodin's inmost thought.
-These judgments are implicit condemnations of the "École"; they are
-also definitions of his classical art, which is by no means "literary,"
-and which is governed, even in its lyrical and tragic developments,
-by good sense, that is to say, by an inborn taste for balance in the
-midst of boldness. If I am anxious to insist so strongly upon Rodin's
-profound <i>normality</i>, this is, I repeat, in order to forewarn the
-public against the declamations of some of his untoward admirers, who
-reckon one of his merits to be an "originality" which they confound
-with that exaggeration, that emphasis and eccentricity that never mark
-the great artist. Whatever tragic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span> or passionate subject a great artist
-may treat, to whatever height of strangeness his imagination may rise,
-beauty of form will, if he is, like Rodin, a master of <i>technique</i>,
-confer upon <i>t</i> him an exalted and permanent serenity. Rembrandt and
-Delacroix come from the depth of their vastly differing worlds to meet
-Raphael and Watteau in that conciliatory region where we admire the
-great masters&mdash;and Rodin is already placed in that region.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_8" id="Footnote_1_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_8"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Rodin has never forgotten Falguière's loyalty at the time
-of <i>The Age of Brass</i> affair.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_9" id="Footnote_2_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_9"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> A recent example in Paris is the double statue of the
-chemists who invented quinine. When will people understand that a
-discovery of this kind, however honourable, is nevertheless quite
-incapable of being associated with any plastic idea? The same thing is
-true of the statues of Chappe and Lavoisier, flanked by instruments of
-telegraphy and chemistry. These are ridiculous signboards, melancholy
-compliments translated by a tradesman's art that renders our streets
-hideous.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3_10" id="Footnote_3_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_10"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> <i>Revue des Revues</i> (of Paris), June 15th, 1898.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4_11" id="Footnote_4_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_11"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> I find myself underlining-: it is not Rodin whose voice
-makes this emphasis. But I am attempting to mark out in this way the
-formulas which spring up in his conversation, and which, collected
-together, will give the public an idea of his instinctive synthesis,
-deduced from life.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_5_12" id="Footnote_5_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_12"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> The word <i>exalté</i> has in this use no precise equivalent
-in English. "Enthusiast," as the eighteenth century knew the
-word&mdash;that is, with the infusion of a touch of lunacy&mdash;conies perhaps
-nearest.&mdash;TRANS.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_6_13" id="Footnote_6_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_13"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> An observation noted by Mlle. Judith Cladel in her curious
-volume, <i>Rodin, drawn from life.</i> (Éditions de La Plume, 1903.)</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_7_14" id="Footnote_7_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_14"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> Loïe Fuller has obtained, by means of stuffs not wetted,
-the effects that the 'École' loves, because her plastic dance is
-logically derived from nature.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h5><a name="IV" id="IV">IV</a></h5>
-
-
-<p class="block">WORKS SINCE THE "BALZAC"&mdash;SMALL WORKS IN MARBLE&mdash;PLAN OF THE MONUMENT
-TO LABOUR&mdash;DRAWINGS AND ETCHINGS</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>"I shun father and mother and wife and brother, when my genius calls
-me. I would write on the lintels of the door-post, <i>Whim.</i> I hope it
-is somewhat better than whim at last, but we cannot spend the day in
-explanation.... Whoso would be a man must be a nonconformist ... must
-not be hindered by the name of goodness, but must inquire if it be
-goodness. Nothing is at last sacred but the integrity of our own mind.
-Absolve you to yourself, and you shall have the suffrage of the world."</p>
-
-<p>I quoted these high-minded words of Emerson's to Rodin at the time of
-the <i>Balzac</i> incident. "They are," I said to him, "the very epigraph
-of your whole life." Nor have they ceased to epitomise the man and
-the artist. From the time of the <i>Balzac</i> Rodin's work has proceeded
-very regularly and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span> on the same principles. The <i>Victor Hugo</i> is being
-finished in marble, in its two versions, in the studio of the Rue de
-l'Université. The group in which Hugo, his extended arm commanding
-silence of the waves, sits surrounded by Muses is almost ready; the
-other, in which Hugo, dreamily listening to the counsels of Iris,
-stands on the edge of a rock washed by waves, amid which Nereids are
-entwined, is not quite so far advanced. <i>The Gate of Hell</i> is ready
-to receive its finally chosen and ordered figures. In the Salon of
-1902 Rodin exhibited the three <i>Shades</i> from its summit, inspired by
-the celebrated <i>Lasciate ogni speransa.</i> In 1900 Rodin only showed
-two or three old productions at the Universal Exhibition, because his
-work was collected in a special pavilion at the Rond-point de l'Alma,
-the concession of which pavilion was made uncomfortable for him by
-his colleagues, so much so that the artist was obliged to remove on
-the very day of closing, with less delay and consideration allowed to
-him than to the most unimportant industrial exhibitor. This special
-exhibition was, nevertheless, a great international success for Rodin,
-and the amazing development of his fame may be said to date from it.
-Before 1900 Rodin stood in the position<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span> of an exceptional artist,
-celebrated but envied, isolated and challenged, whose relations with
-the Government were strained, whom a minority upheld, but on whom the
-official world looked coldly. Since that time his eminence is so firmly
-established that he now holds the rank that Puvis de Chavannes held
-in the estimation of all artists. His triumphant journey to Prague
-(1901-2), London's enthusiastic reception, and Rodin's recent election
-to be President of the Society over which Whistler presided, have
-finally given him the acknowledgment so long looked for. In 1903 his
-marble bust of Hugo aroused enthusiasm, and at the Salon of 1904 the
-colossal bronze <i>Thinker</i> had a most flattering reception, and disarmed
-the last of his former detractors.</p>
-
-<p>A woman's bust accompanied <i>The Thinker</i> to the Salon. Rodin, who does
-portraits now and again, had previously made an admirable one of Mme.
-Fenaille, wife of the art-patron who had been of such great service
-to him; and he is attempting a curious variation of it. He has just
-finished a bust of a helmeted Minerva, as impressive as a Donatello,
-and this, too, is a portrait.</p>
-
-<p>Various works have been produced by Rodin since the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span> <i>Balzac,</i> in
-addition to the <i>Monument of President Sarmiento,</i> which shows an
-admirable bas-relief of a radiant Apollo. These works are nearly all
-in marble, and small. It is almost impossible to describe and classify
-them; a much larger book would be required, and my main purpose here
-has been to give a general idea of Rodin's art and an explanation
-of principles. I have spoken about some of his poems of the flesh,
-especially that <i>Eternal Idol</i>, which will be the glory of thought
-in modern sculpture. Rodin's recent works in marble have the same
-inspiration. Some demand special notice: <i>The Hand of God,</i> a gigantic
-hand, between the fingers of which, and amid a handful of clay, two
-beings are tenderly embracing; <i>Icarus,</i> falling from the sky to be
-crushed on the earth amid his whirling wings; several groups of lovers,
-entwined, and breathing immeasurable tenderness, the most celebrated
-of which is <i>Spring</i> or <i>Love and Psyche.</i> Another <i>Psyche,</i> alone,
-is discovering Love asleep, with extraordinary restrained emotion;
-and there are several attempts at <i>Poets and Muses,</i> embracing or
-consoling one another, as well as a splendid sketch of the <i>Magdalen
-wiping Christ's Body with her Hair.</i> Rodin has thus sometimes touched
-religious<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span> subjects, but with an undogmatic symbolism, philosophic
-and wide. We may also enumerate another version in marble of the
-<i>Nereids</i> of the Hugo monument, a winged <i>Inspiration</i> coming to
-breathe upon the sleeping poet, and holding back the tips of her
-wings with one hand lest she should make a sound in closing them; a
-faun drawing towards him a nymph, who struggles in silent, fierce
-resistance; two high-reliefs of <i>Summer</i> and <i>Autumn</i> in stone; tall
-women with children, intended for the town of Evian, where Baron
-Vitta is accumulating treasures of modern art; <i>Pygmalion</i> beholding
-his statue come to life, who, as soon as she feels herself live,
-turns from him with a surprising movement of coquetry and aversion.
-Such works as these cannot be described in words. In them Rodin has
-excelled to an unparalleled degree in rendering the profoundest
-psychological complexities, refined intentions, and the hesitations
-of feeling. I will further note a sketch of <i>Sappho</i>, seated at
-rest, with her arms leaning upon two little naked women, which is a
-work inspired equally by the Greeks and by the eighteenth century;
-it bears witness to the artist's wish of avoiding the massive, and
-making as many holes as possible within the general block, so as to
-give lightness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span> and to allow a circulation of light, as the Greeks
-did in works that were meant to stand against a background of sea or
-of sky. Many studies of men and women crouching, or squatting, in
-curious attitudes, recall the art of the Japanese bronzes, which Rodin
-immensely admires. We must further note some groups of <i>Women Damned,</i>
-in which Rodin's art attains the highest point of voluptuous tension,
-audacious suggestiveness, and tragic eagerness of the flesh aspiring
-to impossible delight. This whole world of figures is ruled by the
-same lyrical and poetic imagination, the same symbolism incarnated
-in impeccable forms. Everywhere we find the same nervous art,
-agitating, sad, and ardent in its voluptuous character, expressing the
-insatiability of human souls; the aspiration of a troubled time towards
-an ideality which would deliver it from the solicitations of pessimism;
-the hope of escape by the way of desire; and love sought for in the
-over-excitement of neurosis. Rodin, gloomy psychologist of passion,
-understands the disease of the age, and at the same time pities it; a
-true thinker, he extracts its mournful beauty without ceasing to retain
-faith, admiration, and affection for the human creature. Bending over
-life and over his work, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span> is himself his own <i>Thinker</i>, attentive and
-reverent before an unknown and terrible divinity. Never did any other
-sculptor attempt to vivify his art with such intellectual superiority
-and by such meditations, and Rodin is at once the most realistic and
-most metaphysical of poets in stone and bronze.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<a id="rodin034a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_034a.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">ISIS</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>Two or three works of more important dimensions stand out from his
-recent productions; besides a nude female torso (in bronze) of
-startling truthfulness, and two plaster studies that astonished at
-the Salons, and besides <i>The Christian Martyr</i>, so masterly in its
-modelling, Rodin has continued to work at his <i>Ugolino,</i> taken out of
-<i>The Gate of Hell</i>, and has put the finishing touch to two plans. One
-of these is the <i>Monument to Labour</i>, a grand conception, which one may
-dream of seeing carried out and rising up in some square of busy Paris,
-but which want of money will prevent from ever being realised. It is a
-column upon a vast rectangular base, with a crypt in it. Two colossal
-figures of <i>Night</i> and <i>Day</i> would stand at the entrance. In the crypt
-would be shown, in bas-relief, different subterranean works&mdash;mining,
-etc. Around the column would run a covered spiral staircase, and upon
-the column itself would be figured in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span> bas-reliefs all the various
-manifestations of labour, so that as one ascended the stairs all the
-divers phases of human genius could be successively studied. On the
-top would hover the <i>Benedictions</i>, two&mdash;winged spirits, descended
-from heaven, which are already executed in marble on a small scale,
-and are among Rodin's finest conceptions. This colossal project was
-conceived as long ago as 1897. The rough model is in the studio at
-Meudon-Val-Fleury.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="rodin035a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_035a.jpg" width="550" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">NUDE STUDY</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>The monument to Puvis de Chavannes was entrusted to his friend Rodin,
-and is already finished. Rodin conceived it in an original and charming
-way. Instead of making the customary statue, he considered the purely
-Greek quality of Puvis' genius and chose to pay homage to him in a form
-reproduced from the antique. The bust of the great painter is placed
-on a plain table, as the ancients placed those of their dead upon
-little domestic altars. A fine tree loaded with fruit bends over and
-shades the head. Leaning on the table behind the bust is a beautiful
-naked youth, who sits dreaming in a well-chosen supple attitude. The
-whole design is intimate, gentle, and pure. Placed on the ground in a
-garden this votive monument would show how much delicacy and caressing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>
-lightness sometimes lies in Rodin's sombre and pathetic thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>Another important group is that of <i>Orpheus and Eurydice.</i> Orpheus has
-fallen on one knee and is lifting his great lyre towards the gods whom
-he has just implored. Above him, almost on his back, suspended in a
-way that would appear to contradict the laws of equilibrium and the
-material conditions of sculpture, soars Eurydice, compassionate and
-almost vaporous, truly an immaterial shade, with a smile of despair.
-I regret that the unfinished condition of this model does not allow
-me to publish a photograph of it, for nothing would give a clearer
-impression of Rodin's originality in the matter of contour and in the
-mutual relation of figures. The extreme freedom of his attitudes and
-his caprices of balance are, indeed, the newest features that he has
-brought into his art and are not to be found in anyone else in any
-country or time. In these is his true signature, and by them his work
-might be recognised among a hundred statues of all periods. As to the
-expressive beauty of the faces and bodies, that is supreme. No one has
-better comprehended than Rodin all that can be rendered by the naked
-human body and all the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span> intellectual significations that it can hide.
-The nude is to Rodin a whole language.</p>
-
-<p>In his latest spiritualised works there is something Correggio-like
-in the vibration of light upon the softened forms and amplified
-surfaces. They suggest the <i>Antiope,</i> at once soft and muscular, and
-Rodin often speaks of "morbidezza" as a quality which he no longer
-distrusts, whereas he formerly banished it from his ascetic, sinewy,
-and dry figures. He gives his women the pulpy flesh of fruits. The
-lines of landscape seem to him to correspond to the planes of the body;
-he lately said to me that since he has lived at Meudon, opposite the
-flowing Seine, the wooded hills and the fields, he has found useful
-resemblances between the modelling of the body and that of a horizon. I
-have even once suggested to him the title of "The Hill" for the body of
-a young man reclining, the outline of which did in truth resemble the
-undulations of a hill, and he retained the name and the analogy, for he
-delights in everything that binds the human being to the earth, and,
-like a true metaphysician, conceives of nothing isolated or distinct in
-nature.</p>
-
-<p>I come now to Rodin's drawings, drawings which were not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span> made to be
-shown, but which, having nevertheless become known, have surprised
-and puzzled people. Rodin's drawings, like some other drawings by
-sculptors, are not themselves works of art; they are thoughts noted
-down, and are not comprehensible unless they are seen with the statues
-of which they indicate the first idea, or some variation.</p>
-
-<p>Rodin has published some of his sketches; and has produced some
-dry-points (in particular the <i>Ronde</i>,<a name="FNanchor_1_15" id="FNanchor_1_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_15" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> <i>Antonin Proust</i>, the three
-portraits of Henry Becque, full face and two profiles upon the same
-sheet, and two heads of Hugo), some drawings for books by M. Mirbeau
-and M. Bergerat, and a complete set of illustrations of the <i>Fleurs
-du Mal,</i> in the form of marginal drawings for a unique copy belonging
-to M. Gallimard. Many drawings in black or colour have been published
-(by the clever lithographer Clot), and M. Fenaille has superintended
-an admirable <i>edition de luxe</i> of 142 drawings by Rodin.<a name="FNanchor_2_16" id="FNanchor_2_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_16" class="fnanchor">[2]</a>
-Notwithstanding this partial publicity, these works must be considered
-as <i>standing apart;</i> and to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span> consider them by themselves would actually
-be to injure Rodin with the public at large, since they form an
-integral part of his statues. For this reason I have not chosen to
-reproduce any of them here, studies so purely professional not seeming
-to fall within the scope of a work intended to give a general idea of
-an artist's work.</p>
-
-<p>Having said so much, I wish to dwell upon the great beauty of these
-drawings&mdash;a special and terrible beauty. Many deal with Dante. Rodin
-did some painting under Lecoq de Boisbaudron, landscapes, a portrait
-of his father, and sketches after Rubens; but there has never been
-any danger of painting intruding upon his vocation, and his sketches
-rapidly became nothing but notes for sculpture. The objective reality
-of his Dantesque figures is vague, if their subjective reality is
-intense. Rodin, anxious to note down his impressions, and not to
-<i>illustrate</i>, made his sketches into a sort of passionate writing, only
-devoting himself to the scheme and to the contrasts of black and white,
-and neglecting every detail. In these violent washes, these pencillings
-and pen-scribbles, the spectator who is not forewarned sees nothing,
-but the lover of art, who knows beforehand what to seek,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span> follows the
-creative thought. Nothing can be less like what is generally known as
-"a drawing." After the regular drawings, the "painter's drawings" of
-his first period, which have but a restricted interest, and which are
-no longer known, those of his second manner are confusions of light and
-shadow, and show fantastically. I will quote at this point a passage
-from an essay by M. Clément Jasmin, a discerning critic, whose noisy
-rivals do not give him his due place, and who has described these works
-excellently.</p>
-
-<p>"These sketches are altogether the work of a sculptor, even in their
-colour, which seems to have sunk into plaster or clay, and especially
-in the firmness of their modelling, which is imparted by shaded touches
-of body-colour, on grey paper, or rendered by spaces left white. These
-blanks, these white spaces, are the extreme point of the modelling,
-the 'high light' of some projection, which lower down is wrapped in
-half-tints that carry the eye to the shadows of the inflections or
-the hollows. There is a constant relation between the contour and
-the interior modelling. A thrill is communicated by the fantastic
-lighting of some sketches. Rodin adds further strength to this dramatic
-distribution of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span> lights and shadows by one or two tones that accentuate
-the impression or fix a plan. Often his ink will become blue or yellow,
-(water-colours, sepia, or coloured inks being employed), in order to
-settle a value or intensify a feeling. Such is the case in the Fenaille
-publication, with the gloomy red in the face of the Ugolino, of the
-Dantesque Mahomet, whose entrails are hanging out, and of some other
-figures dashed in, in black, on a violet background. One plainly feels
-the material in which the work, of which the sketch is the first idea,
-will be executed. It is always a sculptor who is at work, even when he
-exchanges the chisel for the pen or the brush."</p>
-
-<p>Painters would scorn these drawings. They commonly believe that
-sculptors cannot express upon a plane surface the mass and movement of
-a body. In reality a painter's sketch and a sculptor's sketch differ
-in intention and execution. Rodin's are translations of movements,
-in no way decorative and not attempting to express either modelling
-or detail, but, if we may say so, the abstract geometry, the thought
-that commands the movement. The use of coloured inks, which are solely
-meant to modify certain values that black or white would not express to
-Rodin's mind, has given rise to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span> mistakes. These colours are not there
-to express real tints, as is the case in ordinary drawings thus touched
-up; inaccurate things have been said about these colourings, and about
-the fantastic and almost Japanese appearance of some of the plates.
-Rodin is certainly not thinking of prints in colour. He makes these
-notes instinctively, and displays not so much a deliberate thought as a
-natural faculty of transcription.</p>
-
-<p>In his early drawings Rodin <i>refers to</i>&mdash;for I must insist upon the
-point that the drawings do not <i>represent</i> things&mdash;many of Dante's
-persons and many fanciful animals, and later, to his statues. Now he
-does not draw at all from literary impressions, but solely from the
-living model. He uses ordinary cheap paper, a pencil or a pen; he
-makes his model take some transitory, absolutely free position, often
-in the rest between two sittings, and rapidly draws contour without
-taking his eyes from the model and without looking at his sketch.
-Sometimes the stroke will fall upon emptiness, the sheet of paper will
-be too small, a head or a limb will fail to find its place. Naturally
-this instantaneous sketch will be deformed in the most unexpected
-way; the proportions are false, but the scheme of the contour and the
-modelling of each<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span> piece are true. Often the hurrying pencil will miss
-the curve of a breast or a leg. Then the artist will return to that
-point with hasty, intermingled, impatient strokes that play around the
-true line. His only concern is to fix the first view, the absolutely
-living impression. Afterwards, in tracing his sketch, he rectifies,
-but his chief aim is to amplify the impression of the life, taken
-spontaneously, according to his principle of enlarging the form, in
-order to place it better in the atmosphere (about in the proportion of
-5/4 instead of 4/4). Then he connects the contours and further enlarges
-the modelling, filling the outline with a wash of burnt-sienna, which
-gives the general value, or sometimes with blue or red water-colour.
-Rodin likes this practice in catching movements, and he has in his
-studio hundreds of drawings of this kind that differ from his early
-ones. Those aimed at the imaginative transcription of tragic and
-literary elements under strange illuminations, and were almost like the
-drawings of Odilon Redon; the later ones are merely graphic notes of
-movements, and are incapable of having any direct aim or meaning.</p>
-
-<p>I must add a few words upon a delicate point of which I should not
-have spoken if others had not spoken mistakenly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span> upon the subject.
-Rodin's drawings, especially those of the present time, have shocked
-some people who have seen them by their licentious character. Why
-should we assume embarrassment in explaining this? In all Rodin's work
-there is a profound and violent sense of the voluptuous, and the stern
-painter of the vices and damnations of hell does not need to think of
-prudery. The elevation and dramatic character of his conceptions clothe
-the most daring attitudes with the severe chastity of the beautiful.
-In his sketches, made for himself alone, and in the privacy of his
-studio, Rodin no more fears erotic positions than did Hokusai. Beneath
-the original animality he perceives nature; and feminine sexuality,
-its movements, and impulses interest him, because therein woman is
-psychologically revealed. Everything, in physical desire, that exalts,
-maddens, contorts, and fevers the human body is, for the sculptor, the
-object of an intensely interested study that he does not communicate
-to the general public; nor is he the only one among the great artists
-of form whom the erotic has interested from this point of view. Only
-mediocre minds and minds capable of low intentions see anything low in
-the movements of life. Rodin's studies from the model, naked<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span> and free,
-without spectators, in the serious presence of work, never sully his
-grand and melancholy inspiration; and his daring art is assuredly that
-which most leads away the beholder from erotic ideas, because it notes
-in every human being the melancholy of the insatiable, and makes the
-pleasure of the senses a suffering of the flesh and the spirit. By this
-point he touches the profound morality of art, and his consciousness is
-free from any equivocation. The recent drawings in which he catches the
-animal attitudes of the model are thus no more questionable, from the
-delicate point of view of which I am speaking, than anatomical plates,
-or the sad immodesties of a post-mortem examination. He adds to them
-the power of expressing passion with which he is endowed, but since he
-only shows these drawings to friends and artists in whom nudity does
-not arouse silly thoughts, this concerns no one else. A comparison
-cannot even be ventured between these drawings and the masterly
-etchings of Rops, which are deliberate illustrations of licentious
-subjects, relieved only by beauty of execution, and which should only
-be shown with express reservations. Rodin admires certain bronzes in
-the secret museum at Naples, and certain Japanese prints, because<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span> in
-these, too, art has done its work by expressing a secret and essential
-spring of the nervous and psychological life of humanity; a fierce
-and serious subject which only fools consider laughable or indecent,
-because their minds approach it with indecorum and ridicule. But I
-do not know that Rodin ever even yielded to the fancy of modelling
-one of these subjects for himself, as Rubens and many others did not
-forbid themselves to do. It is time, therefore, to have done with this
-question in regard to the great French sculptor. I do not know for whom
-he intends these recent drawings, a whole framed collection of which
-occupies one of the storerooms of his country house. Perhaps he will
-have them destroyed; in any case, they are but studies of movements and
-masses, and in no way direct representations of life.</p>
-
-<p>Rodin's drawings are "rough drafts" to be compared with those of
-a writer. Some are very impressive, and all constitute precious
-evidence of his psychological preoccupations and of his desire for
-simplification. But they remain on the margin of his work, and neither
-the public nor the critics have those rights over them that belong to
-biographers and friends. That is a point to be plainly specified, and
-I desire to repeat that that is the reason this book contains none of
-them.</p>
-
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_15" id="Footnote_1_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_15"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> This word may mean either a certain sort of dance, or the
-"round" of a patrol.&mdash;TRANS.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_16" id="Footnote_2_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_16"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> Album of 142 sketches, reproduced in heliogravure by M.
-Manzi and published by Goupil, 1897. These sketches in wash or colour
-have been selected according to the advice of M. Fenaille, their owner,
-who lent them, from the most imaginative of Rodin's drawings in his
-second manner.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h5><a name="V" id="V">V.</a></h5>
-
-
-<p class="block">RODIN'S PRIVATE LIFE&mdash;HIS PERSON, STUDIO, AND HOME&mdash;HIS INFLUENCE;
-SCULPTORS INSPIRED BY HIS IDEAS&mdash;RODIN'S PLACE IN THE FRENCH
-SCHOOL&mdash;HIS PRESENT POSITION IN RESPECT TO ACADEMIC SCULPTURE</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>Auguste Rodin is in person a man of middle height, with an enormous
-head upon a massive torso. At first sight one sees nothing of him but
-this leonine bust, the head with its strong nose, flowing grey beard,
-and small, keen, light-coloured eyes, slightly veiled by short sight
-and by a gentle irony. The impression of power is accentuated by the
-rolling gait, the rocky aspect of the troubled brow under the rough
-brush of hair, the bony thickness of the aquiline nose and the ample
-curls of beard. But the first impression is partly contradicted by
-the reticent line of the mouth, the quick look, penetrating, simple,
-and arch, (one of the most composite glances I have ever seen), and
-especially by the voice, which is hollow, not easily modulated, with
-deep inflections and sudden returns to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span> a dental pronunciation, and
-of which the meaning and intention are further modified by certain
-very expressive tossings of the head. He appears simple, precise,
-reserved, courteous, and cordial, without liveliness. Little by little
-his shyness gives place to a calm and remarkable tone of authority.
-He is neither emphatic nor awkward, and would seem rather dispirited
-than inspired. An immense energy breathes in his sober and measured
-gestures. The slowness and apparent embarrassment of his speech and
-the pauses in his conversation give especial significance to what he
-says; moreover, Rodin has acquired of late years a genuine case as a
-talker and even as a writer, which previously he did not possess. I was
-intimately acquainted with Stéphane Mallarmé, who, measured by Rodin,
-was incomparably eloquent, and I often associate these two men in my
-thoughts. The voices were alike, and Rodin, too, with his improvised
-phrases, has the same veiled circumspect way of speech, hitting
-suddenly upon words that illuminate the idea.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<a id="rodin036a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_036a.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">AUGUSTE RODIN</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>Rodin, in speaking of any work of his, has a way of explaining it that
-is very elliptical, but very clear, and which has caused some brilliant
-chatterers to say, because he did not <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>offer a prolix commentary, that
-he did not know what he had done. In reality he utters the essential,
-and his gesture, which seems to model his thought in space, completes
-his words. He looks lovingly on his creations, and sometimes seems to
-meditate in astonishment at the idea of having created them; he speaks
-of them as though they existed apart from himself.</p>
-
-<p>Gradually, beneath Rodin's essential simplicity, one discovers features
-that were at first hidden; he is ironical, sensuous, nervous, proud.
-He contains as possibilities all the passions that he expresses with
-so vibrating a magnificence, and one begins to perceive the secret
-links between this calm, almost cheerful man and the art that he
-reveals. At certain moments his clear and rather vague eyes become
-full of phosphorescent points, the face grows sardonic and almost
-faunlike; at others it saddens and discloses a sickness for infinity.
-This man is the comrade of his dumb white creatures; he loves them,
-follows their abstract life, has moral obligations towards them.
-Fundamentally the one thing with which Rodin is really concerned is
-the life of permanent forms. Of late celebrity, age, and experience
-have disposed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span> him to become an adviser, a master, and he has begun
-to talk æsthetics. But his ideas and opinions are restricted. He
-perceives human beings only very summarily, his cordiality is a way
-of fulfilling his social duties hastily. He has, if I may venture the
-expression, very fine moral antennae, and they serve to recognise the
-persons whom he will like. Very capable of friendship, Rodin reduces
-friendship to tacit agreements upon the essential subjects of thought,
-and it is only if one meets him upon one of these points that one
-takes a place in his remembrance or his liking. He does not put his
-faith in individuals, but in general ideas. He loves nothing but his
-work, and endures everything else with civil boredom. He has a horror
-of debates and disturbances. I have never heard him speak ill of bad
-artists; he neglects, but does not criticise. He has a silent humour
-which leads him to make busts of official and mediocre sculptors, with
-an amusing good grace. Uncompromising in everything that touches his
-art, Rodin has throughout his whole career endured severe struggles
-and grave injustices, and, too proud to dispute, has never shown his
-secret revolts. At the time when the <i>Balzac</i> was refused all Rodin's
-friends said to him: "Resist,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span> force your work upon them; you ought,
-for the work's sake, and a court would surely decide for you, for your
-agreement is definitely in your favour." He listened and thanked them,
-always good-tempered, and then withdrew his statue without saying
-anything.</p>
-
-<p>It is not weakness, for Rodin has had an excessively hard life and
-is strong and patient; it is dignity of the inner life and profound
-indifference for the life about him. Rodin is a high dignitary of
-the Legion of Honour, a president of the judges of sculpture of an
-important society of artists (the Société Nationale), he is honoured
-all over Europe, has been received in England as a genius, and has
-succeeded Whistler as the head of a chosen band of artists; but he
-remains the man that he was when he was unknown and poor in his
-solitude at Brussels.</p>
-
-<p>He likes few things, but likes those thoroughly. He reads little, but
-what he reads strikes home to him as to no one else; Baudelaire and
-Rousseau, in whom he delights, are instances. He is passionately fond
-of music, especially of Gluck, but seldom speaks of it. He simplifies
-everything, sees only the main lines in morality as in art, lives by
-two or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span> three principles, and has an aversion for everything that is
-not essential.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 650px;">
-<a id="rodin037a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_037a.jpg" width="650" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">A CORNER OF RODIN'S STUDIO AT MEUDON</p></div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>When one knows Rodin well one ceases to be able to separate him from
-his work. He can no longer think otherwise than symbolically by slow
-deposits of accumulated sensation which work on in the deep strata of
-his consciousness and suddenly blossom and take a name. His statues are
-states of the soul. He is himself a representative being, surprised at
-his own immanence, and his intelligence is outdone by his instinct.
-That is how it comes about that he does not always know how to name
-the beings that he has discovered, as we discover, by means of pain,
-corners of our consciousness that we had not suspected. In the same way
-that Rodin seems to break away the fragments of a block from around
-an already existing statue hidden in it, he is himself a sort of rock
-concealing shapes within it and embracing in its secret recesses
-immense crystallised arborescences. With a simple enough personal
-psychology he expresses infinite shades and inflexions of emotion. His
-thought is like the monad of Leibnitz; it seems, when one sees the man,
-to have no window to the outer world.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Rodin's opinions upon social life are vague. He contents himself with
-repeating that work lovingly done is the secret of all order and all
-happiness. To love life and natural forms, and to attempt nothing
-disobedient to Nature or her aims, that is his whole morality.</p>
-
-<p>He sees very few people and visits nobody. He would baffle visitors
-accustomed to elegant, literary, well-informed, brilliant artists. His
-studio in the Rue de l'Université, at the end of an old yard encumbered
-by blocks of marble and shaded by aged chestnut trees, is like the
-work-place of a poor beginner. Neither a carpet nor an ornament is
-to be seen; the stone floor, the bare walls, a few rush chairs, some
-modelling stands, some cloths, a shabby deal table loaded with papers,
-sketches piled up on shelves, blouses hanging on nails, a cast-iron
-stove&mdash;these and nothing more are found by the many foreign admirers
-who come to see Rodin, and whom he receives with invariable amiability
-amid his assistants at work upon the Hugo monument or upon some smaller
-piece of marble.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<a id="rodin038a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_038a.jpg" width="600" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">A CORNER OF RODIN'S STUDIO AT MEUDON</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>Setting aside his journeys to London and Prague and his travels in
-Germany and Italy, Rodin leads an extremely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span> retired life in Paris, and
-is rarely to be met. He invariably lunches at his own house at Meudon,
-then goes to the Rue de L'Université to work, and goes home again to
-dinner. Formerly, before he had his house at Meudon, he used to lunch
-at a <i>café</i> in the Place de L'Alma, where he was to be seen for twenty
-years, and to which people used to go to see him, rather as people
-go to see Ibsen in Christiania. The house, of a sixteenth-century
-style, that Rodin has inhabited at Meudon since 1900, is situated amid
-vineyards, and stands alone at the end of a sort of cliff, overlooking
-all Paris, the Seine, and the Bois de Boulogne, and facing the wooded
-heights of Saint Cloud and Bellevue. The site is open and fine; Rodin
-enjoys immense expanses of sky, sunsets, storms, and moonlight nights
-that delight him. The house is spacious, light, furnished with extreme
-simplicity, and adorned by a few pictures, the works of friends (in
-particular his portraits by Sargent and Legros). Rodin has added to
-it the pavilion in iron and glass, in which he exhibited all his
-work, at the Rond-point de l'Alma, in the exhibition of 1900. This
-pavilion, rebuilt and full of brilliant sunlight, contains all the
-artist's statuary. There are also several small studios, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span> which
-Rodin has his marble rough-hewn, keeps the casts of his statues or
-accumulates the collections of bronzes, marbles, antique or Gothic,
-and fragments which he is never tired of finding out and buying. In
-this place, which, after a life of difficulties and worries, Rodin has
-been able to purchase, he leads a life that fully suits his tastes,
-among beautiful trees and flowers, with a majestic landscape before
-him. It is touching to see the man, here, amid the enormous mass of
-his work, a whole world of statues, with which he lives and which sums
-up all his labours and all his existence. A photograph which I am able
-to add to the illustrations of this volume will give a partial idea
-of that surprising and imposing cohort of figures in clay, marble,
-and bronze&mdash;that impassioned or tragic throng. Rodin receives very
-few visitors at Meudon&mdash;hardly any but old friends, and he spends his
-mornings in his garden or in his light and cheerful studio drawing or
-superintending his workmen. It is chiefly at Meudon that he prepares
-his rough drafts, the main lines of his compositions; and in order to
-see an effect he will often hastily put together with clay some of
-the plaster limbs that he keeps in a number of glass cases&mdash;quite an
-anatomical museum in fact, filling a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span> whole storey, and containing
-hundreds of pieces and of attitudes piled together.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="rodin039a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_039a.jpg" width="550" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">STUDY (IN BRONZE) FOR THE "BALZAC"</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>Rodin appears to stand alone in his own time; first, by his genius;
-and secondly, by the special character of his artistic conception.
-This solitude, however, is only apparent. Rodin's ideas, as opposed
-to the teaching of the "École," form a body of logical principles
-which are slowly attracting the adhesion of young artists. The long
-struggle of impressionism against academism has now entered upon its
-last phase: the return to the French tradition, to national affiliation
-in opposition to the Roman neo-classicism. That idea, which is the
-programme of all independent and interesting critical intelligence in
-our country, finds in Rodin its perfect demonstration, and the only
-one afforded by contemporary sculpture. Until now Rodin has preached
-only by example, and we know how slow the critics and the public are in
-extracting from a work the ideas that it contains. But the extraction
-is now begun, and Rodin himself speaks with undisputed authority. Since
-the exhibition of 1900 his moral position stands ten times higher.
-Youth greets him as a chieftain and his detractors are silent. While
-the synthetic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span> and symbolic mind of Rodin arouses the enthusiasm and
-inspires the thoughts of writers, the theory of the amplification of
-the modelling is making its way in the studios of sculptors. "Rodin has
-opened a large window in the pale house of contemporary sculpture,"
-declares Pierre Roche, the sculptor; "out of the timid and much
-impaired craft that was before his day he has shown that a bold art
-full of hope can be made." This opinion of one of the most delicate
-artists of our generation is precisely that of many independent
-sculptors. Among these we must quote Emile Bourdelle, Rodin's pupil
-and friend, an impassioned, vibrating, and generous artist, whose
-works are among those first looked for in each Salon. Others are the
-two brothers Gaston and Lucien Schnegg, the latter of whom exhibited
-in the Salon of 1904 so beautiful a head of Aphrodite, almost worthy
-in the mysterious and vaporous beauty of its planes, of the ancients,
-and of Rodin; Jules Desbois, of the first rank in technical skill and
-of a violently original temperament; Alexandre Charpentier, a former
-collaborator of Rodin's, whose success in applied art has not turned
-him aside from his expressive and vigorous work in statuary; Mlle.
-Camille<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span> Claudel, Rodin's pupil, who is the first woman sculptor of
-existing-art in France, and whose name has appeared upon admirable
-works; and finally, Pierre Roche, although his supple and decorative
-fancy denies itself the expression of the tragic. The Swiss sculptor
-Niederhausern-Rodo, George Minne, the sculptor of Ghent, who has a
-powerful creative genius, not understood, and the Italian sculptor
-Rosso, are also partisans of Rodin's art, and so is the Englishman
-Bartlett. In another direction it is very interesting to note the
-curious reciprocal influence of Auguste Rodin and Eugène Carrière,
-who are united by friendship and by the same aesthetic creed. Eugène
-Carrière, the most profound painter of the inner life existing in the
-French school of to-day, has great analogies with Rodin, both as a man
-and as an artist. He, too, reduces his art to essentials, to the main
-lines and the deliberate amplification of surfaces. Thus his figures,
-bathed in shadow, are akin to Rodin's statues, while the latter, bathed
-with dewy light, seem to be pictures by Carrière. The painter becomes
-massive and powerful, the sculptor becomes vaporous. Rodin seeks the
-bland, half-shadows of Correggio, and Carrière desires that his figures
-should have the powerful<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span> relief of bronze. The painter sacrifices
-colour to the sole study of values, and by his black-and-white comes
-back to sculpture. Very curious is this point of junction between
-two great artists. Rodin is beginning to explain himself with the
-pen; and Eugène Carrière has, for some years past, been writing&mdash;too
-rarely&mdash;passages upon art of which the style is admirable and the
-concentration of thought astonishing, passages which recall Mallarmé
-and Baudelaire, and leave far behind the commonplaces of journalistic
-criticism. Rodin and Carrière have their school, their circle of chosen
-admirers, and their double influence may soon be the most decisive, if
-not the most brilliant and the noisiest, in French art of to-day.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<a id="rodin040a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_040a.jpg" width="600" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">NUDE FIGURE (PHOTOGRAPHED IN THE OPEN AIR AT TWILIGHT IN THE GARDEN AT
-MEUDON)</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>The prevailing note of opinion about Rodin among his friends and his
-detractors is that he is like no one else, and that no statue can, in a
-manner, be looked at beside his, so individual is the conception from
-which they spring. By the mere fact that they exist, they compel us to
-choose between them and the others. Their silhouettes, their planes,
-the quality of their shadows, and their lights, make them technically
-works apart. If such a man understands sculpture<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span> thus, either he is
-right, against everybody, or he is totally mistaken; we cannot like him
-and also approve of ordinary statuary. His psychological and tragic
-genius conquers the admiration even of those who oppose his material
-execution. Rodin does not set himself up as a chief, nor recognise
-followers; yet he is a chief by his very work.</p>
-
-<p>He is the greatest living French artist, and one of the most complex
-and powerful movers of thought in modern art. He does not found a
-school, but he influences the soul of a generation. He remains alone,
-not susceptible of imitation; but if he did not exist sculpture would
-be deprived of its greatest regenerator.<a name="FNanchor_1_17" id="FNanchor_1_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_17" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> By inscribing passions
-in symbols, he touches the sensibilities of all, and is a master
-to poets as much as to sculptors, because his subjects are moral,
-affecting, never commanded by an anecdote, bathed in the universally
-lyric. Attempts have been made to blame him because of the admiration
-of writers; it has been said, with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span> an inflexion of scorn (especially
-in the circles of his fellow-artists), "he is a <i>littéraire</i>." An
-injustice easily committed at a time when the intellect of painters
-and sculptors seems to blush at itself, and when they make it a sort
-of false merit to show that their eye and hand are separate from their
-brain. Rodin's splendid technical power annuls the reproach and retains
-the praise. Resting firmly upon nature, his symbols may rise high.
-Rodin delights poets because he makes the infinite emanate from the
-most finite of arts.</p>
-
-<p>Everything has been patiently meditated by him. He dares, but is never
-overbold; his balance and his taste are those of a classic, despite
-the uncomprehending astonishment of the academic sculptors, hypnotised
-by the sophistry of <i>finish</i> and <i>elegance</i>, and confusing the <i>exact</i>
-with the <i>true.</i> There is a synthesized form, that corresponds to
-reality synthesized in symbols, a <i>second truth;</i> and that proportion
-is observed by very few artists. Most of them, contenting themselves
-with an immediate, momentary, anecdotic truth, translate it by
-picturesque observation, or by minutely detailed copying. This attempt
-of a sterile cleverness to transcribe the instantaneous is the very
-contrary of art, the first character<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span> of which is to display the laws
-of vital permanence underlying fugitive aspects. Herein lies the reason
-why sculptors become uneasy over Rodin, while writers, more familiar
-with general ideas, become enthusiastic. The impressionist crisis&mdash;the
-study, that is to say, of instantaneous lights and actions&mdash;hardly got
-over, he brings in this <i>second truth,</i> the transcription of general
-and permanent feelings into a form that speaks as much to the mind as
-to the senses. Such a man dominates impressionism as much as he does
-academism.</p>
-
-<p>A whole order of curious and fundamental relations between nervous
-sensibility and thought has arisen out of his work. Rodin's personality
-is specially representative in the line of French sculptors. He goes
-back, as I have said, to the Egyptians and the Greeks in the matter
-of technical ideas. In his tragic feeling he proceeds directly from
-the Gothic artists. It is from them that he descends, and especially
-from the sculptors of the French Renascence, in particular Germain
-Pilon; and he blends his Greek remembrances, passed through an Italian
-influence, with a conception altogether national, vigorous, and
-decorative. Rodin's actual part is to take up<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span> sculpture exactly at
-the moment of the French evolution.<a name="FNanchor_2_18" id="FNanchor_2_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_18" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> Since that time we have had
-some great masters; native genius has been triumphantly upheld, in
-opposition to the false school that came from the Alps, by Coysevox,
-Houdon, Puget, Pajou, Pigalle, Clodion, Falconet, Couston, Rude,
-Carpeaux, and Barye, a line of splendid inventors of shapes, all of
-whom, in contradistinction to the official school, have represented
-the inmost qualities of their race. All these men Rodin emulates by
-the importance of his work; perhaps the future may regard him as
-the magnificent outcome of their efforts carried on through three
-centuries. In this succession of artists, Puget, Rude, and Barye are
-those with whom his technical relations are closest.<a name="FNanchor_3_19" id="FNanchor_3_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_19" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> But he has been
-less decorative than Puget and less hampered by the themes imposed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
-upon him; he has gone further than the great Rude in the expression of
-inward emotion, and he surpasses even Barye in power of modelling and
-boldness of silhouette. He has created a world which is fully his own,
-a feeling and a pathos not to be found elsewhere, which are the very
-soul of his time.</p>
-
-<p>Rodin, then, can be set only beside Puget and Rude. Like Puget, he is
-overflowing with vitality and with passionate frenzy; he worships power
-and heroic beings; but his are sad, and nearer to Gothic asceticism
-and to the nervous derangement of Baudelaire than to the resplendent
-pomp of the seventeenth century, into which Puget transposed his
-heroes of Rome and of Corneille. Like Rude, he is attracted by deep
-things, by soul tragedies; but he is more abstract than the creator
-of the <i>Napoleon Awakening to Immortality</i>, the <i>Joan of Arc,</i> or
-the <i>Marseillaise.</i> Rodin is more general, more synthetic; he turns
-his mind to permanent symbols, outside of ages and races. Taking up,
-as if in challenge, the mythological subjects that the "École" had
-most spoiled, he has shown how a great mind can renew all things and
-impress upon them the magic of its vision. He is the most symbolic
-of our men of genius; and if the modelling of the Greeks,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span> Gothic
-austerity, the strength of Puget and of Rude, have helped Rodin to
-make up his personality, the fusion of these elements and the addition
-of a personal imagination and an extraordinary contemplative faculty
-have enabled him, like Wagner, who descended from Bach, Beethoven, and
-Liszt, to create, after and apart from all of them, work that resumes
-them and forgets them, to become in its turn an initiator. The point
-in which Rodin is inimitable is the expression of the voluptuous with
-all its latent woes; and this point strongly recalls to memory <i>Tristan
-and Isolde</i>, which is such a paroxysm as might touch the most perilous
-region of exceptional art; but Rodin is kept within the bounds of the
-normal, and protected from the audacities of his strange and troubled
-imagination, by his imperturbable technical certainty and by his
-admiration for some few masters. As was the case with Baudelaire and
-with Poe, his purity and grandeur of form save him; like Dante, this
-lover of gloomy beauty hangs over the verge of passion's hell without
-falling into it.</p>
-
-<p>Rodin's art is healthy because it feeds upon natural truth and general
-logic. He is the supreme painter of man bowed by intense, melancholic,
-feverish, constricting thought; but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span> also, with a candid tenderness
-unknown to Wagner, he is the caressing creator of women in love, the
-poet of youth, embracing and radiant. Only a genius can have the
-diversity of mind that produces <i>The Burghers of Calais</i>, ascetic
-and mediæval, the spasmodic <i>Hell</i>, the almost abstract <i>Balzac</i>,
-the bronze busts worthy of Donatello, and the images of women carved
-in the radiant and golden marble of Attica by a sensuous and subtle
-enthusiast who has rediscovered the soul of Hellenic beauty. This union
-of technical skill, evolved according to the secrets of the antique
-with a power of expressing all human sentiments from gentleness to
-lewdness, from the mystic to the pathetic, from nervous disorganisation
-to carnal frankness, this union of contraries and this universality are
-not to be found in any of our forerunners. Not Puget, nor Rude, nor
-any of our masters has had such intellectual ubiquity, such strength
-of condensation; in these points it is allowable, even in our own day,
-to acknowledge Rodin as supreme in the rich French school, and thus to
-anticipate the judgment of the future, in whose eyes he will loom yet
-larger.</p>
-
-<p>In any case it was high time he should appear; he has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span> been as useful
-as was Manet by his intervention in French art. In spite of Dalou,
-sculpture had fallen very low after the death of Carpeaux and Barye;
-the deplorable school of the Second Empire had brought it into
-degeneracy, and we could reckon no one in sculpture to correspond
-to the great impressionists. Such men as Dujalbert, Chapu, Mercié,
-Frémiet, Saint Marceaux, and Falguière, are but sham great sculptors,
-nothing of whose work will last; the "École" group, from Paul Dubois
-to Barrias, Aube and Guillaume, is a mere example of pretentious
-insignificance. The few vigorous temperaments, or workers of genuine
-technical merit, like Denys Puech, Jean Dampt, Gardet, Camille
-Lefèvre, Devillez, and Jean Bassier, did not know how to put together
-their efforts in such a way as to found a real school. They produced
-without attaining a cohesion of thought capable of guiding a fresh
-generation. Bartholomé, thoughtful, pure, dreamy, and proud, stands
-apart. Mme. Besnard and M. Théodore Rivière are charming, but without
-influence. I have spoken of the group that has spontaneously placed
-itself around Rodin. Amid this interesting, unequal, and scattered
-sculpture he appeared with the authority of a master and a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span> prophet;
-his work set the question upon its true basis again, showing whence we
-came, what was to be avoided, and whither we were to go; and all this
-with such clearness of evidence that the appearance of Rodin becomes,
-in like degree with that of Goujon and that of Puget, a capital date
-in the history of the French school, I declared in the Preface my
-intention to avoid any extravagant eulogy of Rodin, and have uttered
-my dislike of the idolatry by which some people think it necessary
-publicly to emphasise their admiration, with its snobbish accretions.
-But I should fall into the opposite fault if I did not declare the
-truth and the importance of what such an artist brings to his art, and
-did not mark his exact place in the line of his country's sculpture.
-Henley has called Rodin the Michael Angelo of the modern world. That
-opinion of a foreign critic, a critic justly esteemed one of the most
-upright in contemporary literature, France may justly make her own,
-far from extravagant and puerile praises, and in the face of the work
-accomplished. I shall be but too happy if I have contributed to make
-clearer to the public certain secret reasons, certain inner frameworks,
-of that logical and beautiful work.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_17" id="Footnote_1_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_17"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> A vehement but indiscriminating critic, M. Octave Mirbeau,
-has seen good to write, by way of affirming that Rodin's art moved him
-strongly: "A style takes rise from him." I have neither the space nor
-the wish to recriminate; but it would be dangerous to let such artistic
-heresies pass without protest. Rodin is an admirable example, but to
-say that a style arises from him is to say that he may become the
-creator of a perishable formula, and to understand nothing about his
-art.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_18" id="Footnote_2_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_18"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> Some surprise may be felt at my having failed to insist
-upon the name of Michael Angelo. Everybody has hit upon the obvious
-comparison. It is the exceeding obviousness that leads me to distrust
-it. Rodin is much nearer to Puget than to Michael Angelo, who is
-muscular strength carried to heroic proportions. Rodin, like Puget, and
-more than Puget, is nervous strength. Rodin appears much more akin to
-Michael Angelo than he really is. Careful study causes us more and more
-to leave behind that preliminary likeness which has sufficed so many
-critics.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3_19" id="Footnote_3_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_19"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> We might perhaps say the same in regard to the great
-Carpeaux, too, who carried the art of movement and expression to so
-high a degree, and who did the same liberal work against the "École"
-as Rodin was to do at a later time. But their visions, aims, and minds
-differ profoundly.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h5><a name="VI" id="VI">VI</a></h5>
-
-
-<p class="block">APPENDIX&mdash;CHRONOLOGICAL LIST OF RODIN'S PRINCIPAL WORKS&mdash;LIST OF THE
-PRINCIPAL BOOKS OR ARTICLES WRITTEN ABOUT HIM&mdash;QUOTATIONS REFERRING TO
-HIM&mdash;AN OPINION OF EUGÈNE CARRIÈRE'S; AN OPINION OF HENLEY'S&mdash;VARIOUS
-NOTES</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>Chronological catalogue of Rodin's works is almost impossible to draw
-up. I do not think Rodin himself could do it. It must be remembered
-that before 1877 he made a quantity of studies which he destroyed,
-and such a producer as he is willing to neglect things of which
-others would keep count. In his poor and wandering days Rodin must
-have abandoned many things. How would it be possible to recount the
-figures that were retouched or even executed at Carrier-Belleuse's,
-the earliest independent works, the characters executed by him at
-Brussels, the statues that were planned and left unfinished for lack
-of money, those that were broken or that failed&mdash;all the immense store
-of work accomplished in the course of twenty years by a man who worked
-every day? How would it be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span> possible even to enumerate the sketches
-and varied renderings of different subjects piled up in the studio at
-Meudon, in the Clos Payen, in the Rue des Fourneaux, and at Vaugirard?
-It is a whole world. I will confine myself, therefore, to a statement
-of known and exhibited works: and these, indeed, are what is essential.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<h5><a id="LIST_OF_THE_PRINCIPAL_EXHIBITED_WORKS"></a>LIST OF THE PRINCIPAL EXHIBITED WORKS</h5>
-
-
-<p>1864. <i>The Man with a Broken Nose.</i></p>
-
-<p>1865-70. Works in the studio of Carrier-Belleuse.</p>
-
-<p>1872-77. Friezes upon the Bourse and various works at Brussels.</p>
-
-<p>1877. <i>The Primitive Man (The Age of Brass).</i> Decorative work on the
-Trocadéro.</p>
-
-<p>1878-80. <i>Saint Jerome. Saint John the Baptist.</i> Works in the
-manufactory of Sèvres. Competition for the National Defence Monument.</p>
-
-<p>1881. <i>Adam</i> (destroyed). <i>Eve.</i></p>
-
-<p>1882. <i>Ugolino</i> (a sketch taken up again later). Busts of <i>Alphonse
-Legros</i> and <i>IV. E. Henley.</i> Studies for <i>The Gate of Hell.</i></p>
-
-<p>1883. <i>Bellona. General Lynch</i> (equestrian statue). <i>The Genius of
-War.</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>1884. Monument of <i>President Vicunha. Bust of a Young Woman.</i></p>
-
-<p>1885. <i>The Man and the Serpent.</i> Busts of <i>Dalou, Hugo,</i> and <i>Antonin
-Proust.</i></p>
-
-<p>1886. First sketch of the Hugo monument. Drawings dealing with <i>The
-Gate of Hell.</i> Bust of <i>Henry Becque. The Kiss</i> (a small group).</p>
-
-<p>1887. <i>Perseus and the Gorgon. Head of St. John beheaded.</i></p>
-
-<p>1888. <i>The Danaid. Alan Walking.</i> Nude study for one of the <i>Burghers
-of Calais.</i> Several little groups.</p>
-
-<p>1889. Studies for the <i>Gate of Hell</i> and the monument to <i>Claude
-Lorraine. Torso of a Woman.</i> Group of <i>The Dream. The Dream of Life.
-Women Damned</i> (in marble). <i>Hecuba.</i> Bust of <i>Roger Marx. Destitution.
-Thought</i> (in marble).</p>
-
-<p>1890. <i>Bust of a Young Woman</i> (in silver). <i>Torso of Saint John.
-Brother and Sister.</i></p>
-
-<p>1891. <i>The Caryatid. The Young Mother. A Nymph.</i></p>
-
-<p>1892. Busts of <i>Puvis de Chavannes</i> and <i>Henri Rochefort. Grief.
-Claude Lorraine. The Burghers of Calais.</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>1893. <i>The Death of Adonis.</i> Medallion of <i>César Franck. Galatea.</i>
-Bust of <i>Séverine. The Crest and the Wave. Resurrection. The Child
-Achilles</i> (group in clay).</p>
-
-<p>1894. <i>Eternal Spring. Hope</i> (a reclining figure in back view.)
-<i>Orpheus and Eurydice</i> (first version). <i>Christ and Magdalen.</i></p>
-
-<p>1895. Inauguration of <i>The Burghers of Calais. Illusion, the Daughter
-of Icarus.</i> Medallion of <i>Octave Mirbeau.</i> Nude studies for the
-<i>Balzac. Man Crouching.</i></p>
-
-<p>1896. <i>The Inner Voice. The Muse of Anger</i> (for the Hugo monument).
-<i>The Conqueror. Minerva. The Poet and the Life of Contemplation. Women
-Bathing.</i> Studies for the <i>Balzac.</i></p>
-
-<p>1897. <i>Victor Hugo. Balzac.</i> Monument of <i>President</i> <i>Sarmiento.</i></p>
-
-<p>1898. Statue of <i>Balzac.</i> Bust of a <i>Young American.</i> Bust of <i>Madame
-F.</i> Statue of <i>Sarmiento,</i> with a high relief of Apollo in marble.
-Monument of <i>Labour. The Benedictions</i> (marble). <i>Twilight. Clouds.</i>
-<i>The Parcæ and the Young Girl.</i></p>
-
-<p>1899. Works for the Hugo monument.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>1900. Marble groups. Exhibition at the Rond-point de l'Alma.</p>
-
-<p>1901. <i>Shades</i> (for <i>The Gate of Hell).</i></p>
-
-<p>1902. Groups in marble. <i>The Hand of God.</i> Busts.</p>
-
-<p>1903. Bust of <i>Hugo. The Poet and the Muse.</i> Various sketches.
-<i>Ugolino</i> (fresh version). <i>The Prodigal Son.</i></p>
-
-<p>1904. <i>The Thinker</i>, and various works in marble in process of
-execution.<a name="FNanchor_1_20" id="FNanchor_1_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_20" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p>
-
-<p>The work of Rodin may thus be estimated at about ten works on a grand
-scale, forty groups or statues, some thirty important busts, and
-perhaps two hundred figures or portraits, without counting sketches,
-from 1877 to 1904.</p>
-
-<p>I come now to the mention of some significant writings that deal with
-his aesthetic theory or with his work; and, as may be supposed, I leave
-out of question a quantity of valueless articles, for Rodin has been
-directly or indirectly the pretext for a great mass of writings, and
-is the modern French artist who has been most talked of, justly or
-unjustly. The works quoted are such as may be consulted with advantage.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_20" id="Footnote_1_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_20"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> To these may be added, in 1905, a bust of the Rt. Hon.
-<i>George Wyndham</i>, and <i>The Hand of God.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span></p></div>
-
-<h5><a id="ARTICLES_OR_BOOKS_RELATING_TO_RODIN"></a>ARTICLES OR BOOKS RELATING TO RODIN</h5>
-
-<p>"Balzac and Rodin," by Roger Marx (<i>Le Voltaire,</i> March, 1892).</p>
-
-<p>"Claude Lorraine," by Roger Marx (<i>Le Voltaire,</i> June, 1892).
-(Excellent studies in the criticism of sculpture.)</p>
-
-<p>"Auguste Rodin," by Roger Marx (<i>Pan,</i> and <i>The Image,</i> September,
-1897).</p>
-
-<p>Drawings by Rodin, 129 plates, containing 142 heliogravures (Goupil and
-Co., 1897), from the suggestions and loans of M. Fenaille.</p>
-
-<p>"Rodin's Studio," by Edouard Rod (<i>Gazette des Beaux Arts,</i> May, 1898).</p>
-
-<p>"Rodin," by Gabriel Mourey (<i>Revue illustrée,</i> October, 1899)</p>
-
-<p><i>Exhibition of 1900: Rodin's Works,</i> with four prefaces by Eugène
-Carrière, Jean Paul Laurens, Claude Monet, and Albert Besnard.</p>
-
-<p>"Rodin and Legros," by Arsène Alexandre (<i>Figaro,</i> June, 1900).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"The Gate of Hell," by Anatole France (<i>Figaro,</i> June 1st, 1900).</p>
-
-<p><i>La Revue des Beaux Arts et des Lettres,</i> January 1st, 1900.</p>
-
-<p><i>La Plume,</i> 1900. Special number.</p>
-
-<p><i>Les Maîtres Artistes,</i> special number, October 15th, 1903.
-(Illustrated collections, containing a certain number of critical
-studies by various authors.)</p>
-
-<p><i>Rodin,</i> by Léon Riotor: a pamphlet, reproducing in French, German,
-English, Italian, Spanish, and Russian, a study that appeared in the
-<i>Revue populaire des Beaux Arts,</i> April 8th, 1899.</p>
-
-<p><i>Rodin, the Sculptor,</i> a volume of criticism, illustrated; by Léon
-Maillard (Floury); 1899.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Sculptor Rodin, drawn from life.</i> A volume by Mlle. Judith Cladel
-(<i>La Plume</i> office, 1903).</p>
-
-<p><i>Rodin,</i> a study by L. Brieger-Wasser (Vogel. Strassburg; 1903).</p>
-
-<p><i>Rodin,</i> by George Treu (<i>Jahrbuch der bildenden Kunst.</i> Berlin,
-Marstersteig, 1903).</p>
-
-<p><i>Rodin,</i> by R. M. Rilke (Berlin, Bard, 1903).</p>
-
-<p>"Rodin." Articles upon, by W. E. Henley, 1890; D. S. MacColl, 1902;
-Henri Duhem, 1890; Karel B. Made (Prague); Vittorio Pica (Rome).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Of these various writings devoted to Rodin, those of Roger Marx should
-be particularly noted, on account of their technical understanding;
-Léon Maillard's volume is a sincere, well-informed, well-illustrated
-book, produced by a man who comprehends. The book by Mlle. Judith
-Cladel, daughter of the distinguished novelist, is an originally
-conceived volume, the only one that relates certain conversations, and
-attempts, with charming acuteness, to present Rodin in his private
-character. It is a work that deserves to be much better known and
-appreciated, and of which Rodin's first panegyrists, jealous of being
-the only "inventors" of the artist, have been very careful not to
-speak. The article by the graceful painter, Henri Duhem, is likewise
-excellent; and I consider Mr. MacColl's very remarkable, on account of
-its elevation and precision of judgment. The others have such value
-as belongs to admiring articles written hurriedly in newspapers: they
-express sympathetic feelings, or comment in a poetical way upon the
-subjects, but their critical value is négligeable, and there is nothing
-to be quoted from them for the information of my readers. The <i>Balzac</i>
-gave rise to a shoal of newspaper articles. Georges, Rodenbach, and
-France, on that occasion,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span> said the acute and witty thing's about
-Rodin that they say about all manifestations of thought, and M.
-Mirbeau made Rodin the theme of some of those polemical variations,
-conjoining hyperbolical praise with abuse of his adversaries, which
-he is accustomed to offer as art-criticisms, and which have gained
-him a reputation of a certain kind. There is nothing to note in these
-pamphlets mixed with eulogistic effusions, the whole of which do not
-contain the substance of twenty lines by Henley or of Eugène Carrière's
-admirable Preface, which I am desirous of reproducing here because it
-is a masterpiece of synthetic divination.<a name="FNanchor_1_21" id="FNanchor_1_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_21" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_21" id="Footnote_1_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_21"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Preface to the Catalogue of the Rodin exhibition in the
-Pavillon de l'Alma, 1900. (The work mentioned above; other prefaces by
-Claude Monet, A. Besnard, and J. P. Laurens.)</p></div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<h5><a id="THE_ART_OF_RODIN"></a>"THE ART OF RODIN</h5>
-
-<p>"Rodin's art comes from the earth and returns to it, like those giant
-blocks&mdash;rocks or dolmens&mdash;which mark deserts, and in the heroic
-grandeur of which man recognises himself.</p>
-
-<p>"The transmission of thought by art, like the transmission of life, is
-the work of passion and of love.</p>
-
-<p>"Passion, whose obedient servant Rodin is, makes him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span> discover the laws
-that serve to express it; she it is that gives him the sense of volumes
-and proportions, the choice of the expressive prominence.</p>
-
-<p>"Thus the earth projects external apparent forms, images, and statues
-that fill us with a sense of its internal life.</p>
-
-<p>"These terrestrial forms were the real guides of Rodin. They have set
-him free from scholastic traditions, in them he found his being and the
-creative instinct of men whom humanity celebrates.</p>
-
-<p>"Trees and plants revealed to him their likeness to those fair women,
-with sleek limbs rising, like delicate columns, to the moving torso and
-swelling breast, above which the head hangs heavily in the company of a
-strong and supple neck, even as a fine fruit full of savour weighs down
-its branch.</p>
-
-<p>"The massive brow overshadows the eyes, and the cheek brings the lip
-softly to the lover's entreaty.</p>
-
-<p>"Forms seek and meet in voluptuous desires of violence and of
-resignation, rebellious and obedient to laws from which nothing
-escapes; everywhere conscious logic triumphs.</p>
-
-<p>"The generalising spirit of Rodin has imposed solitude upon him. It
-has not been his lot to work upon the cathedral<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span> that is not, but his
-desire of humanity links him to the eternal forms of nature."</p>
-
-<p>After such a passage, in which every word is significant and eloquent,
-and is a great artist's reflection, everything seems pale. I will not,
-however, confine myself to a mere dry mention of the essay by Vittorio
-Pica, the great Italian critic, who generously arranged for Rodin's
-participation in the Venetian Exhibition (Gallery of Modern Art, 1897),
-and I should have liked to quote Anatole France's fine article, and
-some assertions of Mr. MacColl's, who very logically recalls to our
-memory the sculptor Auguste Préault, who is too much forgotten, and
-who was, indeed, a sort of imperfect precursor of Rodin. I must at
-least transcribe a few lines from W. E. Henley, who was, from the very
-beginning, a clear-sighted admirer of Rodin, and who spoke of him with
-eloquence and passion:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"M. Dalou ... has declared that when the century goes out it will
-remember the aforesaid doors" (i.e. <i>The Gate of Hell</i>) "as its heroic
-achievement in sculpture. And if that be true&mdash;as I believe it to be
-true&mdash;then where, between<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span> himself and Michael Angelo, is there so
-lofty a head as Rodin's?... His busts alone were enough to place him
-in the future, the style of them is so complete, the treatment so
-large and so distinguished, the effect so personal, yet so absolute in
-art.... Here, if you will, are a thousand hints of the possibilities of
-human passion: from Paolo and Francesca melting into each other:</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 15%;">
-"'La bocca mi bacio tutta tremante'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>as no man and woman have done in sculpture since sculpture began....
-Here is sculpture in its essence.... You may read into it as much
-literature as you please, or as you can; but the interpolation is
-not Rodin's, but your own.... It is not literature in relief, nor
-literature in the round; it is sculpture pure and simple.... Passion is
-with him wholly a matter of form and surface and line, and exists not
-apart from these.... He is our Michael Angelo; and if he had not been
-that, he might have been our Donatello. And with Phidias and Lysippus
-all these some-and-twenty centuries afar, what more is left to say of
-the man of genius whose art is theirs?"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>We see that Henley's admiration returns to the comparison of Michael
-Angelo and Rodin. I persist in thinking that the resemblance rather
-lies in moral identity, in conception than in technicalities. The
-muscular enlargement of the Italian hero is not Rodin's amplification
-nor his expressiveness, <i>which is altogether nervous.</i> It is none the
-less true that these two men are the only ones who have imagined and
-realised a sculpturesque conception of so vast a reach. Not even Puget
-and Rude, who came between them, ventured such wholes as <i>The Tomb of
-the Medici</i> or <i>The Gate of Hell.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-<h5>MUSEUMS</h5>
-
-<p>Rodin has in the Luxembourg Museum (Paris) the following works:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><i>The Age of Brass,</i> originally placed in the Luxembourg Gardens near
-the School of Mines.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Danaid</i> (marble).</p>
-
-<p><i>Thought</i> (marble).</p>
-
-<p><i>St. John the Baptist Preaching</i> (bronze).</p>
-
-<p><i>The Fair Helmet-maker</i> (bronze).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Bust of <i>Jean Paul Laurens</i> (bronze).</p>
-
-<p><i>The Kiss</i> (marble).</p>
-
-<p>Bust of <i>Mme. V.</i> (marble).</p>
-
-<p>At the Petit Palais (Ville de Paris), one work.</p>
-
-<p>At Beziers, Cognac, Dijon, Douai, Lille, and Lyons, several works.</p>
-
-<p>At Brussels, one work.</p>
-
-<p>At Copenhagen, several works.</p>
-
-<p>At New York, Boston, Chicago, and Philadelphia, works. At Helsingfors,
-one work.</p>
-
-<p>At Rotterdam, one work.</p>
-
-<p>At Geneva (Rath Museum), three works.</p>
-
-<p>At Venice, Christiania, St. Petersburg, Stockholm, Düsseldorf, Munich,
-Weimar, Vienna, Prague (town hall), one work in each town.</p>
-
-<p>At Hamburg, three works.</p>
-
-<p>At Hagen, three works.</p>
-
-<p>At Berlin (new gallery of Charlottenburg), five works.</p>
-
-<p>At Crefeld, two works.</p>
-
-<p>At Buda-Pest, five works.</p>
-
-<p>In London (Victoria and Albert Museum), two works; (British Museum),
-one work.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>At Glasgow, one work.</p>
-
-<p>Museum of Marseilles, <i>The Inner Voice</i> (clay).</p>
-
-<p>The new works in these various museums are originals or casts.</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-<h5>PRIVATE COLLECTIONS</h5>
-
-<p>M. Vever (<i>Eve,</i> in marble).</p>
-
-<p>M. Pontremoli (the <i>National Defence.</i>)</p>
-
-<p>M. Antony Roux (<i>The Kiss</i>).</p>
-
-<p>M. Roger Marx (bust, <i>The Young Mother</i>).</p>
-
-<p>M. Blanc (<i>The Eternal Idol.</i>)</p>
-
-<p>M. Desmarais (the <i>Idyll.</i>)</p>
-
-<p>Mme. Durand (<i>Thought</i>, in marble, given to the Luxembourg).</p>
-
-<p>M. Peytel (various groups).</p>
-
-<p>Mme. Russell (<i>Minerva.</i>)</p>
-
-<p>M. Fenaille (<i>The Spring, Bust of Mme. F., The Poet and the Life of
-Contemplation,</i> a twisted column with figures, surmounted by a mask).</p>
-
-<p>Baron Vitta (high-reliefs in stone).</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise de Carcano (<i>Head of St. John beheaded,</i> marble).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This, of course, is a very cursory list, and includes only collections
-in Paris.</p>
-
-<p>I must add separately to the works published about Rodin those for
-which I am responsible: (1) a study, called "The Art of M. Rodin,"
-<i>Revue des Revues,</i> 15th June, 1898; this has been approved by the
-artist, and very frequently reproduced. (2) A lecture delivered on
-the 31st of July, 1900, at the Rodin exhibition, and published by
-<i>La Plume</i>, with four unpublished drawings. (3) An essay upon the
-surroundings, personality, and influence of Rodin, which appeared in
-the <i>Revue Universelle</i> in 1901, and has likewise been reprinted,
-particularly in the <i>Maîtres Artistes</i> (special number, 15th October,
-1903).</p>
-
-<p>The high price of the work published by Messrs. Goupil (<i>A Hundred
-and Fort-two Drawings by Rodin</i>) prevents that fine volume from being
-accessible to the public. The amateur photographer Druet has taken
-photographs of all Rodin's work, which are rather misty, but which
-render admirably the caressing touch of light on the main planes, and
-which in a measure reproduce the artistic atmosphere of the statues.
-Messrs. Haweis and Coles have likewise taken some beautiful and curious
-proofs. More classic, but also more definite, are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span> the fine photographs
-which the art publisher Buloz has recently taken, and which have been
-employed to illustrate this volume.</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-<h5>PORTRAITS</h5>
-
-<p>There is a remarkable portrait of Rodin by Mr. John Sargent (dating
-from about twenty years ago). Another, by M. Alphonse Legros (a
-profile), is more of a fancy head, and wears a sort of tiara. A more
-recent portrait has been produced by Mr. Alexander. There is a very
-forcible bust by Mile. Camille Claudel, as well as a bust by J.
-Desbois, a lithograph by Eugène Carrière, and some amusing studio
-sketches by Mile. Cladel. An interesting lithograph of "Rodin in his
-Studio," by W. Rothenstein, appeared in the <i>Artist-Engraver,</i> April,
-1904.</p>
-
-<p>A curious photograph, taken by M. Steichen; a poster for the Rodin
-exhibition, containing a portrait, and drawn by Carrière; and some
-excellent photographs taken at Prague (of which the one here reproduced
-is astonishingly faithful) complete this list of likenesses.</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p> <span class="caption"><a id="INDEX"></a>INDEX</span>
-<br /><br />
-<i>Achilles, The Education of,</i> <a href='#Page_33'>33</a><br />
-<i>Adam</i> (destroyed), <a href='#Page_14'>14</a><br />
-<i>Adonis, The Death of,</i> <a href='#Page_33'>33</a><br />
-<i>Age of Brass, The,</i> <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a><br />
-Antiope (of Correggio), The, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a><br />
-Antique, The, influence of, on Rodin, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Rodin's analysis of, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>-<a href='#Page_80'>80</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">its right use, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>-<a href='#Page_77'>77</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">its truth and beauty, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a></span><br />
-Aphrodite (by Lucien Schnegg), <a href='#Page_111'>111</a><br />
-<i>Apollo,</i> the two reliefs, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a><br />
-Aube, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-<i>Autumn</i> (stone), <a href='#Page_86'>86</a><br />
-<i>Avarice and Lewdness,</i> <a href='#Page_26'>26</a><br />
-<br />
-<i>Balzac, Statue of,</i> <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>-<a href='#Page_51'>51</a>, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href='#Page_75'>75</a>, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a></span><br />
-Barrias, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>; his monument to Hugo, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a><br />
-Bartholomé, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-Bartlett, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a><br />
-Barye, <a href='#Page_2'>2</a>, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-Bassier, Jean, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-<i>Bastien-Lepage, Statue of,</i> <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a><br />
-Baudelaire, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a><br />
-Beauvais, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a><br />
-<i>Becque, Henry, Bust of,</i> <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">dry-point portraits of, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></span><br />
-<i>Bellona,</i> <a href='#Page_17'>17</a><br />
-<i>Benedictions, The,</i> <a href='#Page_89'>89</a><br />
-Bergerat, M., Rodin's drawings for his book, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a><br />
-Besnard, Mme., <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-Boisbaudron, Lecoq de, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a><br />
-Boucher, the sculptor, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a><br />
-Bourdelle, Emile, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a><br />
-<i>Broken Nose, The Man with the,</i> <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a><br />
-<i>Brother and Sister,</i> <a href='#Page_31'>31</a><br />
-Brussels, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a><br />
-<i>Burghers of Calais, The,</i> <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>-<a href='#Page_39'>39</a>, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a></span><br />
-Burgundian sculptors, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a><br />
-Busts, Rodin's portrait, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a><br />
-Carcano, Marchioness of, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>Carpeaux, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-Carrier-Belleuse, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a><br />
-Carrière, Eugène, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his opinion of Rodin's art, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>-<a href='#Page_133'>133</a></span><br />
-<i>Caryatid, The,</i> <a href='#Page_31'>31</a><br />
-Celtic genius, The, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a><br />
-Chaplin, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a><br />
-Chappe, A statue of, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a> n.<br />
-Chapu, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-Charpentier, Alexandre, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a><br />
-Chartres, The cathedral of, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a><br />
-<i>Christ and the Magdalen,</i> <a href='#Page_33'>33</a><br />
-<i>Christian Martyr, The,</i> <a href='#Page_88'>88</a><br />
-Cladel, Mlle., <a href='#Page_70'>70</a> n., <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a><br />
-Classicism, Rodin's, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a><br />
-Clodion, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a><br />
-Clot, lithographer, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a><br />
-<i>Conqueror, A, holding a Statue of Victory,</i> <a href='#Page_40'>40</a><br />
-Corneille, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a><br />
-Correggio, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a><br />
-Costume in sculpture, The question of, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>-<a href='#Page_50'>50</a><br />
-Couston, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a><br />
-Coysevox, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a><br />
-<i>Crouching Man, The,</i> <a href='#Page_33'>33</a><br />
-Dalou, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>; Rodin's bust of, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a><br />
-Dampt, Jean, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-<i>Danaid, The,</i> <a href='#Page_28'>28</a><br />
-Dante, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a>, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a><br />
-David of Angers, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a><br />
-Devillez, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-<i>Day, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a></i><br />
-Delacroix, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a><br />
-Delaplanche, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a><br />
-Desbois, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a><br />
-Donatello, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a><br />
-Drawings and sketches, Rodin's, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>-<a href='#Page_100'>100</a><br />
-<i>Dream-Group,</i> <a href='#Page_29'>29</a><br />
-Dry-points, Rodin's, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a><br />
-Dubois, Paul, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-Duhem, Henri, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a><br />
-Dujalbert, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-Dutch painting, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a><br />
-<br />
-Egyptian sculpture, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a><br />
-Eiffel Tower, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a><br />
-Emerson quoted, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a><br />
-Erotic subjects, Rodin's treatment of, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>-<a href='#Page_100'>100</a><br />
-Etchings, Rodin's, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a><br />
-<i>Eternal Idol, The</i>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a><br />
-<i>Eve,</i> <a href='#Page_14'>14</a><br />
-Exhibited works, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a><br />
-Exhibition with Claude Monet, the, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a><br />
-<br />
-Fagel, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a><br />
-Falconet, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a> ??<br />
-Falguière, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his "Balzac," <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Rodin's bust of, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a></span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span><i>Faun and Nymph,86<br />
-Fauns and Bacchantes,</i> <a href='#Page_30'>30</a><br />
-<i>Fenaille, Bust of Mme.,</i> <a href='#Page_84'>84</a><br />
-Fenaille, M., <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>; his edition of<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Rodin's drawings, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a></span><br />
-<i>Fiennes, Jean de,</i> <a href='#Page_35'>35</a><br />
-Finish, False notions of, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a><br />
-Flemish primitives, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a><br />
-Fleurs du Mal, Baudelaire's, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Rodin's illustrations to, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></span><br />
-Florence Baptistery Gates, as model of <i>The Gate of Hell,</i> <a href='#Page_22'>22</a><br />
-France, Anatole, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a><br />
-<i>Franck, Medallion of Cæsar,</i> <a href='#Page_33'>33</a><br />
-Frémiet, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-Fuller, Loïe, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a> n.<br />
-<br />
-<i>Galatea,</i> <a href='#Page_33'>33</a><br />
-Gallé, Emile, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a><br />
-Gallimard, M., <a href='#Page_92'>92</a><br />
-Gardet, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-<i>Gate of Hell, The,</i> <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>-<a href='#Page_27'>27</a>, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a><br />
-<i>Genius of War, The,</i> <a href='#Page_17'>17</a><br />
-Gluck, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a><br />
-Gothic sculptures, Rodin's study of, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a><br />
-Goujon, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a><br />
-Greek sculpture, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a><br />
-Guillaume, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-<br />
-<i>Hand of God, The,</i> <a href='#Page_85'>85</a><br />
-<i>Hecuba,</i> <a href='#Page_29'>29</a><br />
-<i>Helmet-maker, The Fair,</i> <a href='#Page_29'>29</a><br />
-Henley, W. E., <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his opinion of Rodin's art, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>-<a href='#Page_134'>134</a></span><br />
-Hokusai, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a><br />
-Houdon, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a><br />
-<i>Hugo, Victor, Bust of,</i> <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">dry-point portraits of, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">the <i>Monument to,</i> <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a></span><br />
-<br />
-<i>Icarus,</i> <a href='#Page_85'>85</a><br />
-<i>Illusion, the Daughter of Icarus,</i> <a href='#Page_33'>33</a><br />
-<i>Inferno,</i> Dante's, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a><br />
-Inspiration, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a><br />
-<i>Iris,</i> <a href='#Page_19'>19</a><br />
-Italy, Rodin's travels in, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a><br />
-<br />
-Japanese bronzes and prints, Rodin's admiration of, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a><br />
-Jasmin, Clément, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a><br />
-Joan of Arc, Rude's, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a><br />
-<br />
-<i>Kiss, The,</i> <a href='#Page_23'>23</a> n., <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a><br />
-<br />
-<i>Labour, Monument to,</i> <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a><br />
-Lamartine, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a><br />
-<i>Laurens, Jean Paul, Bust of,</i> <a href='#Page_31'>31</a><br />
-Lavoisier, A statue of, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a> n.<br />
-Lefèvre, Camille, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-Legros, Alphonse, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>; bust of, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a><br />
-<i>Lorraine, Claude, The Monument to,</i> <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a><br />
-Louvre, the, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span><i>Love and Psyche,</i> <a href='#Page_85'>85</a><br />
-<i>Lovers, Groups of,</i> <a href='#Page_85'>85</a><br />
-Luxembourg, The, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a> n., <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a><br />
-<i>Lynch, Statue of,</i> <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a><br />
-<br />
-MacColl, D. S., <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a><br />
-<i>Magdalen, The,</i> <a href='#Page_85'>85</a><br />
-<i>Mahomet</i> (drawing), <a href='#Page_95'>95</a><br />
-Mallarmé, Stéphane, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a><br />
-Manet, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-<i>Man Walking,</i> <a href='#Page_28'>28</a><br />
-<i>Man with the Broken Nose, The</i> (clay head), <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">(marble), <a href='#Page_7'>7</a></span><br />
-Marseillaise, Rude's, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a><br />
-Marx, Roger, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">bust of, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a></span><br />
-<i>Meditation,</i> <a href='#Page_19'>19</a><br />
-Meudon, Rodin's house and studio at, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a><br />
-Michael Angelo, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a> n., <a href='#Page_122'>122</a><br />
-<i>Minerva</i> (helmeted bust), <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">(marble and silver), <a href='#Page_40'>40</a></span><br />
-Minne, George, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a><br />
-Mirbeau, Octave, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a> n.;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">bust of, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">medallion of, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Rodin's drawings for his books, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></span><br />
-Monet, Claude, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a><br />
-<i>Monument to the Defenders of the Nation,</i> <a href='#Page_14'>14</a><br />
-Morbidezza, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a><br />
-<i>Mother, The Young,</i> <a href='#Page_31'>31</a><br />
-<i>Muse of Anger,</i> <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a><br />
-<br />
-<i>Muse of the Inner Voice,</i> <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a><br />
-Museums, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a><br />
-<br />
-Nancy, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a><br />
-Naples Museum, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a><br />
-Napoleon Awakening to Immortality,<br />
-Rude's, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a><br />
-Neo-Greek School, Errors and defects of, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a>, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a><br />
-<i>Nereids, The,</i> <a href='#Page_86'>86</a><br />
-Niederhausern-Rodo, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a><br />
-<i>Night,</i> <a href='#Page_88'>88</a><br />
-Nude, The, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a><br />
-<i>Nymph, A,</i> <a href='#Page_31'>31</a><br />
-<br />
-<i>Orpheus and Eurydice,</i> <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a><br />
-<br />
-Paintings, Rodin's, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a><br />
-Pajou, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a><br />
-Pantheon, The, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a><br />
-<i>Perseus and the Gorgon,</i> <a href='#Page_28'>28</a><br />
-Pica, Vittorio, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a><br />
-Pigalle, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a><br />
-Pilon, Germain, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a><br />
-Poe, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a><br />
-<i>Poet and the Life of Contemplation, The,</i> <a href='#Page_40'>40</a><br />
-<i>Poets and Muses,</i> <a href='#Page_85'>85</a><br />
-Préault, Auguste, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a><br />
-Private Collections, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a><br />
-<i>Proust, Antonin, Bust of,</i> <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">dry-point of, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></span><br />
-<i>Psyche,</i> <a href='#Page_85'>85</a><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>Puech, Denys, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-Puget, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a><br />
-Puvis de Chavannes, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>; bust of, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">monument to, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a></span><br />
-<i>Pygmalion,</i> <a href='#Page_86'>86</a><br />
-<br />
-Raphael, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a><br />
-Redon, Odilon, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a><br />
-Rembrandt, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a><br />
-Renascence, Rodin's admiration for the, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>-5<br />
-<i>Rimini, Paolo and Francesca da,</i> <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a><br />
-Rivière, Théodore, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-<i>Rochefort, Bust of,</i> <a href='#Page_31'>31</a><br />
-Roche, Pierre, in, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a><br />
-Rodin, Auguste, birth, parentage, and schooling, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">early art-training, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>, <a href='#Page_2'>2</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">under Barye, <a href='#Page_2'>2</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">works for ornament-maker, <a href='#Page_2'>2</a>, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in Carrier-Belleuse's studio, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">early works in sculpture, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">goes to Brussels, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>; work there, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">friendship with Legros, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">takes painting lessons from Lecoq de Boisbaudron, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">accepted at Salon, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">accused of casting from life, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his first sale, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">cleared of accusations, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">sudden emergence from obscurity, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">slow development, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">attitude to academic art, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his originality and power noticed, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">studios granted him by Government, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">works at Sèvres, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his stay in Brussels a formative time, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">deeply impressed by Dante and Baudelaire, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a> (and see under these names);</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">monument to Hugo described, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">impatience of officialism, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Gate of Hell</i> described, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>-<a href='#Page_27'>27</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">exhibition with Claude Monet in 1889, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">monument to Claude Lorraine described, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Burghers of Calais</i> described, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>-<a href='#Page_39'>39</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">friendship with M. Fenaille, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">the <i>Balzac</i> and the controversy it excited, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>-<a href='#Page_52'>52</a>, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">visits to Italy, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a>; articles</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in the <i>Musée</i> quoted at length, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>-<a href='#Page_80'>80</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">at the Paris Exhibition of 1900, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">visit to Prague, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>; welcomed in London, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">elected President of the International Society, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">honours, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">personal appearance, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">portraits of him, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">private life and home, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>-<a href='#Page_109'>109</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">house and studios, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>-<a href='#Page_110'>110</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">tastes, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">travels, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">as a talker, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">social opinions, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">influence, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">friends and pupils, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">characteristics of his art, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">artistic descent and affinities, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>-<a href='#Page_119'>119</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">place in the French school, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>-122;</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span><span style="margin-left: 1em;">lost works, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a> n.;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">paintings, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">dry-points, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">drawings and treatment of voluptuous subjects, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>-<a href='#Page_100'>100</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">photographs of his works, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">essentially a poet, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>,69; as thinker, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">classicism, his, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his symbolism, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his composition, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his conception of his art analysed, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>-<a href='#Page_81'>81</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">fondness for small groups, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his treatment of costume, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his treatment of flesh, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his principles of portraiture, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his endeavour to give atmosphere, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his works treated to be viewed from all sides, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>-6;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his modelling, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his study and power of representing movement, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">dynamic character of his art, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his synthetic power, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his veracity, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his favourite type of woman, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">influence and value of the antique, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>-<a href='#Page_80'>80</a></span><br />
-<i>Ronde, The</i> (dry-point), <a href='#Page_92'>92</a><br />
-Rops. <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a><br />
-Rosso, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a><br />
-Rousseau, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a><br />
-Rubens, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a>, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a><br />
-Rude, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a><br />
-<br />
-<i>St. John Baptist</i>, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a><br />
-<i>St. John Baptist</i> (torso), <a href='#Page_31'>31</a><br />
-<i>St. John, Head of the Beheaded</i> (marble), <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a><br />
-Saint Marceaux, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-<i>St. Pierre, Eustacede</i>, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a><br />
-Salon, the, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a><br />
-<i>Sappho,</i> <a href='#Page_86'>86</a><br />
-Sargent, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a><br />
-<i>Sarmiento, Monument to President,</i> <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>.<br />
-Schnegg, Gaston and Lucien, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a><br />
-<i>Séverine, Bust of Madame,</i> <a href='#Page_33'>33</a><br />
-Sèvres, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a><br />
-<i>Shades, The,</i> <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a><br />
-Société des Gens de Lettres, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a><br />
-<i>Spring, Eternal,</i> <a href='#Page_33'>33</a><br />
-<i>Spring,</i> <a href='#Page_85'>85</a><br />
-<i>Summer,</i> <a href='#Page_86'>86</a><br />
-<br />
-Tanagra figures, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a><br />
-<i>Thinker, The,</i> <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a><br />
-Thomas, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a><br />
-<i>Thought,</i> <a href='#Page_29'>29</a><br />
-<i>Torso</i> (nude female bronze), <a href='#Page_88'>88</a><br />
-Turquet, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a><br />
-<br />
-<i>Ugolino,</i> <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>; (drawing), <a href='#Page_95'>95</a><br />
-<br />
-Values in painting and sculpture, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>Van der Meer, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a><br />
-Van Rasbourg, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a><br />
-<i>Venus and Adonis,</i> <a href='#Page_33'>33</a><br />
-<i>Vicunha, Monument to the President,</i> <a href='#Page_17'>17</a><br />
-Villon, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a><br />
-<br />
-Wagner, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a><br />
-Watteau, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a><br />
-<i>Wave, The,</i> <a href='#Page_33'>33</a><br />
-Whistler, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a><br />
-<i>Wissant, Jacques and Pierre de,</i> <a href='#Page_36'>36</a><br />
-<i>Woman, Bust of,</i> <a href='#Page_84'>84</a><br />
-<i>Woman, Bust of a Young,</i> <a href='#Page_17'>17</a><br />
-<i>Woman, Bust of a Young</i> (silver) <a href='#Page_31'>31</a><br />
-<i>Women and Children,</i> <a href='#Page_86'>86</a><br />
-<i>Women Bathing,</i> <a href='#Page_41'>41</a><br />
-<i>Women Damned,</i> <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a><br />
-</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 50665 ***</div>
-
-
-
-</body>
-</html>
-</div>
-
-</div>
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@@ -1,3953 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Auguste Rodin, by Camille Mauclair
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Auguste Rodin
- The Man - His Ideas - His Work
-
-Author: Camille Mauclair
-
-Translator: Clementina Black
-
-Release Date: December 11, 2015 [EBook #50665]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AUGUSTE RODIN ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Marc D'Hooghe at http://www.freeliterature.org
-Images generously made available by the Internet Archive.)
-
-
-
-
-
-AUGUSTE RODIN
-
-THE MAN--HIS IDEAS--HIS WORKS
-
-BY
-
-CAMILLE MAUCLAIR
-
-AUTHOR OF
-
-"THE GREAT FRENCH PAINTERS AND THE EVOLUTION OF FRENCH PAINTING FROM 1830"
-"THE FRENCH IMPRESSIONISTS," ETC.
-
-TRANSLATED BY
-
-CLEMENTINA BLACK
-
-WITH FORTY PLATES
-
-NEW YORK
-
-E. P. DUTTON & CO.
-
-1905
-
-
-
-
-TO
-
-EUGÈNE CARRIÈRE
-
-AND
-
-ROGER MARX
-
-
-
- MY DEAR FRIENDS,
-
- One of you is a great painter, whose art and mind are
- fraternally akin to Rodin's. The other is the first French
- Art critic of our day, and has nobly defended Rodin from the
- outset.
-
- For these reasons I felt it just and natural to dedicate
- this book to both of you, as a testimony of my affection,
- given in the presence of the English public, and under the
- auspices of a name that unites all three of us in the love
- of beauty.
- C. M.
-
-
-
-
-The photographs used as illustrations to the present volume are kindly
-lent by M. Buloz, art publisher of Paris, to whom we offer our sincere
-thanks; and for five of them--very remarkable in their effect (the
-_Bellona,_ the bust of _Hugo_, the two studies of torsos for the _St.
-John the Baptist,_ and the _Fair Woman who was a Helmet-maker_) we are
-indebted to Messrs. Haweis and Coles, to whom we are no less grateful.
-The very faithful portrait of M. Rodin is the work of M. Eckert, of
-Prague.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-Auguste Rodin is certainly the contemporary French artist about whom
-most has been written, especially during the last ten years. In
-addition to innumerable articles in newspapers and reviews, several
-books have been devoted to him. In offering the present work to the
-English public I think it desirable to define exactly the aim which I
-propose to myself. To begin with, as my limits of size are somewhat
-narrow, I shall endeavour to condense into a restricted space as many
-interesting details as I can give, and to neglect nothing that may
-contribute to a clear and precise presentment of Rodin's personality
-and work. But such details have already been collected in some French
-works; and if I were to content myself with presenting a new version of
-them to the public I should have fulfilled but half of my task and my
-duty.
-
-The other half interests me far more keenly. It seems to me that
-after having told the reader all that he ought to know about a man, a
-critic should then try to make a closer and deeper study of him--come
-into contact with his ideas and his soul, form an original judgment of
-him, and in short pass from the iconographie or biographic side to the
-artistic and psychological side of his work. I have tried, therefore,
-to begin where my fellow-workers have left off and to say exactly what
-they do not appear to me to have said.
-
-The things written about Rodin have been mainly literary compositions,
-admiring and lyrical passages, to which his favourite subjects have
-served as texts. Much less has been heard about his personal ideas upon
-the technical principles of sculpture, or about his methods of work.
-The reason of this is primarily a fear of fatiguing the public, to
-whom the technicalities of an art--which involve dry explanations--are
-less interesting than the results. Moreover, it must be owned that
-few writers understand these questions. In painting, as in sculpture,
-persons who do not practise these arts, or who are not sufficiently
-familiar with the brush and the chisel to understand the secrets of
-works of art, even if not to produce them, generally prefer to avoid
-these dangerous aspects and keep to literary eulogy. A work is
-proclaimed great, and the reader is adjured to believe it so, but it is
-infinitely more difficult to give him a clear, technical explanation of
-why that work is great. Towards that quarter, therefore, I have chosen
-to turn, expecting to find there things to say that cannot be read
-elsewhere.
-
-Rodin has not merely created beautiful statues. He is an innovator, (or
-rather a renovator), in his methods of sculpture, and that fact has
-called down severe criticism on his head. A long-standing friendship,
-which I reckon as an honour, has allowed me to have numerous
-conversations with him upon the very basis of his art, upon the manner
-in which he practises it, and upon his ideas in relation to his own
-work and to ancient and modern sculpture. To these ideas the synthetic
-mind of Rodin imparts so much vigour that they are the motives of his
-work and cannot be separated from it. My desire has been to present
-them; and instead of giving the public my own opinions, in passages of
-more or less brilliancy, I wished to give those--so infinitely more
-interesting--which have been uttered by the artist himself. Often,
-in the course of this book, I shall be merely the transcriber while
-he speaks, and I think my readers will be grateful to me for that.
-Furthermore, in regard to technical points and to the way in which
-Rodin conceives composition and modelling, I may--and even, in order to
-inspire a just and necessary confidence, I should--say that when Rodin
-exhibited his _Balzac_ his first innovation in his present manner, he
-had so much faith in my friendship and in my critical powers that he
-entrusted to me the duty of explaining these delicate points in the
-French reviews,[1] and in a later lecture given at the Paris Exhibition
-of 1900, in the pavilion where he was exhibiting the whole of his
-works. These explanations, in their main lines, I have rewritten here.
-In that portion I have endeavoured to do original critical work, after
-having satisfied the biographical demands of the reader. I have avoided
-discussions of too abstract an æstheticism; I believe that everything
-can be said simply and in simple forms; I believe also that even in the
-most subtle questions of art there is an inner light that renders them
-accessible to all whose minds are sincere, and whose hearts are open to
-emotion. But I hope that, in reading this book, people will understand
-very exactly why a statue by Rodin is different from any other statue,
-and why he made it so--a matter which too few writers have explained.
-It is not so much my business to display abundantly the admiration
-which I feel, but which, no more than my friendship, shall induce me to
-turn my essay into a hymn of praise.
-
-Rodin himself is the first man to be wearied by some praises, and a
-just observation upon his methods gives him much more pleasure. Like
-every man of high intelligence, he would rather be understood than
-praised.
-
-I believe myself to be filling a gap and satisfying a wish by giving
-at the end of this volume some remarks upon the artists whom Rodin has
-influenced. He is commonly treated as "a force of nature"; "an isolated
-phenomenon"; people affect to consider him as a sort of immense
-unconscious producer. These are absurd hyperboles. Rodin is a man of
-strong will, logical, and conscious of what he is doing, and strongly
-linked to the Greeks and to the Gothic school; he has very definite
-theories, and several sculptors, of whom Rodin's extreme admirers do
-not speak, preferring to leave their divinity alone in the clouds, draw
-their inspiration from his views. I shall name some men to whom Rodin
-is much attached and in whose work he takes pleasure in following the
-development of his principles, for he knows what he wishes, whence
-he comes and whither he goes, and has a horror of being thought a
-visionary--a phenomenon, as people say in their indiscreet zeal; on the
-contrary, he holds himself to be a real classical artist, whose example
-cannot possibly be harmful. I have thought it well, also, to conclude
-by a summary of the principal works or essays dealing with Rodin, at
-least in France; and by a chronological list of his statues--that is to
-say, of course, an approximate list, for many fragments of this great
-mass of work have been destroyed by Rodin himself, especially in the
-earlier part of his career, before 1877. No such list has ever been
-made, and it may add to the interest of the present volume; I give
-it under the artist's authorisation, for I made it in his house and
-according to his advice.
-
-It is bad to repeat oneself. Yet I am anxious to say once more--and my
-insistence will be understood--that my long friendship and personal
-admiration for Auguste Rodin and my gratitude for the affectionate
-regard that he shows me count for nothing here. A study is asked
-of me, not a panegyric. When I have reckoned up the vast quantity
-of work, the maker's life, theories, talks, doings, and influence,
-very little room will be left for compliments. It will be for the
-reader to think them. Many people who would have had a difficulty
-in talking of sculpture have found Rodin a convenient subject for
-literary declamations--too many for me to wish to imitate them. Such a
-course would be pleasing neither to the artist nor to the public, and
-would content them no more than it would content me. Precise details
-about the man, the work, and the iconography; clear explanations of
-technicalities and ideas--these form all my ambition. The statement of
-facts will be enough to arouse love and admiration for Rodin; louder
-than all praises and with a stronger claim speaks the work of thirty
-years.
-
- C. M.
-
-
-[1] "The Art of Rodin," _Revue des Revues,_ Paris, 15th June, 1898; and
-lecture, 31st July, 1900.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-I. YOUTH AND EARLY WORK OF RODIN--HIS FIRST ATTEMPTS; HIS TIME AT
-CARRIER'S--HIS STAY IN BRUSSELS AND WORK THERE--"THE AGE OF BRASS" AT
-THE SALON OF 1877; THE INCIDENT ARISING IN REGARD TO IT--THE "ST. JOHN
-THE BAPTIST"; BEGINNING OF RODIN'S REPUTATION
-
-II. RODIN'S STUDIO--HIS WORKS FROM 1880 TO 1889--"EVE"; SOME BUSTS;
-THE MONUMENT TO VICTOR HUGO--"THE GATE OF HELL"--"THE DANAID"--THE
-"THOUGHT"--THE EXHIBITION OF CLAUDE MONET AND RODIN, IN 1889--THE
-MONUMENT TO CLAUDE LORRAINE AT NANCY (1892)--"THE BURGHERS OF CALAIS"
-(1888-1895)
-
-III. RODIN'S WORK FROM 1895 TO 1898--SMALL GROUPS--THE STATUE OF
-"BALZAC"--THE INCIDENT OF THE SOCIÉTÉ DES GENS DE LETTRES--THE
-"TECHNIQUE" OF THE "BALZAC"--RODIN'S IDEAS UPON MODELLING AND
-COMPOSITION--HIS OPINIONS ABOUT THE GREEKS, THE GOTHIC STYLE,
-CLASSICISM, AND MYTHOLOGICAL SUBJECTS--RODIN'S "ANTIQUE" PERIOD
-
-IV. WORKS SINCE THE "BALZAC"--SMALL WORKS IN MARBLE--PLAN OF THE
-MONUMENT TO LABOUR--DRAWINGS AND ETCHINGS
-
-V. RODIN'S PRIVATE LIFE--HIS PERSON, STUDIO, AND HOME--HIS INFLUENCE;
-SCULPTORS INSPIRED BY HIS IDEAS--RODIN'S PLACE IN THE FRENCH
-SCHOOL--HIS PRESENT POSITION IN RESPECT TO ACADEMIC SCULPTURE
-
-VI. APPENDIX--CHRONOLOGICAL LIST OF RODIN'S PRINCIPAL WORKS--LIST
-OF THE PRINCIPAL BOOKS OR ARTICLES WRITTEN ABOUT HIM--QUOTATIONS
-REFERRING TO HIM--AN OPINION OF EUGÈNE CARRIÈRE'S; AN OPINION OF
-HENLEY'S--VARIOUS NOTES
-
-INDEX 141
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
- ETERNAL SPRING (photogravure) _Frontispiece_
- THE AGE OF BRASS
- THE AGE OF BRASS
- ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST PREACHING
- EVE
- SKETCH FOR THE MONUMENT TO THE DEFENDERS OF THE NATION
- UGOLINO AND HIS CHILDREN
- BELLONA
- BELLONA
- VICTOR HUGO (dry-point)
- VICTOR HUGO (dry-point)
- BUST OF VICTOR HUGO
- MONUMENT TO VICTOR HUGO (fragment)
- VICTOR HUGO (fragment)
- NEREIDS (group at base of the Victor Hugo monument)
- SHADES (for the top of _The Gate of Hell_)
- THE THINKER
- DANAID
- DANAID
- THOUGHT
- THE FAIR HELMET-MAKER
- A NYMPH (bronze)
- PUVIS DE CHAVANNES
- JEAN PAUL LAURENS
- BUST OF MADAME V.
- THE BURGHERS OF CALAIS
- A BURGHER OF CALAIS
- A BURGHER OF CALAIS
- A BURGHER OF CALAIS
- BALZAC
- BALZAC
- PRIMITIVE MAN
- YOUNG WOMAN BETWEEN GOOD AND EVIL COUNSEL
- IRIS
- NUDE STUDY
- AUGUSTE RODIN
- CORNER OF RODIN'S STUDIO AT MEUDON
- CORNER OF RODIN'S STUDIO AT MEUDON
- STUDY IN BRONZE FOR THE "BALZAC"
- NUDE FIGURE (photographed in the open air, at twilight,
- in the garden in Meudon)
-
-
-
-
-AUGUSTE RODIN
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-
-YOUTH AND EARLY WORK OF RODIN--HIS FIRST ATTEMPTS; HIS TIME AT
-CARRIER'S--HIS STAY IN BRUSSELS AND WORK THERE--"THE AGE OF BRASS" AT
-THE SALON OF 1877; THE INCIDENT ARISING IN REGARD TO IT--THE "ST. JOHN
-THE BAPTIST"; BEGINNING OF RODIN'S REPUTATION
-
-
-Auguste Rodin was born in Paris, in the Val de Grâce quarter, on the
-14th of November, 1840, of a family of humble employés. The child
-at first attended a day-school in the Rue Saint Jacques, then went
-to a boarding-school at Beauvais, kept by his uncle. At fourteen he
-returned to Paris and entered the school of art in the Rue de l'École
-de Médecine. A period of desperate industry at once set in for him.
-
-In addition to the lessons of this little school, where from eight
-to twelve young Rodin learned the elements of drawing, and later on
-of modelling, copied drawings in crayons and reliefs in the Louis
-XVI. style, he went twice a week to Barye's classes at the Jardin
-des Plantes; "Barye," he says, "did not teach us much; he was always
-worried and tired when he came, and always told us that it was very
-good." But Rodin, together with Barye's son and some other lads, had
-arranged a sort of studio for themselves in a cellar of the museum,
-making seats of tree-trunks, and already attempting sculpture. At
-six in the morning he used to go to draw animals, then he copied the
-anatomical objects in the Museum. He remembers that, being too poor to
-buy an anatomy of the horse, he copied it piece by piece. After Barye's
-class, or the classes of the Rue de l'École de Médecine, he would lunch
-on a bit of bread and some chocolate and hasten to the Louvre, and
-in the evenings he would go to draw and study at the Gobelins. Then
-he worked for a maker of ornaments, since it was necessary to earn a
-living. From fourteen to seventeen years old Rodin led this fevered
-existence. "In those three years," he has often repeated to me, "I came
-to understand the meaning of a drawing from the life, the synthesis of
-my art, and the rhythm of animals. I remember that a companion of those
-days,[1] of whom I have since lost sight, made me see, in a couple
-of hours, on a very true and simple principle, an observation of the
-necessary equilibria of movement not taught in the schools, the secret
-of the plans of a figure. That lesson has influenced my whole life. As
-for the ornament-maker, in whose workshop I earned a scanty wage, I
-long deplored being constrained to do so, but I have since thought with
-affection of it, understanding that there are as many sources of beauty
-in ornament as in the face."
-
-His work at the ornament-maker's allowed Rodin to earn his living as an
-art-worker and as a strenuous and silent student; and he vegetated in
-this manner until he attained his twenty-fourth year, never ceasing,
-in spite of his poverty and of his daily labour, to work at sculpture.
-Then he offered himself as an assistant and pupil at the studio of
-Carrier-Belleuse. Carrier-Belleuse was then at the full height of his
-reputation as an elegant sculptor, whose real gifts of spontaneous
-invention were being rendered insipid by his desire to please. Rodin
-remained six years at Carrier-Belleuse's, and worked there without
-gaining much instruction. But he meditated and taught himself. From his
-twenty-fourth year dates the head known as _The Man with the Broken
-Nose_, which is a masterly work, strongly inspired by the antique,
-and already foreshadowing all his future. This clay head, which the
-young man sent to the Salon of 1864, was refused. From time to time
-Rodin tried to compete for admission to the École des Beaux Arts; he
-was thrice refused. This disgusted him with the usual career upon which
-his lack of any income invited him to enter. His ideas, his independent
-temper, his presentiments, and his love of an art personal to himself,
-showed him that he would never gain anything, and never have the
-academic discipline necessary to succeed. He took advantage of an
-opportunity. Carrier-Belleuse had a commission at Brussels and did not
-care to execute it; Rodin got permission from his master, who esteemed
-him, to undertake it in his name, and, after having spent six years
-in the fashionable sculptor's studio, he went to Brussels, where Rude
-had already spent a considerable time. He was destined to remain there
-until 1877, working with the Belgian sculptor, Van Rasbourg, at the
-pediment of the Bourse, where his sign manual may still be seen, as it
-may upon some caryatids of a house on the Boulevard d'Anspach and upon
-some other works.
-
-Of this exile at Brussels we know that the artist retains only kindly
-memories, but he is too sparing of personal details to enable us to
-analyse with any certainty this part of the life of a tenacious,
-concentrated man who, entirely occupied with his dreams, with
-indefatigable study, the anxieties of poverty, and his lonely pride,
-had no desire to be known.
-
-"I worked very hard over there," he says, to sum up the matter. It
-is certain that Rodin was at this time already in possession of
-that formidable will which led to his success, and also of that
-disdainful obstinacy which prefers obscurity and lack of success to
-any compromise. He speaks little or not at all of the drama that was
-being worked out in him at this time, or of the way in which he refined
-and cultivated his perceptions, nor of the painting lessons that he
-took of Lecoq de Boisbaudron, in company of Alphonse Legros, who
-became his intimate friend; but this influence of Lecoq de Boisbaudron
-must not pass unnoted. It does great honour to that master teacher
-who has formed so many eminent modern artists. His seven years' stay
-at Brussels allowed Rodin to live modestly but decently, amid quiet
-surroundings, to reflect, and to shape himself intellectually; it was a
-sort of spiritual retreat that did him good, apart from the fact that
-he gained a thorough knowledge of the Flemish Primitives and of the
-Gothic masters who were so strongly to influence him. No biography,
-however, could render comprehensible the way in which, for example, the
-brain of a low-born and poor child was able, amid poverty and incessant
-manual labour, to grow into the wide and deep brain of a thinker
-familiar with the synthesis of art; these things are the secrets of
-personality.
-
-[Illustration: THE AGE OF BRASS]
-
-Rodin was destined to emerge suddenly from obscurity at the age of
-thirty-seven, that is to say, at a time of life when many men think
-themselves hopelessly sacrificed, and when he had already produced
-much and suffered much; for it may be said that the whole of his work
-from 1855-75 is unknown and lost, and yet what labour it represents!
-Except _The Man with the Broken Nose_, none of it is ever mentioned;
-the pediment of the Bourse at Brussels is crumbling away, time is
-devouring Rodin's work upon it no less than Van Rasbourg's; he will not
-speak of the many figures that he made to the order of Carrier-Belleuse
-and interpreted according to his own free inspiration; and he only
-occasionally alludes to a large figure that was broken in a household
-removal, and was, in his opinion, one of the best he ever made in his
-life. In 1876 _The Man with the Broken Nose,_ in marble, was admitted
-to the Salon. This determined Rodin in 1877 to send in his statue, _The
-Age of Brass,_ and this gave rise to an incident, the very injustice of
-which was to bring him into notice.
-
-The jury,[2] astonished by this work, admitted it, but accused the
-artist of having taken a cast from life, so perfect was the modelling.
-The practice of taking a cast from the life is unhappily frequent,
-and we know he praised academicians who employ this artistic fraud
-without any scruple. Rodin protested. He had had a Belgian soldier for
-his model in Brussels: he had photographs taken of him and sent them
-to the jury, who did not even open the packet, and persisted in the
-allegations. Three sculptors, however, Desbois, Fagel, and Lefèvre, who
-thenceforward became Rodin's friends, protested in his favour, some
-critics spoke of the affair, and Rodin's work made so much impression
-that the secretary of the Fine Arts, Turquet, bought _The Age of Brass_
-(which stood for a long time in the Luxembourg Gardens and is now in
-the museum).
-
-Rodin waited until 1880 to exhibit _St. John the Baptist_. Meanwhile
-Turquet had conceived a friendship for him and wished to wipe out the
-unjust accusation brought against _The Age of Brass._ The inspectors
-of the Fine Arts department disowned the purchase of that work and
-declared it cast from life. Rodin, discouraged, remained silent; a
-chance saved him. As he was continuing to look for work in order to
-support his young wife and himself, and to defray the expenses of his
-art, he chanced to be executing a group of children in a composition
-for the sculptor Boucher. His facility was prodigious; Boucher saw
-him improvise the group in a few hours and went, thunderstruck, to
-tell some of his friends. He had the honesty to declare that such
-a man, having done thus before his own eyes, was capable of making
-_The Age of Brass._ Chapu, Thomas, Falguière, Delaplanche, Chaplin,
-Carrier-Belleuse, and Paul Dubois insisted loyally, and Rodin's cause
-was won. Turquet, delighted, and free to act, bought the _St. John the
-Baptist_ and gave Rodin a commission. Then the artist answered: "I
-am ready to fulfil it. But to prove surely that I do not take casts
-from the life I will make little bas-reliefs--an immense work with
-small figures, and I think of taking the subject from Dante." This
-was the origin of that celebrated _Gate of Hell_, which is not yet
-completed, and which, continually handled afresh, has finally become
-the central motive of all Rodin's dreams, the storehouse of his ideas
-and researches.
-
-[Illustration: THE AGE OF BRASS]
-
-From that time forward (1880) Rodin was what he is to-day; he had
-emerged, once for all, from obscurity, and went on to display without
-interruption and without hesitation the succession of works that have
-rendered him celebrated. He knew his path, his method, his field of
-thought. From the age of sixteen to that of forty he had, by unknown
-persistent labour, been ripening his individuality. And his work,
-from _The Age of Brass_ to the _Balzac_, is but a visible development
-of that hidden period. The period from the _Balzac_ to our own day
-testifies to a new theory that he has framed. But one may say that
-the Rodin of the years from 1877 to 1897 was entirely contained in
-the unknown man of the preceding period. It was, indeed, that slow
-preparation that gave to the revelation of the works that appearance
-of certainty, of sudden mastery, which so struck people's minds. We
-are accustomed to see artists make youthful successes with works of
-brilliant promise, then we follow their course and see them growing
-greater. Rodin came to light in twenty-four hours. He was thought to
-be a young beginner; his past struggle was unknown; people were aware
-of him only when he had done with scruples and had, as he says, "made
-peace with himself." From this fact came his prestige. From it came
-also his well-defined attitude in regard to academic art.
-
-[Illustration: ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST PREACHING]
-
-We need to recall the graceful, effeminate, and conventional statuary
-of the generation from 1865 to 1875 in order to comprehend fully
-what _The Age of Brass_ and _St. John the Baptist_ brought into the
-exhibitions when they made their appearance there. Rough truth, a sense
-of movement, an intense realism, an absolute scorn of the pleasing, a
-lofty style, a deep feeling of organic life, power due to the eager
-love of form, of muscular formation and physical activity; all these
-things inevitably shocked the gentle sculptors who were enamoured of
-the academic style and of mythology. Moreover, Rodin was unknown;
-he had no claim, knew nobody, had never asked for anything, and was
-a son of the people. That Carrier-Belleuse's former workman should
-take upon himself to make statues all by himself aroused scorn. His
-technical skill was so great that there could be no possibility of
-denying it. Therefore, in spite, the accusation of casting from the
-life was invented. The accusers did not reflect upon the splendid
-testimonial that would be given to the artist if he should succeed in
-proving that his skill alone had created this perfection. The amusing
-thing is that the same people who declared this skill too great to be
-anything but a reproduction, accused Rodin, twenty years later, over
-his _Balzac_, of not knowing his craft! Apart from this question of
-fact, and these professional jealousies, the style of these works could
-not fail to displease. In them there was already a sort of symbolic
-and savage beauty, which has become a characteristic of Rodin's art.
-The pained, awakening movement of the man in _The Age of Brass_, the
-gesture of _St. John the Baptist_, and still more his wild face with
-its open mouth, were so much outside the usual conventions as to make
-everybody feel that here was an artist resolved to take no account of
-the "École" and its principles. These two splendid studies of the nude
-already contained a very special thought. Rodin, therefore, was hated
-in the first place as a man who would be revolutionary. He was hated
-because he was powerful, because he emerged suddenly from obscurity,
-and because he was felt to possess an obstinate individuality. It was
-also for these very reasons that warm sympathies went out to Rodin
-from among artists opposed to the spirit of the "École," and from
-independent writers who divined in him a man capable of expressing in
-his art thoughts and emotions that had ceased to be found in art.
-
-[Illustration: EVE.]
-
-
-[1] This unknown student was called Constant Simon. Rodin remembers him
-as a remarkable man.
-
-[2] The hanging committee of the Salon is called a "jury."--TRANS.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-RODIN'S STUDIO--HIS WORKS FROM 1880 TO 1889--"EVE"; SOME BUSTS;
-THE MONUMENT TO VICTOR HUGO--"THE GATE OF HELL"--"THE DANAID"--THE
-"THOUGHT"--THE EXHIBITION OF CLAUDE MONET AND RODIN, IN 1889--THE
-MONUMENT TO CLAUDE LORRAINE AT NANCY (1892)--"THE BURGHERS OF CALAIS"
-(1888-1895)
-
-
-Rodin's previous works, from 1881 to 1889, had been produced in modest
-abodes in the Rue des Fourneaux and the Boulevard de Vaugirard, and
-later, in a little studio, granted by the Government, at the Dépôt des
-Marbres, in the Rue de l'Université, where a certain number of studios
-are given to sculptors. From 1889 onwards the Government granted Rodin
-two larger studios there, which he still occupies. At a later date
-he also had, at his own expense, a studio in an odd corner of the
-Boulevard d'Italie, at a place called the Clos Payen, besides a house
-at Sèvres, and eventually one at Meudon, in which he still lives and of
-which I shall speak again. Among these were distributed his studies
-and his finished works: _The Gate of Hell_ was sketched in at the Rue
-de l'Université, and there, too, Rodin's assistants are at work upon
-his present groups.
-
-[Illustration: SKETCH FOR A COMPETITION. MONUMENT TO THE DEFENDERS OF
-THE COUNTRY]
-
-From 1879 Rodin worked at Sèvres, having been introduced by
-Carrier-Belleuse, and a vase decorated by him may be seen there.
-In 1880 he made a fine competitive design for the _Monument to the
-Defenders of the Nation,_ which was not accepted. In 1881 he made a
-figure of _Adam_, which he destroyed, and an _Eve,_ which must be
-reckoned among his noblest creations--an _Eve_ ashamed of her faults,
-bowed down by terror, vaguely tormented less by remorse for her sin
-than by the idea of having created beings for future sorrow. This
-_Eve_ is a bronze of formidable appearance and all Rodin breathes in
-it. As in the _St. John the Baptist,_ we feel the effect of a definite
-conception of sculpture, but here the design is more spiritual and the
-scheme of modelling simpler and larger. From that time onward we shall
-find the artist producing regularly, putting forth a peaceful power,
-and working in complete possession of himself, not free certainly
-from doubts and searchings, but allowing nothing of the sort to be
-seen. Rodin's way of working is very peculiar; he does not begin one
-piece of work, carry it to its conclusion, and then devote himself to
-another. He has had from the outset a certain number of thoughts that
-correspond to forms, and although he has only shown his works one after
-another, he has nevertheless elaborated them side by side, working at
-them simultaneously and modifying them one by another. Thus _The Gate
-of Hell_ has been made and remade for more than twenty years; thus
-the monument to Hugo, not yet handed over, goes back, by the sketches
-for it, to 1886; while the studies for _The Burghers of Calais_ date
-from 1888, though the monument was only completed in 1895; thus, too,
-among the little groups on which Rodin is still at work, are many that
-have grown out of rough sketches made fifteen years ago. Rodin has a
-store of ideas and emotions dear to him, upon which he has patiently
-meditated, which he has promised himself to execute, and which he
-brings to ripeness in silence, remaining throughout long years without
-appearing to concern himself with them. "Strength and patience" might
-be his characteristic motto. Like all great artists, he thought out
-the essential lines of his work at once, lines that I shall define at
-the end of this book. His is a synthetic and generalising mind, which
-can only begin its active course after slow meditation, and conceives
-no isolated thing; spontaneous and at the same time prudent. He had
-that time of meditation at Brussels, not hastening to produce, not
-permitting himself to express an idea until he had prepared in detail
-the technical expression, the necessities of the craftsman.
-
-[Illustration: UGOLINO AND HIS CHILDREN]
-
-The _Ugolino_, a cast, of which Rodin exhibited the first sketch in
-1882, is the first sign of that preoccupation with Dante, which was to
-be shown in all his later work. He has read comparatively few things,
-and that designedly; he attaches himself strongly to a few great and
-profound works, and meditates upon them indefatigably. His whole
-symbolic imagination has been fed by Dante and his whole sensuous
-imagination by Baudelaire. These two gloomy poets have impressed him,
-and it may be said that he has absorbed them. Almost all Rodin's great
-symbolic figures refer to the _Inferno_, and all his little groups of
-lovers have the neurotic subtlety, the refined, homesick melancholy
-of the _Fleurs du Mal._ He has a constant need to evolve from realism
-to general ideas, from thought to delight or sorrow, and the ideal of
-Dante or of Baudelaire is strangely mingled in him with love of the
-antique and worship of mythology. It is, indeed, this quite individual
-fusion that forms the basis of his personality. The _Ugolino_, which
-was exhibited, first alone and then with his dying children, over
-whom he is crouching, haggard and already almost like a wild beast,
-is a tragic and powerful work. The same year Rodin produced the bust
-of Alphonse Legros, which has taken so high a place in England in
-the opinion of the best judges, and in that of the lamented W. E.
-Henley, whose penetrating criticism paid homage from the first to our
-sculptor's art.
-
-[Illustration: BELLONA _Page_ 17]
-
-[Illustration: BELLONA]
-
-_The Genius of War,_ the _Monument to General Lynch_, and the very
-curious _Bellona,_ date from 1883; the _President Vicunha_[1] and a
-_Bust of a Young Woman_, from 1884. This was rather a period of groping
-than of production; Rodin was continuing his studies, and becoming
-more confirmed in his technical methods. We must go on to the year
-1885 to reach the revelation of three of his finest sculptures--the
-three busts of _Dalou_, _Victor Hugo,_ and _Antonin Proust_, which
-powerfully declare his personality. These are works that are not
-disputable, that cannot be accused of having a "literary" intention,
-mere bits of sculpture giving evidence of mastery and showing surfaces,
-planes, and high lights worthy of the very finest busts of the French
-school. As time goes by, the ideas, the philosophy, the symbolism,
-the "dramatisation" of Rodin's compositions may come to be disputed,
-or exact comprehension of them may be lost; but works like these will
-always, by their mere professional worth, bear witness for him. Life,
-thought, strength, and character are carried as far as is possible. The
-bust of Hugo was the outcome of some few studies that the artist was
-able to make from the life. Hugo declared David of Angers to have made
-so good a bust of him that he considered it unnecessary ever to sit
-again. Rodin wished to obtain sittings, but failed; the poet admitted
-him to his table, and merely said to him, "Come when you like, observe
-me ... and do what you can." At table Rodin took sketches of Hugo in
-cigarette-paper books; he had a stand and some clay in the ante-room,
-and from time to time he would run in to note down anything that had
-just struck him.
-
-VICTOR HUGO. (DRY POINT)
-
-VICTOR HUGO. (DRY-POINT)
-
-In this manner was that admirable bust completed, which (with the two
-etchings here reproduced) was the only material of which Rodin could
-make use for the Hugo with the bowed head of his future monument, the
-commission for which was given him by the Government after the death of
-the national poet in 1883, and which is on the eve of completion.
-
-The next year (1886) Rodin exhibited the scheme of the monument itself,
-which has since undergone several variations, but of which the central
-theme is always as follows: Hugo, naked and half-draped, like a god,
-is seated on a rock at the edge of the sea. With his outstretched left
-arm he makes a silencing gesture towards the sea and the Nereids,
-and thus begs them to let him listen to the Muse of his Inner Voice,
-who rises, pensively, behind him, and to the Muse of Anger, who,
-crouched on a rock above his head, seems ready to fly up into the
-sky. This Muse may also be interpreted as an Ins, the messenger of
-the voices of the elements, and the Muse of the Inner Voice is also
-called Meditation. She is of the greatest beauty; hers is one of the
-figures in which, before the _Balzac_, Rodin indicates his new method
-of amplifying the relief and systematically altering the proportions,
-in order--according to an idea which I shall analyse in detail in
-the next chapter--to secure a decorative effect. Nothing can be more
-expressive and more supernatural than the harmonious sadness of this
-great drooping shape; it is really a soul incarnated in a movement of
-modesty and secret contemplation that disturbs and moves us as we gaze.
-The Hugo himself is truly Olympian in the majesty of his gesture, the
-vastness of his heroic nudity, and the magic of the shadow that bathes
-his face bowed partly down over his breast; and the monument as a whole
-is of magnificent decorative unity. There are to be two monuments
-to Victor Hugo, one for the Pantheon, the other for the Luxembourg
-Gardens, and they are to have slight variations, not in the attitude
-of Hugo himself, but in the significance and style of the adjacent
-figures. These two monuments, however, have not been accepted without
-great difficulties caused by the very nature of Rodin's conception; and
-the fact that they are accepted has not prevented the Place Victor Hugo
-from being disfigured by a hideous and gigantic monument, the work of
-Barrias, which fills the place of those that Rodin had not completed.
-Rodin's slowness, which arises from the scrupulous circumspection
-of his mind--never satisfied with itself--and from his habit of working
-simultaneously at several subjects, has always contributed towards
-driving away official commissions from him; while the jealousy of
-his fellows and the exceptional character of his work have further
-helped to bring about strained relations between him and the official
-circle. Rodin does not care about pleasing or about being understood
-by everybody, and he has no idea of concessions. Thus almost all his
-important works have given rise to incidents likely to disturb his
-peace and hinder his work.
-
-[Illustration: BUST OF VICTOR HUGO.]
-
-[Illustration: VICTOR HUGO MONUMENT. (A FRAGMENT)]
-
-[Illustration: VICTOR HUGO. (A FRAGMENT)]
-
-Together with the sketch of the Hugo monument, a bust of Henry Becque,
-and a curious etching made from it, Rodin exhibited in 1886 the first
-drawings belonging to _The Gate of Hell_, or at least to the work which
-people have agreed to call by that title. I have already related the
-origin of that Government commission. In the beginning Rodin had been
-asked to make a door in high-relief, intended for the Musée des Arts
-Décoratifs. But the sculptor's imagination, beset by ideas of Dante,
-soon deviated from the original scheme. The door really exists in the
-studio of the Rue de l'Université, under the aspect of a vast rough
-model in plaster and beams, in the very simple shape of a two-leaved
-door 19 ½ feet high, with a frieze, a tympanum, and two lateral
-capitals. It was, at first, to have been surmounted by the two figures
-of Adam and Eve, but Rodin gave them up. He now seems determined to
-place the _Shades_, here reproduced, in the highest plane.[2] On the
-uppermost beam _The Thinker_ is to be seated. In the panels of the
-door and upon the wide uprights are enshrined figures--to the number
-of over a hundred--detached in high-relief, exactly as upon the gates
-of the Baptistery in Florence, which Rodin has, quite simply, taken
-as his model. These figures were, at first, direct interpretations
-from Dante, in particular Paolo and Francesca da Rimini and divers
-inhabitants of the Inferno. Then Rodin intermingled figures due solely
-to his inspirations from Baudelaire and to his own sharp perception
-of tragic perversity. He enlarged Dante's conception as he modernised
-it, and has ended by making this door into what he smilingly calls
-"my Noah's Ark." That means that he is continually putting in little
-figures which replace others; there, plastered into the niches left
-by unfinished figures, he places everything that he improvises,
-everything that seems to him to correspond in character and subject
-with that vast confusion of human passions. The size of these figures
-is greatly restricted; the largest scarcely exceed thirty-nine inches
-in height. The dimensions of the final rendering, however, still remain
-to be fixed. The splendid figure called _The Thinker_ is carried out
-in bronze larger than life, and Rodin is credited with an intention of
-bringing up all the other figures to the same dimensions, which would
-represent an unheard-of outlay and a gate nearly a hundred feet high--a
-Cyclopean work indeed! _The Thinker_, who has been so called on account
-of the likeness between his attitude and that of Michael Angelo's
-_Pensieroso_, is much more truly an image, with his stunted body and
-a primitive man's face, of the cave-dweller, the prognathous savage
-beholding the crimes and passions of his progeny unroll themselves
-below him. Immediately beneath him may be seen the most celebrated
-characters of the Dante cycle, notably the lovers of Rimini entwined
-and falling into hell.[3] Then as we descend towards the ground the
-figures become more independent of the subject, more personally
-invented by the artist, and at the foot we find "women damned," such as
-Baudelaire conceived, amid characters from heathen mythology.
-
-[Illustration: NEREIDS (Group at the base of the Victor Hugo monument.)]
-
-It may thus be said that, although, perhaps, the celebrated doorway
-may never be finished, it is a storehouse of Rodin's creations. It
-stands by him as a theme for inspirations, and he brings into it a
-whole category of thoughts and works, never troubling himself about the
-architecture or the actual scheme. He will be for ever improvising some
-little figure, shaping the notation of some feeling, idea, or form, and
-this he plants in his door, studies it against the other figures, then
-takes it out again, and if need be, breaks it up and uses the fragments
-for other attempts. Many of these little figures have developed into
-important separate groups. Rodin is ruled primarily by the need to
-create and to satisfy an irresistible vocation; he cares little what
-may be the ultimate transformation of his inventions, and his sculpture
-is, furthermore, so conceived that it may be executed on a large scale
-or a small; this is indeed so much the case that it is often impossible
-to judge from a photograph what are the dimensions.
-
-
-[Illustration: SHADES (For the top of "The Gate of Hell".)]
-
-_The Gate of Hell_ might therefore better be called "the Pandemonium,"
-or some quite other name. If it were to be carried out it could not
-contain all the figures destined for it by the artist. There they
-stand, innumerable, ranged on shelves beside the rough model of the
-door, representing the entire evolution of Rodin's inspiration, and
-forming what I call, with his consent, "the diary of his life as a
-sculptor." To enumerate these figures and groups would take too long;
-suffice to say that the larger part of Rodin's small marbles and
-bronzes are but completions of these sketches, and that on account of
-the essentially decorative character of the outlines and the intense
-originality of the proportion and balance of the figures, they can
-be conceived either as statuettes or as lifesized works. Such as it
-is, _The Gate of Hell_ is the plan of a piece of work unique in the
-sculpture of modern days, a plan slowly elaborated, and of which every
-detail has been foreseen and analysed for years. No one has dared to
-undertake so audacious an assemblage of figures upon such a scheme, and
-the scheme is present to Rodin in its entirety. He by no means forgets
-the decorative effect nor the harmonious aspects, the concords that the
-gate should have, and if ever Government should require him to deliver
-his work he would be able to do so without delay. Twenty years in the
-studio have matured it in his mind. The work that Dante inspired has
-assumed a more general significance. Low-relief, high-relief, figures
-standing free, groups, single figures, all the styles of sculpture are
-gathered into the symphony of a throng, lost amid whirling mists of
-hell and converging towards the figure of the Thinker. The conception
-embraces centuries. Ugolino is there, and so are centaurs, female
-fauns, satyrs, and creatures dreamed of by Baudelaire, abstract
-personifications of vices--in particular, there is the extraordinary
-group of the miser dying of hunger over his treasure beside a
-prostitute _(Avarice and Lewdness)._ The Thinker, in his austere nudity
-and pensive strength, is at one and the same time the alarmed Adam,
-the implacable Dante, and the compassionate Virgil of this frightful
-unrestrained humanity, but he is, above all, the ancestor, the first
-man, simple and unconscious, looking down on what he has begotten. The
-symbolism and philosophy of the artist are independent of any religious
-doctrine; his spiritual ardour excels in setting free the symbols of
-the various creeds, and he is supported mainly by deep and incessant
-consultation of nature, and by his exceptional sense of expression
-in movements. He attains the decorative harmony of his work not by
-additions, but by systematic suppressions, as the Gothic artists and
-those of the Renascence did.
-
-[Illustration: THE THINKER]
-
-_The Gate of Hell_ is the outcome of studies made by Rodin from the
-Gothic sculptors, during his stay in Brussels. In this, and in _The
-Burghers of Calais_, he resumes the deep influence that he there
-underwent. As to the influence that the antique had upon him, that only
-showed itself later, in his smaller works in marble, and especially
-in the _Balzac_ and recent productions. The _Gate_ corresponds to the
-period in which Rodin's great aim was to create, through intensity
-of movement and originality of attitude and outline, a _new system
-of the dramatic_ in his art, which the taste of the day had frozen
-into a false "neo-Greek nobility," obtained by immobility, by inertia
-of outline, and by a fear of seeing too living a movement break the
-general harmony. To seek a fresh harmony in the very study of movement,
-to create, side by side with _static_ art, a _dynamic_ art, such, in a
-brief formula, was Rodin's idea.
-
-He was shortly to exhibit a work which was still more significant of
-the thoughts with which he was busy. For, though I have spoken at once
-of that famous _Gate,_ which is the _leit-motiv_ of Rodin's art, it
-must be remembered that in 1886 nothing was known of it but drawings.
-Only by degrees have groups and fragments of it been seen, and the
-work itself has never left the studio in the Rue de l'Université. It
-was _The Burghers of Calais_ which revealed most clearly to the public
-Rodin's capabilities in the way of style and of composing a whole work,
-and I will speak of the _Burghers_ in this chapter, although the work
-was not completed until 1892 and was not set up in Calais until 1895.
-
-[Illustration: DANAID]
-
-[Illustration: DANAID]
-
-[Illustration: THOUGHT]
-
-In 1887 we may note _Perseus and the Gorgon_, and a marble _Head of
-the beheaded St. John_, which belongs to the Marchioness of Carcano.
-In 1888 was exhibited the exquisite _Danaid,_ one of the most tender
-female figures that were ever lovingly moulded by this sculptor of
-the energetic, and one which has a subtle delicacy of soul that seems
-strangely placed between two works of power. At the same time a naked
-figure was also shown at the Exposition des Beaux Arts, in Brussels--a
-_Man Walking_, which was no other than one of the _Burghers,_ and
-of which the robust execution made an impression. The year 1889 marked
-an increase of the artist's activity. He was busy upon preparatory work
-for the monument of Claude Lorraine, which he had been commissioned to
-make for Nancy. He was going on with _The Gate of Hell._ He completed a
-statue of Bastien-Lepage for the cemetery of Damvilliers. He began upon
-the busts of the art critics, Octave Mirbeau and Roger Marx, finished
-an admirable little _Dream-Group_ in marble, in which a young man is
-lying back and trying to hold fast a sphinx-woman who takes flight,
-wild and fateful. An impressionist sketch of _Hecuba_, crouching down
-and shrieking, and _Thought_, in marble, completed the record of this
-well-filled year. _Thought,_ a proud, sweet head rising from a block,
-is one of Rodin's best known works and the very symbol of his art.
-It occupies a place in the Museum of the Luxembourg, where it is in
-company with _The Danaid,_ the _St. John, The Kiss,_ a masterly female
-bust, and a bronze statuette. _The Fair Helmet-Maker,_ from Villon's
-poem, is a work on a very small scale, but containing the depth and
-strength of tragedy--the whole drama of a human body's ruin.
-
-[Illustration: THE FAIR HELMET-MAKER]
-
-
-In 1889 Rodin and Claude Monet together held, in the George Petit
-gallery, an exhibition which has remained famous and which united
-our two greatest artists. Rodin sent to it the _Women Damned_, the
-_Beheaded St. John_, some _Fauns_ and _Bacchantes_, _Bastien-Lepage,_
-in all some thirty works, among which was _The Burghers of Calais_,
-shown complete for the first time. The sensation produced was immense.
-Rodin now tasted unmistakable fame, and his reputation spread all over
-the world. This fame, however, did not disarm the official circle, and
-not until the last three or four years have the critics been unanimous
-in their praise of the great French sculptor, whose every important
-work has given occasion to a battle, because its beauty arose from
-principles opposed to the whole system taught in the schools.
-
-The five following years were marked by various works which did not,
-however, interfere with the threefold parallel continuation of the
-_Victor Hugo, The Burghers of Calais,_ and _The Gate of Hell_, which
-were exhibited in various states in the Salon. Rodin considers it his
-duty, indeed, to submit to the public the phases of his work, rough
-attempts, clay, marbles, or bronzes, before the final completion; and
-understanding very well that his style is, or seems to be difficult,
-he thus explains himself to the public in the exhibitions, and allows
-people to follow the stages through which his thought passes. In
-addition to these works may be noted, for the year 1890, the bust
-of a young woman, in silver, _Brother and Sister_, bronze, and the
-_Torso_ of St. John the Baptist. In 1891, _The Caryatid_, a marble
-figure of a young woman with a stone upon her shoulder, the group of
-_The Young Mother_ (first bronze and then marble), and _A Nymph._ In
-1892, the busts of _Rochefort_ and of _Puvis de Chavannes,_ which, with
-those of _Dalou, Jean Paul Laurens_, _Hugo_, and _Falguière,_ form
-an incomparable series from Rodin's hand of portraits that surpass
-all modern French sculpture, and are admirable alike in execution and
-expression. The _Puvis de Chavannes_ is perhaps the finest; it is a
-work that does not pall even beside Donatello himself. In 1892 the
-_Burghers_ and the _Claude Lorraine_ were completed. The _Burghers_
-waited three years for their setting up, but the monument to Lorraine
-was inaugurated immediately, thanks to the devoted efforts of that
-great art-worker in glass, Émile Gallé, and of Roger Marx, who by
-his writings and his incessant activity has had a most noble effect
-upon modern French art. These two eminent men, both natives of Nancy,
-enforced the acceptance of the work. The monument consists of a statue
-of Lorraine, standing, palette in hand, his head raised eagerly towards
-the east, and of a pedestal from which Apollo and his rearing horses
-stand out in splendid high-relief. Thus did Rodin seek to pay homage
-to the master-painter who adored movement in light, by acclaiming
-both these in his turn. Fault has been found with the importance of
-the pedestal in comparison with the statue, the objectors failing to
-understand that this allegory of Apollo incarnated the very soul of
-the great artist whose effigy towered over the whole work, and that
-this whole could not be dissevered. The idea animating this composition
-was criticised by the authorities. Here, once more, Rodin with his
-symbolic vision, his tendency to bold simplifications of the general,
-synthetic idea, was found disturbing. He was asked for the _sculptured
-portrait_ of a man, and he preferred to give prominence to a symbol
-that expressed the dream and the essential genius of that man, the
-sun-painter--an idea which was logical, but which ran counter to
-the received prejudice as to portrait statues. The propagandist
-persistence of Gallé and Roger Marx, however, convinced the people of
-Nancy, who are now very proud of their monument. The horses and the
-Apollo are the most living, palpitating, and lyrical things that Rodin
-has produced.
-
-[Illustration: PUVIS DE CHAVANNES]
-
-[Illustration: JEAN-PAUL LAURENS]
-
-In 1893 Rodin made the bust of Madame _Séverine,_ the medallion of
-_César Franck,_ and several works in marble; _Galatea, The Death of
-Adonis, The Education of Achilles,_ and _The Wave._ From 1894 date
-the _Eternal Spring,_ one of his tenderest and purest works, besides
-an _Orpheus and Eurydice,_ an _Adonis and Venus,_ and finally _Christ
-and the Magdalen._ For, by degrees, he was returning to religious and
-mythological subjects, after having expressed only general symbols
-or pieces of pure realism; and I shall have to call attention at a
-later point to the original manner in which Rodin was bold enough to
-interpret these subjects which the academic classicism seemed to have
-worn out and left insipid for ever.
-
-The year 1895 at last beheld the inauguration, on the 3rd of June, of
-_The Burghers of Calais_ at Calais. To the same year belongs another
-fine work in marble: _Illusion, the Daughter of Icarus,_ besides
-a vigorous bronze, _The Crouching Man,_ a medallion of _Octave
-Mirbeau,_ and--at this early date--some nude studies for the _Balzac,_
-for the _Balzac_ was studied minutely in the nude, a point of which
-many people know nothing, before appearing draped in the famous
-dressing-gown which was destined, in 1898, to arouse so much clamour.
-
-[Illustration: BUST OF MADAME V.]
-
-The _Burghers_ were set up, by subscription, in a square in Calais.[4]
-
-The monument is one in which Rodin has deliberately departed from
-all the rules of official art. These require that the effect should
-be pursued primarily by a compact grouping, the same thought being
-translated by the same gesture from all the persons. Rodin, on the
-contrary, desired to leave their full individuality to his six burghers
-going in their shirts and with halters on their necks to surrender
-themselves to King Edward, and he has isolated them on their one
-base. These six men are walking, one behind the other, two by two,
-half naked and miserable, with their emaciated faces--men besieged,
-sacrificed. One devotion unites them in the name of their town's
-salvation, but their characters and their thoughts remain distinct,
-and in each may be read a different drama of the conscience. They
-have not the factitious enthusiasm and the declamatory gesture with
-which an ordinary sculptor would have thought well to furnish them;
-they are simply citizens who have resolved to fulfil a fatal duty,
-and are going to perform it without cowardice, but nevertheless were,
-yesterday, trades-people and family-men with no pretensions to the
-heroic. They bear with them their regrets, their inner heartbreak, and
-are not thinking of striking an attitude in the eyes of history. They
-are the unknown, obscure heroes of a fatality such as often arose in
-their rough times; and of how many dead men, devoted like them, has
-history forgotten the deeds and names! There is Eustace de St. Pierre,
-with his shaven magistrate's face, stiff and controlled, carrying the
-key of the town; behind him Andrieux d'Andres, with his hands clenched
-over his sobbing face, turns back, this last time, towards the city.
-Jean de Fiennes, with his rough beard and weak, old man's shoulders, is
-listening to Jean d'Aire, who, younger than he, is murmuring words that
-perhaps confide to him his horror of death, and entreat from the old
-man encouragement in renunciation. But in front of all the others the
-two brothers, Jacques and Pierre de Wissant, advance resolutely; and
-one turns back to hasten his friends, while one exhorts them, pointing
-with a restrained gesture towards heaven.
-
-[Illustration: THE BURGHERS OF CALAIS]
-
-The entire reality of these figures is no less striking than their
-ideality, just as is the case in the beautiful creations of the
-"Primitives." These are men whose absolutely real nakedness reveals
-itself beneath the coarse sacks that clothe them, a nakedness not
-harmonised into any style, but shown in all its veracity by an artist
-who has chosen models suitable to his characters without any care to
-arrange them or to give them that pretended _beauty_ which would be
-merely a falsehood and an enfeeblement. These are six wretched men,
-shivering with cold and anguish. The scene is as close as possible
-to history, and the faces are real--ugly or ordinary. But an idea
-transfigures them. The tragedy of their sacrifice gives them a strange
-greatness, and they become fine because their soul is fine. We guess
-the gradation of their reflections: none faces his fate just like
-another, and the reason is that, though what they will is one, what
-they leave is different for each, and everything in them speaks, from
-their faces down to the least attitude of their limbs. Their expression
-is sober; a heavy silence enwraps them; we follow them with our
-eyes as the dwellers in Calais must have done from the heights of
-their walls; and they are so grouped that from every point we see them
-separately, presenting a distinct aspect, and yet the one base unites
-and uplifts them. This is a marvel of psychological composition.
-
-Technical skill assists this composition; we find the power of the
-_St. John_, but more simplification. Only the essential lines attract
-the eye, the details are subsidiary to the whole. Admirable bits of
-flesh modelling are only noticed after long examination; the substance
-is scarcely thought of, so much is the mind held at first by the
-intellectual drama, and this was what Rodin desired. These six beings,
-side by side, are august in their sorrow, and they move us by means of
-their simplicity and by the absence of any theatrical gesture. We feel
-the bodies under the shirts, for Rodin made six complete models in the
-nude before he threw upon them these rags of stuff and knotted ropes.
-The feet are strongly attached to the earth; we guess that their limbs
-are heavy, because, though their will bids them walk, every step leads
-towards death. The impression is extraordinary and such as perhaps no
-sculpture ever gave before. This is a reality of all time: the epic of
-the sacrifice of the humble. As for the style, it recalls the Gothic
-sculptors by the rugged power of the moulding, the asceticism of the
-heads, and the strength of the knotty limbs. We are compelled to think
-of the Flemish "primitives," and especially of those genial Burgundian
-sculptors and image-makers of genius who produced the immortal figures
-of Philippe Pot's tomb in the Louvre. There is the same desire for
-expression in sculpture, which seeks beauty solely in intensity of
-character, and finds style in the sincere study of reality--all
-these things concurring towards the greater synthesis of the work's
-general thought. Rodin there shows himself an essentially French and
-northern artist, alien from all that the academies, hypnotised by the
-Italianism of the second Renascence, have chosen to invent as dogmas
-of beauty. _The Burghers of Calais_ is a work of the true French
-classic tradition--of the national classicality which has nothing in
-common with that classicality imported from Italy in 1550 by which our
-indigenous artists have so long been oppressed, thanks to the "École
-de Rome." Standing before such a creation we recognise this truth
-sharply--this truth which is the secret of Rodin's genius and of
-the enthusiasm that he aroused. Better than Rude, better than Barye,
-better even than Carpeaux, has he found the way to free himself, and to
-go back, by power of thought and mastery, to our true national lineage.
-
-[Illustration: A BURGHER OF CALAIS]
-
-[Illustration: A BURGHER OF CALAIS]
-
-[Illustration: A BURGHER OF CALAIS]
-
-The _Burghers_ ought, according to Rodin's idea, to be placed in front
-of the old Hotel de Ville of Calais, facing the sea; and he wished
-the group to be placed on a very high pedestal, so that the figures
-should stand out against the open sky, or else, on the other hand,
-almost on the level, so that everyone could walk round them, live with
-them, almost elbow them. A bad site has been chosen and a pedestal of
-moderate height and ordinary appearance. The _Burghers_ are very fine
-all the same, and are certainly the most powerful piece of sculpture
-of the epoch. I have promised to be sober in my praises of Rodin, but
-I do not see why in speaking of such a work as this I should hide my
-convictions. Those who have seen it cannot fail to consider it, as I
-do, the work of a thinker and of an artist of genius.
-
-
-[1] It Is curious to recollect that the very fine equestrian statue of
-General Lynch and the monument to President Vicunha, sent to America
-by Rodin, were never paid for, and that, owing to revolutions, they
-actually disappeared, so that these works may be considered lost. Only
-the spoiled rough models and some photographs remain.
-
-[2] These _Shades_ are a symbolic representation of men who are just
-dead, and who are bending down with folded hands in misery and terror
-gazing at the hellish crowd into which they are about to fall.
-
-[3] The final version of this group has been treated by Rodin
-separately, and is known by the name of _The Kiss_. The marble group is
-in the Museum of the Luxembourg.
-
-[4] A statue of Eustace de St. Pierre had been asked for. Rodin sent
-the six effigies of burghers, and this gave rise to fresh difficulties
-with the authorities.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-RODIN'S WORK FROM 1895 TO 1898--SMALL GROUPS--THE STATUE OF "BALZAC"
---THE INCIDENT OF THE SOCIÉTÉ DES GENS DE LETTRES--THE "TECHNIQUE"
-OF THE "BALZAC"--RODIN'S IDEAS UPON MODELLING AND COMPOSITION--HIS
-OPINIONS ABOUT THE GREEKS, THE GOTHIC STYLE, CLASSICISM, AND
-MYTHOLOGICAL SUBJECTS--RODIN'S "ANTIQUE" PERIOD.
-
-
-The year 1896 was occupied by the continuation of work for the Hugo
-monument. The _Muse of Anger_ and the _Muse of the Inna' Voice_ were
-brought to their full completion. In addition to these Rodin made a
-very fine head of _Minerva,_ in marble, with a silver helmet; a statue
-of a _Conqueror_, holding a statue of _Victory;_ and two groups--_The
-Poet and the Life of Contemplation_ (for M. Fenaille, the faithful
-admirer, who was, at a later date, to publish his sketches) and _The
-Eternal Idol,_ a marvel of inspiration. A young naked woman is in a
-half-sitting posture, her head bent, her gaze lost in a dream. A man
-kneeling before her, his arms behind him and his desire restrained,
-puts his head gently forward and kisses the idol beneath the left
-breast over the heart, with mute fervour, and with a mystic, amorous
-concentration of his whole being. Rarely does sculpture allow of so
-much pulsating life and so much psychological emotion united to plastic
-perfection and originality of arrangement.
-
-From 1897 date the marble group of the _Women Bathing,_ the last
-studies for the _Balzac,_ and the studies for the _Monument to
-President Sarmiento_, a statue upon a pedestal in high-relief. Small
-groups in marble and in bronze are a form of which Rodin is fond. He
-has been led to devote himself largely to them on account of _The Gate
-of Hell,_ the dimensions of which necessitated small figures. Moreover,
-Rodin reserves this form of art for certain categories of works that
-have a character of passion and intimacy. It should be possible to pass
-easily round them, to lean over them, almost to touch them and move
-them about; one should be able to live with them, as one cannot do with
-large figures meant to be looked at from below. The happy form of the
-small sculptured block, which the eighteenth century had employed to
-so much advantage, allows this constant communion of the spectator and
-the work of art. Rodin, who executes his bigger figures in so large a
-style, reserves for these a style that is minute but never mannered.
-The outlines remain large, so much so, indeed, that the work would
-always bear an enlarged scale; but the modelling is wrought with an
-almost caressing touch and with a strange love of form. Here the rough
-sculptor, so Gothic in his austerity, fingers the marble with the care
-and the delicacy of a lover; he reveals himself as a fervent adorer of
-smooth, womanly flesh; he plays with the subtlest variations of light
-upon the inflexion of marble surfaces, and the man who is reproached
-with caring for nothing but "character" and with despising "beauty"
-creates arms, necks, knees, and bosoms of exquisite perfection. His
-favourite type of woman is the long, delicately made woman, with
-a small bust, largely curved hips, and a face full of will, the
-nervous, feline, voluptuous woman, of head rather than of heart, such
-as Baudelaire and Rops have imagined. The characteristic feature of
-Rodin's small groups is the seeking after new combinations of movement.
-I have said already that his essential idea was the production of
-_dynamic_ art; that is to say that, finding himself face to face
-with an academic school that had grown inert owing to its care for
-pseudo-harmony, he had determined to draw sculpture out of this blind
-alley and to show, before all things, how the expression of movement
-might lead to an entirely new conception of decorative outline. From
-this endeavour arose those little groups of lovers in which the
-attitudes are so infinitely varied, those curious presentments in
-which the arms and legs are placed as freely as in a painting. But the
-painting has the help of shadow, of backgrounds, and of values, which
-allow the light to be concentrated on a single point and the rest to be
-blurred. Rodin has attempted so to compose his most audacious movements
-that, in walking round, a new aspect of them is constantly presented,
-whereas ordinary sculpture, meant to be seen from a single point, does
-not allow the spectator to pass behind it. This difficulty and this
-main idea have led Rodin to treat modelling and composition in a way
-upon which I shall dwell more fully later on, and to invent a style of
-statuary which borrows some of the laws of painting.
-
-These thoughts had long been ripening in Rodin when at last he resolved
-to apply them to his _Balzac_, which was really not his first attempt
-in this direction, but the first that was seen in public. When this
-statue appeared in the Salon of 1898, it created such a commotion that
-for a week the public forgot, over it, the events of that vast serial
-story, the Dreyfus affair. The clamour was extraordinary; some people
-raged at what they considered a scandalous practical joke, others
-warmly defended the new work. The Société des Gens de Lettres, already
-irritated by Rodin's delays in finishing the statue, declared plainly
-that it refused the _Balzac_, a decision which led to the resignation
-of the committee. Rodin might have brought an action and won it,
-for, strictly speaking, his agreement required the society to accept
-the work such as he delivered it. He preferred to withdraw his work
-without claiming its price or discussing the matter. Once again his art
-encountered violent opposition from the official camp--but to struggle
-is repugnant to his temper. Inflexible in his will as a producer, he is
-timid and proud in his attitude towards contradictions. Opportunity,
-moreover, offered him a roguish and witty revenge. Falguière was
-commissioned to make a _Balzac._ This put Falguière in a very awkward
-position; after all the fuss made about Rodin's statue, he must needs
-produce something finer, or at the very least equally interesting. He
-was certain of a bad reception at the hands of Rodin's admirers and he
-was bound to please the others. Falguière only succeeded in producing a
-mediocre work. The _Balzac_ that may be seen at the present time in the
-Avenue de Friedland is nothing but a half-hearted imitation of Rodin's;
-it is Rodin's _Balzac_ seated, and without character or interest. This
-work appeared in 1900, at a time when opinion was already beginning
-to recognise the injustice done to Rodin, and it pleased nobody.
-Then Rodin, to show that the incident had in no way altered his
-friendly relations with Falguière,[1] made an admirable bust of his
-fellow-worker, which was as fine as the second _Balzac_ was poor, and
-thus gave to Falguière and to the public, also, a silent and ironical
-lesson.
-
-What, then, was this _Balzac_ which was so much detested, and about
-which the most abusive and extraordinary things were written? Merely
-the image of the great writer, draped in a dressing-gown, with empty,
-hanging sleeves; he has risen in the night and is walking up and down,
-disturbed and sleepless, pursuing an idea that has suddenly presented
-itself. He is bent forward, his head thrown back, the eyes deep-set,
-and the mouth contracted in a smile of challenge. The powerful
-neck--the neck indeed of a bull--emerges from the open wrapper. Rodin
-made use of various daguerreotypes, and especially of a celebrated
-portrait of Balzac, that shows him in shirt-sleeves with one brace,
-and folded arms. The enormous proportions of the head, the amazing
-strength of the thorax, the monstrous and leonine character of the face
-are all exact. "His was the countenance of an element," said Lamartine
-of Balzac, "with a torso that was joined to the head by an enormous
-neck, short legs, and short arms." These words absolutely justify the
-statue. Rodin had made studies for it in the nude (there are some fine
-clay models of the subject in his studio), then he clothed it with a
-gown (or to be more exact, with a bath-wrap, for that is what Balzac's
-famous monk's robe was), and proceeded to simplify the folds until
-he had left only the two or three essential ones. The result thus
-obtained, with the disproportion of body and legs, led Rodin to hide
-the short, ugly, useless arms under the drapery, and the figure thus
-assumed pretty much the appearance of a mummy, of a sort of monolith,
-from which nothing stood out but the one point of interest, the savage
-and magnificent animality of the head, with its darkened gaze and the
-bitterly curved mouth, of which Rodin had made a separate small study
-in bronze. A great heave of the shoulders throws the body slightly
-backward, causing it to rest upon one leg, which is apparently bent,
-while the other is moved forward to walk.
-
-[Illustration: BALZAC]
-
-The whole work gives the impression of a _menhir_, a pagan dedicatory
-stone. Interest is concentrated solely upon the head. Rodin considered
-that the representation of a celebrated figure offered no corporeal
-interest. It is evident that a great error prevails on this subject.
-The ancients have transmitted to us naked or draped statues. It must
-be remembered that this homage was almost always paid to warriors,
-athletes, or courtesans; to represent these at full length was to
-express their fame. Their beautiful shape received fit homage. The gods
-were conceived as incarnations of moral beauty in physical beauty.
-But as time and morality have gradually brought us to honour men who
-are great in thought, the bodily representation of them has strayed
-into an extremely false path. Dress and physical exterior ceased to be
-of plastic interest, but the manner of our homage remained the same.
-Busts with pedestals commemorating in writing the deeds or the works
-would have been the right form of celebration. But this, the only
-intelligent form, appeared to our modern statue-maniac ages too scanty.
-This heretical opinion has given birth to the gentlemen in frock-coats
-who disfigure our present towns and are hoisted upon pedestals in our
-public squares. To this absurd point have we come: in order to honour
-the soul we reproduce its husk, the body, which is destined to the
-nothingness of the grave, and we represent the shoes and coats as
-exactly as the head. We attempt in our pious regard for the essence
-of a thinker to represent that part of him which was transitory. The
-result is photography in bronze, a wretched artistic contradiction.
-Nevertheless, if we are to bow to custom and represent a man at full
-length of whom the head is the only important fact, we must indeed
-give him a body that is like reality; but the artist should try to
-concentrate interest as much as possible on the face. So illogical
-is this style in itself that the bodies and clothes are copied from
-chance models; the head of the person to be glorified is stuck on to
-them, and it is the merest bit of luck if it has been possible to shape
-this head itself from actual evidence! For plenty of statues represent
-individuals who never looked like them, and of whom no authentic
-likeness exists, which is the height of absurdity and the very
-burlesque of an honour.[2]
-
-[Illustration: BALZAC]
-
-In such cases an allegorical monument should be a matter of necessity;
-yet we behold hundreds of such statues, all the same, and our prejudice
-in favour of verisimilitude requires us to contemplate the embroidery
-of their doublets or the trimming of their coats.
-
-Rodin, for his part, to whom such ideas, which degrade his art to the
-lowest level, are revolting, believes that composition and expression
-should be so arranged as to make the spectator forget the _plastique_
-of the body. In his busts he neglects the inevitable linen collar,
-coat-collar, and necktie. The graceful dress of _Claude Lorraine_, the
-shirt and rope of _The Burghers of Calais,_ had served his purpose
-well, and in the statues of _General Lynch_ and _Bastien-Lepage_ he
-had reduced the modern dress to large bronze reliefs without precise
-details. Especially in the image of a thinker he seeks to annul the
-costume. The Olympian character of Hugo allowed of the nude; for the
-massive deformity of Balzac the dressing-gown was appropriate. The
-majority of those who mocked did not even know that this careless
-costume was habitual to the author, and that Rodin chose to surprise
-him in his home and in the fever of work, instead of showing him in the
-street with a hat and stick, as they would no doubt have expected.
-
-The _Balzac_, then, presents the aspect of a sheath of stone pushed out
-by a few twisting folds, which give it the appearance from behind of
-an upright sarcophagus. The size of the head, the abnormal largeness
-of the chest and neck, which have aroused mockery, are historic. Apart
-from these points, one honestly wonders what it is that can have
-shocked people in this bold and sincere work. The face is admirable in
-its pride, its strength of will, its haughty irony, and penetrating
-power of thought. The modelling and the leading lines are masterly.
-The rather ghostly look of the clay disappears in the bronze, as may
-be seen from the little head in that material, of which the monument
-was to be made. It is the freedom, the spontaneity, the life of the
-statue, which, as in the case of the _Burghers,_ gave a shock to the
-conventions of the official world and disturbed the ideas of the public
-at large.
-
-It is true, nevertheless, and is generally admitted even by its most
-active adversaries that this great figure possesses a strange haunting
-power; when one had seen it in the Salon one could see nothing else
-after it, and could not succeed in getting away from it. People
-returned to it, in order to attack it, but they did return to it
-inevitably. The same official sculptors who in 1877 had accused _The
-Age of Brass_ of being cast from life because the figure was so exact
-did not shrink from accusing this same Rodin, matured by twenty years
-of work, of "not knowing the figure" and hiding his Balzac under a
-robe out of weakness. Besides these reproaches, which were made in
-bad faith, reproaches arose which exclaimed at Rodin's madness or
-hypocritically regretted that a man of so much talent should have made
-so great a mistake. But one thing which the _Bahac_ never encountered
-was indifference; what was the spell which compelled everybody to
-regard it as an irritating puzzle, as a challenge, as a work out of the
-ordinary run? Plenty of hostile faces were to be seen, but many of
-them showed a secret fear of being in the wrong, of misunderstanding a
-fine thing, a work which was a forerunner. This same fear might have
-been read as early as 1867 upon the faces of the detractors who stood
-in a ring around Manet's first works.
-
-The spell lay in the extreme simplification, the reduction of the
-elements to a powerful unity, according to a scheme with which Rodin
-had made experiments in silence and which he now revealed. And at
-this point I am led to a brief explanation of Rodin's ideas upon the
-technical part of his art.
-
-At the time of the _Balzac's_ appearance I gave an account of the way
-by which Rodin had been led to a new conception of sculpture. This was
-in an article[3] that has been reproduced more or less everywhere, and
-that Rodin has been good enough to consider as the emanation and direct
-expression of his artistic wishes. I cannot enter into all the details.
-The scale of this book would not allow of that, but the following are
-the principal points of that evolution.
-
-Rodin's is above all a temperament inclined to the expression of
-passionate and tragic character. Thence comes his constant study of
-movement. As I said before, that study has led him to give unlooked-for
-values to the general outline and to produce works which may be viewed
-on all sides and which continually show a fresh and balanced aspect
-that explains the other aspects: otherwise the daring gestures and the
-bold combinations of the limbs would have given an air of absurdity
-to the groups. Rodin is at the same time very reflective and very
-instinctive. He matures a thought slowly, but he often passes by
-chance from that thought to its realisation. This is the predominant
-feature of his nature, and it explains his entire art. Rodin often
-appears unconscious, astonished at what he had in him and at what he
-has brought into existence, to such a degree that he explains it badly
-enough. He sees his thought in the whole of nature and finds it there
-again; that thought, indeed, is fed by general ideas, and is, if I may
-say so, almost "elemental." From this point of view Rodin's _genius_
-is independent of his _talent_ as a sculptor. It sometimes happens to
-him to see a block of marble or a knob of wood, and the form of such an
-object will show him what he will make and the movement of the figure.
-He adapts to it one of the ideas which he always has in reserve: the
-aspect of the wood or the marble determines the passage of the thought
-to the material which will incarnate it. I said one day to Rodin: "One
-would say that you knew there was a figure in that block, and that you
-do nothing beyond breaking away the stone that hides it from us." He
-answered that that was exactly his feeling as he worked. Upon the naked
-figure Rodin has ideas that are peculiar to his nature as a mystic and
-a realist. He considers the body with its four limbs as a cypher, of
-which the combinations are infinite. That is an old idea that was held
-by primitive theologians of the Eastern religions. And it is the fact
-that Rodin has invented an immense series of attitudes and combinations
-that one would not have thought possible: he attaches little groups to
-the side of a block of marble with the freedom of a painter throwing
-a figure upon a background. He makes his people light, he makes them
-soar, he entwines them in surprising positions.
-
-It was therefore absolutely essential that he should find means to
-constitute a logical harmony _on every side_ of his works. Scholastic
-statuary is opposed to this principle. Its tendency is to treat groups
-as bas-reliefs. The spectator must stand in front, at a certain spot,
-and whatever is behind is accessory: the decorative line produces its
-effect only from that point. So true is this that statues are very
-often so placed in public squares that people cannot pass round them.
-The academic sculptors treat a piece of sculpture like a picture; it
-has a right side and a wrong side. Rodin, shocked at this method, began
-by working in quite a different way. He made successive sketches of all
-the faces of his works, going constantly round them so as to obtain a
-series of views connected in a ring. Travels in Italy had led him to
-think that the ancients proceeded in this manner and that their great
-endeavour was to get the design of the outline by means of movement,
-which continually modifies the anatomy. Anatomy, indispensable to
-the artist, becomes the source of all the academic errors if once
-we forget that it is but inertia, the state of non-action, and
-consequently incapable of expressly teaching us about life and about
-the modifications that thought imposes upon flesh. The real value of
-a living figure is given by profiles studied successively in a full
-light. Rodin was delighted by this way of working. But his pictorial
-inclinations, his ideas about the possible formation of a _background_
-in sculpture as in painting, were not satisfied.
-
-When the academic school wishes to make use of a background to a figure
-it confines itself to a hollow or a relief. Rodin desired that a statue
-should stand free and should bear looking at from any point, but he
-desired nevertheless that it should remain in relation with light and
-with the surrounding atmosphere. He was struck by the hard, cut-out
-aspect of ordinary statues, and asked himself how an atmosphere might
-be given to them. Painting has two means to this end: of which the
-first is _values. Values_ are independent of colour. Values, an element
-common to both arts, are in painting and sculpture _the relations as
-to opacity or transparence of an object and the background against
-which it is seen._ They may be dark on a light ground, light on a dark
-ground, or light upon a ground that is likewise light; but they are
-always the very life of the outline, and the important point is to fix
-that outline first of all. When we see a person placed between the
-sun and ourselves, against the light, we do not at first perceive the
-details within the outline, but we do see the general mass of the body,
-and that mass is filled with more or less intense colour, in which we
-presently distinguish details. Our perception at the moment is as much
-sculptural as pictorial. Rodin, struck by the importance of this idea,
-devoted himself to obtaining, _at once and together,_ the _volume;_
-that is to say, the equivalent in sculpture of the _value,_ and the
-design of _successive views of one movement._
-
-But the second means in painting is the employment of intermediate
-tones encircling the figure and combining with the background. How
-could an equivalent be found for that? Logic led Rodin on to a step
-which alarmed him: he made experiments after examining the antiques
-very closely. He took fragments of his statues and began to raise them
-in certain places by layers of clay, intensifying the modelling and
-enlarging the lines. He observed that the light now played better upon
-these enlarged lines; the refraction of light upon these amplified
-surfaces was softer, the hardness of the cut-out outline vanished,
-and a radiant zone shaped itself around his figures and united them
-gradually with the atmosphere. In this way, therefore, by means of
-this systematic accentuation of the outlines, an intermediate tone, _a
-radiancy of the forms,_ was produced.
-
-Rodin understood at once that he had found his way to the deepest
-secret of his art; that is to say, to the ideal limit where through its
-hidden laws a plastic art touches the other arts in a negation of all
-that is merely materialistic. The intermediate tones in painting, the
-radiating surfaces in sculpture, are the same principle as the nervous
-radiations noted in photographing a hand, where it may be seen that
-the fingers are prolonged by emanations. Nothing is fixed, limited,
-or finished in nature, and the radiating state is the only real one.
-But this was a dangerous discovery for a sculptor, since people would
-immediately exclaim upon the _deformation_ _of what was seen_, the
-alteration of the fact, the falsification of anatomy. Therefore Rodin
-proceeded in silence and with very great prudence. The point was not,
-of course, _to enlarge_ _all surfaces equally_, for that would have
-produced only an increase of scale. The thing was _to amplify_, with
-tact, _certain parts of the modelling_, the edges of which were swept
-by the light, so as to give a halo to the outline. At the same time,
-Rodin experimented in a series of drawings made on purpose, forbidding
-himself to give any detail, tracing only the outlines of bodies filled
-in with one wash of water-colour that gave the _value._ I shall return
-to these sketches. They cannot be understood without a knowledge of
-their original purpose.
-
-This theory, to which Rodin approved of my giving the name of
-_deliberate amplification of surfaces_, is simply the critical
-principle of Greek sculpture, which has been entirely misunderstood
-by the academic school. That school, which is supposed to honour the
-Greeks, is really false to their spirit and their teaching. Moreover,
-this principle, which belongs to all the primitive statuary that
-was made for the open air, is to be found among the Egyptians and
-the Assyrians. It calls in question the academic tradition whereby
-_exactitude_ is confounded with _truth._ In reality it may be said
-to be a profoundly classic principle which has been denied by the
-academic school. Here, as in painting, classicism is opposed to the
-academic. Hence it should be concluded that in reality Rodin is by
-no means an _innovator_ opposing himself to a school that retains
-classic traditions, but, speaking precisely, a classic, returning to
-nature, replacing himself in the state of mind of a Greek before his
-model, and opposing himself to a school that has overloaded art with
-methods, formulas, and expedients that change the character of antique
-and Gothic art. Rodin has a horror of what is called "originality,"
-and an even greater horror of what is called "inspiration." He only
-trusts completely to work and to minute, sincere observation of nature.
-"Slowness is a beauty," he often says. He has the greatest antipathy
-for "sculpture with literary meanings," and has often been galled,
-without saying so, by certain praises, in which writers, reeling off
-pages of description about his works, have thought to please him by
-dwelling on the idea and not on the execution. "I invent nothing,"
-he says; "I rediscover. And the thing seems new because people have
-generally lost sight of the aim and the means of art; they take
-that for an innovation which is nothing but a return to the laws of
-the great sculpture of long ago. Obviously, I think; I like certain
-symbols, I see things in a synthetic way, but it is nature that gives
-me all that. I do not imitate the Greeks; I try to put myself in the
-spiritual state of the men who have left us the antique statues. The
-'École' copies their works; the thing that signifies is to _recover
-their method._ I began by showing close studies from nature like _The
-Age of Brass._ Afterwards I came to understand that art required a
-little more largeness, a little exaggeration, and my whole aim, from
-the time of the _Burghers_, was to find a method of exaggerating
-logically: that method consists in the deliberate amplification of the
-modelling. It consists also in the constant reduction of the figure to
-a geometrical figure, and in the determination to sacrifice any part of
-a figure to the synthesis of its aspect. See what the Gothic sculptors
-did. Look at the cathedral of Chartres; one of the towers is massive
-and without ornament: they sacrificed it to give value to the exquisite
-delicacy of the other tower.
-
-"In sculpture the projection of the muscular _fasciculi_ must be
-accentuated, the foreshortening forced, the hollows deepened; sculpture
-is the art of the hole and the lump, not of clear, well-smoothed,
-unmodelled figures. Ignorant people, when they see close-knitted true
-surfaces, say that 'it is not finished.' No notion is falser than that
-of _finish_ unless it be that of _elegance_; by means of these two
-ideas people would kill our art. The way to obtain solidity and life is
-by work carried out to the fullest, not in the direction of achievement
-and of copying details, but in that of truth in the successive
-schemes. The public, perverted by academic prejudices, confounds art
-with neatness. The simplicity of the 'École' is a painted cardboard
-ideal. A cast from life is a copy, the exactest possible copy, and
-yet it has neither motion nor eloquence. Art intervenes to exaggerate
-certain surfaces, and also to fine down others. In sculpture everything
-depends upon the way in which the modelling is carried out with a
-constant thought of the main line of the scheme, upon the rendering of
-the hollows, of the projections and of their connections; thus it is
-that one may get fine lights, and especially fine shadows that are not
-opaque. Everything should be emphasised according to the accent that
-it is desired to render, and the degree of amplification is personal,
-according to the tact and the temperament of each sculptor; and for
-this reason there is no transmissible process, no studio recipe, but
-only a true law. I see it in the antique and in Michael Angelo. To work
-by the profiles, in depth not by surfaces, always thinking of the few
-geometrical forms from which all nature proceeds, and to make these
-eternal forms perceptible in the individual case of the object studied,
-that is my criterion. That is not idealism, it is a part of the
-handicraft. My ideas have nothing to do with it but for that method; my
-Danaids and my Dante figures would be weak, bad things. From the large
-design that I get your mind deduces ideas."
-
-Rodin, then, is convinced that he is classical, and rebels against the
-"École" which claims to be so. He has the greatest admiration for the
-Renascence, but declares that he does not so clearly understand the
-genius of the Gothic sculptors. He admires it, but has not thoroughly
-penetrated it. "I feel it, but I cannot express it," he says. "I cannot
-analyse the Celtic genius to my own satisfaction. In the Middle Ages
-art came from groups, not from individuals. It was anonymous; the
-sculptors of cathedrals no more put their names to their works than
-our workmen put theirs on the pavement that they lay. Ah! what an
-admirable scorn of notoriety! The signature is what destroys us. We do
-portraits, but what we do is not so great. These kings and queens, on
-the cathedrals, were not portraits. The fellow-workers stood for one
-another, and they interpreted; they did not copy. They made clothed
-figures; the nude and portraiture only date from the Renascence. And
-then those fellows cut with the tool's end into the block, that is why
-they were called sculptors. As for us, we are modellers. And what a
-disgraceful thing that casting from life is, which so many well-known
-sculptors do not blush to use! It is a mere swindling in art. Art was
-a vital function to the image-makers of the thirteenth century; they
-would have laughed at the idea of signing what they did, and never
-dreamed of honours and titles. When once their work was finished,
-they said no more about it, or else they talked among themselves.
-How curious it would have been to hear them, to be present at their
-gatherings, where they must have discussed in amusing phrases, and with
-simple, deep ideas!... Whenever the cathedrals disappear civilisation
-will go down one step. And even now we no longer understand them, we
-no longer know how to read their silent language. _We need to make
-excavations not in the earth, but towards heaven._..." An admirable
-saying that Rodin has often repeated to me and that I have never heard
-without deep emotion! He has the secret of these true formulas, and
-his words, which are not eloquent, but, rather, obscure, are suddenly
-lighted up by them. His speech, like his sculpture, is born from
-sincere contact with the essence of nature. In regard to the Renascence
-and Michael Angelo, he reports that he received no decisive lesson
-from either until after a journey to Italy in 1875. "I believed before
-that," he says, "that movement was the whole secret of this art, and
-I put my models into positions like those of Michael Angelo. But
-as I went on observing the free attitudes of my models I perceived
-that they possessed these _naturally_, and that Michael Angelo had
-not preconceived them, but merely transcribed them according to the
-personal inspiration of human beings moved by the need of action. I
-went to Rome to look for what may be found everywhere: _the latent
-heroic in every natural movement._ [4]
-
-"Then I gathered the elements of what people call my symbolism. I do
-not understand anything about long words and theories. But I am willing
-to be a symbolist, if that defines the ideas that Michael Angelo gave
-me, namely that the essence of sculpture is the modelling, the general
-scheme which alone enables us to render the intensity, the supple
-variety of movement and character. If we can imagine the thought of
-God in creating the world, He thought first of the construction, which
-is the sole principle of nature, of living things and perhaps of the
-planets. Michael Angelo seems to me rather to derive from Donatello
-than from the ancients; Raphael proceeds from them. He understood that
-an architecture can be built up with the human body, and that, in
-order to possess volume and harmony, a statue or a group ought to be
-contained in a cube, a pyramid; or some simple figure. Let us look at a
-Dutch interior and at an interior painted by an artist of the present
-day. The latter no longer touches us, because it does not possess the
-qualities of depth and volume, the science of distances. The artist who
-paints it does not know how to reproduce a cube. An interior by Van
-der Meer is a cubic painting. The atmosphere is in it and the exact
-volume of the objects; the place of these objects has been respected,
-the modern painter places them, arranges them as models. The Dutchmen
-did not touch them, but set themselves to render the distances that
-separated them, that is, the depth. And then, if I go so far as to say
-that _cubic truth, not appearance, is the mistress of things,_ if I
-add that the sight of the plains and woods and country views gives me
-the principle of the plans that I employ on my statues, that I feel
-cubic truth everywhere, and that plan and volume appear to me as laws
-of all life and all beauty, will it be said that I am a symbolist, that
-I generalise, that I am a metaphysician? It seems to me that I have
-remained a sculptor and a realist. Unity oppresses and haunts me."
-
-"What," says Rodin again, "is the principle of my figures, and
-what is it that people like in them? It is the very pivot of art,
-it is balance; that is to say, the oppositions of volume produced
-by movement. That is the striking, material fact in art, with all
-due deference to those persons who conceive art as distinct from
-'brutal' reality. Art is like love. For many people it is a dream, a
-psychological complication, a palace, a perfume, a stage scene; but
-nothing of the sort! The essential of love is the pairing; all the
-rest is only detail, charming, and full of passion, but detail. It is
-the same in art: people come and praise my symbols and my expressions
-to me; but I know that the plans are the essential thing. Respect the
-plan, make it exact from every point; movement intervenes, displaces
-these volumes and creates a fresh balance. The human body is like a
-_walking temple,_ and like a temple it has a central point around which
-the volumes place and spread themselves. When one understands that,
-one has everything. It is simple, but it must be seen, and academism
-refuses to see it. Instead of recognising that that is the key to my
-method they prefer to say that I am a poet. That expression signifies
-that people feel, confusedly, the difference between an art resting
-on conventions and one derived from truth; only they think that the
-'poetic' art is the conventional one. They call that _inspiration._
-That is the belief that has led to the theory of genius being madness.
-But men of genius are just those _who, by their trade-skill, carry the
-essential thing to perfection._ People say that my sculpture _is that
-of an 'exalté.'[5]_
-
-"I do not deny that there is exaltation in my works; but that
-exaltation existed not in me, but in nature, in movement. The divine
-work is naturally exalted. As for me, all I do is to be true; my
-temperament is not 'exalted'; it is patient. I am not a dreamer,
-but a mathematician; and if my sculpture is good it is because it is
-geometrical."
-
-From these fragments of conversation the reader will conceive how
-Rodin's generalising spirit leads him from the realism of his daily
-work to the synthesis of a sort of ideo-realistic metaphysical system.
-He has the sense (belonging only to genius) of the _continuity of
-the universe_, and he certainly had it at a time when, unlettered
-as he was, he would not have known how to explain it specifically
-to himself. He constantly formulates this metaphysical system, as I
-have seen it formulated by Stéphane Mallarmé, who could never see
-anything without instantly bringing together two ideas or images that
-no one would ever have thought of connecting. Spontaneous analogy
-is the mark of genius and the secret of all real poetry. This is
-why I consider Rodin as a very great poet--not in the sense that he
-dislikes, but on the contrary, by giving to the word "poet" its deep
-etymological significance according to the Greek, that of "making,
-creating, vivifying." We may understand, too, in how great a degree an
-intellectuality of this kind offers a living challenge to the ideas
-of the "École." The man who thinks thus is necessarily isolated and
-has struggled all his life, never making a concession and saying
-nobly, "The artist, like the woman, has an honour to preserve." I will
-further quote from Rodin the following reflection[6]: "Where you follow
-nature, you get everything. When I have a beautiful woman's body for
-a model the drawings that I make from it give me images of insects,
-birds, and fishes. That seems improbable, and I had no suspicion of
-it myself. Formerly I used to be seeking shapes for vases, either to
-use them at Sèvres, where I used to work, or elsewhere.... I never
-succeeding in finding a beauty of proportions and lines such as I had
-the feeling of, because I only founded my attempts upon _imagination._
-Since that time I have drawn women's bodies, and one of these bodies
-gave me, in the synthesis of it, a magnificent shape for a vase, with
-true and harmonious lines. The point is not to create. Creation and
-improvisation are useless words. Genius only comes to the man who
-understands with his eye and his brain. Everything is in the things
-about us. Manufacture and ornamental art want reforming according to
-these ideas. I should have liked to see that. Everything-is contained
-in nature. There is an harmonious, continual, uninterrupted movement. A
-woman, a mountain, a horse, in conception they are all the same thing,
-they are made on the same principles. Young artists compose instead of
-following their models and understanding that therein lies infinity."
-Here Rodin directly touches a scientific truth--the relative monotony
-of Nature's productive forms. Nature does everything with very few
-forms: the variations are so infinite that there are no two leaves
-alike, but the nerves of a leaf, the lines of a vein, an artery, a
-bird's wing, a fishbone, a nerve-cell, are identical; multiplicity
-derives from identity and returns to it, so that everything is reduced
-to a fundamental geometry which perhaps is but the effect of a single
-cellular generation. In this respect the laws of art and of science
-are the same, even as among all the arts there is a synthesis of
-common laws, an identity where we seem to behold a difference. Recent
-work in science, by establishing the existence of states of radiation
-(Crookes, Röntgen, Hertz) is busy undermining our old conception of
-matter, showing us the identity of it with the immaterial, and thereby
-abolishing our preconceptions about the idea and the fact, music and
-sculpture, considered as different manifestations. I remember that I
-one day kept Rodin's curiosity excited for a long time by explaining
-the details of this theory to him; he was not acquainted with it,
-and listened to me as to a writer in love with general ideas. But it
-was clear that in his mere province as a sculptor he knew far better
-and had penetrated far more deeply into this enthralling problem of
-identity. His is a luminous mind, of the same kind as the electric
-rays; it rather penetrates than surrounds what is obscure to it. On
-that day he was disturbed, and I was irritated by certain declamations
-which had been written about his "philosophy," and of which the author
-had assuredly not comprehended the logical consequences; and we came
-to the conclusion that it would be much better for Rodin's peace of
-mind to keep silent upon these points, for his "philosophy" could only
-be made comprehensible to those who could understand the method of his
-sculpture.
-
-It is time, however, to pause in this path and to return simply to
-the question of sculpture. Nor was it my purpose to tire the reader
-by these abstractions when I began to say a few words about Rodin's
-opinions concerning the antique. It must be understood, then, that the
-_Balzac_ and even the _Hugo_, as well as some figures, were the result
-of all these preceding reflections. "When I saw my _Balzac_ brought
-into the yard from the storehouse of the statues in order to go to
-the Salon," says Rodin, "I had it purposely placed beside _The Kiss,_
-which had been finished rather earlier. I was not dissatisfied with the
-simplified vigour of that group, to which I had already applied these
-experiments. But I saw that it looked slack, that it did not hold its
-place beside the _Balzac_ as Michael Angelo's torso does beside a fine
-antique, and then I understood that I was in the right path. I have
-had hesitations, you know, pangs that I do not speak of. And then,
-little by little, as I looked at nature, as I came to understand it
-better and to throw aside my prejudices more frankly, I took courage.
-It seemed to me that I was doing better. When I began I did skilful
-things, things that were smartly done, but they were thin and dry, but
-I felt there was something beyond, and that something is amplification.
-I only ventured on it when I was over fifty years old, but do you not
-think I have a right now to disregard the objections of the mob and the
-newspapers? I have taken time to know why I was doing as I did. The
-essential things of my modelling are there, and they would be there
-in less degree if I 'finished' more. As to polishing or repolishing a
-toe or a curl, I find no interest in it; it impairs the large line,
-the soul of what I desired to do, and I have nothing more to say to
-the public on that point. There the line of demarcation comes between
-the confidence that the public ought to have in me and the concessions
-that I ought not to make to the public." To this firm and discreet
-resolution Rodin has kept in all the works wrought out by him since
-1898.
-
-[Illustration: PRIMITIVE MAN.]
-
-I cannot better set forth his opinions about the antique than by
-quoting the following fragments from two articles that he wrote for
-the _Musée_, a review of ancient art, in January and February, 1904;
-for Rodin sometimes writes, quite unpretentiously, but with the same
-lucidity of thought that he shows in his familiar conversation. One of
-these articles refers to a Greek statuette in the Museum of Naples, the
-other to the lesson that the ancients give us.
-
-"In the first place, the Antique is Life itself. Nothing is more alive,
-and no style in the world has rendered life as it has. The ancients
-were the greatest, most serious, and most admirable observers of nature
-who have ever existed. The antique was able to render life because
-the ancients saw the essential thing in it--large blocks. They confined
-themselves to the large shadows cast by these large blocks, and as
-truth itself lies in that, their figures being so made could never be
-feeble. Moreover, the antique is simple, and that gives it astonishing
-energy. And then there is much more study in it than appears; that
-was brought home to me once. When I had finished my _Age of Brass_, I
-went to Italy and I found an Apollo whose leg was in exactly the same
-position as one in _The Age of Brass_ that had taken me six months'
-work. Then I saw that though on the surface everything seems to be done
-at a stroke, in reality all the muscles are built up and one sees the
-details come to light one by one. That is because the ancients studied
-everything in its successive profiles, because in any figure and every
-part of a figure no profile is like another; when each has been studied
-separately the whole appears simple and alive.
-
-"The great error of the neo-Greek school is really this: it is not
-_type_ that is antique, but modelling. For want of having understood
-that, the neo-Greek school has produced nothing but papier-mâché. It
-is bad to put the antique before beginners; one should end, not begin
-with it. If you wanted to teach someone to eat, you would give him
-fresh food, that he might learn to chew; it would never occur to you
-to give him food already triturated to exercise his teeth upon. Well,
-when you want to teach sculpture to anyone, set him face to face with
-nature, and when he has gained plenty of power to deal with nature,
-then say to him: 'Now, here is what the antique has done.' And that
-will give him a new source of energy. Whereas if you give the antique
-to the beginner who has never struggled with nature, he does not
-understand anything about it, and loses his individuality over it.
-You make a plagiarist of him, and instead of making his own prayer to
-nature he will repeat the prayer of the antique without understanding
-the words of it. He will die an old pupil; he will not die a man.
-
-"To teach the antique at the outset of a man's studies is to render
-the antique incomprehensible. In the first place, no one can teach the
-antique, it is not possible; that art of truth and simplicity cannot
-be taught. The sculptor works from nature, and afterwards he goes to
-look, in the galleries, and see how the antique rendered what he has
-been trying for from the life. But if he goes straight to the antique,
-shutting his eyes to nature, as the antique has always been done from
-nature, our sculptor will only be able to carry that vision into his
-own work in a factitious way; he will be neither antique nor modern,
-but bad.
-
-"A man may do antique work in our day, not in the false sense of
-producing the _antique type,_ but in the true sense of _modelling
-like the antique._ Such a man (painter, etcher, or sculptor) will
-take nature, and if he has the power of the antique he will produce
-antique work, which will entirely disagree with what is taught as
-such, but will agree with that in the museums. The 'École' begins
-at the end; when a man begins with nature, he may go on to the most
-improbable inventions; the antiques themselves show that. Do you know
-of anything more impossible than the centaur? But is there anything
-finer in Olympia? The ancients knew nature so well that they became her
-fellow-workers and created, not phantoms, but beings that were alive in
-spite of physical impossibilities. To my mind it would be better not
-to study the antique than to study it wrong. It is not the artist's
-alphabet, but the reward of his work. The command which it gives us is
-not to copy it, but to do like it.
-
-[Illustration: YOUNG WOMAN BETWEEN GOOD AND EVIL COUNCIL.]
-
-"To say that the antiques, which portray the plain marvel of life,
-are beautiful is a superficial sort of praise. Beauty is not the
-starting-point, but the point of arrival; a thing can only be beautiful
-if it is true. Truth itself is only a complete harmony, and harmony
-is finally only a bundle of utilities. The miracle of life could not
-be perpetuated but for the constant renewal of universal balance. The
-ancients felt that vast rhythm, and their art, being modelled upon it,
-appears to us as a natural and sublime expression of beauty.... One
-of the ancients made a statue. How did he set about it? It is useless
-to bring in rules that only grew up in the brains of commentators
-dissecting a series of works, centuries afterwards. The antique remains
-uncomprehended because we have not a simple enough spirit. It is not
-by studying the antique that we shall learn its secret; in order to
-understand, not its nomenclature, but its spirit, we must begin by
-studying nature. Rembrandt cannot be understood by copying him at the
-Louvre, he can only be understood when we travel through nature to him.
-Well, nature is always there, waiting patiently for antiques to be
-made afresh; the model is there waiting for someone to come at last,
-no matter whence. For it is an error to think the antique comes from
-the south: it comes from everywhere. The antique can be produced from a
-Dutch woman or an American woman; the type is nothing, the modelling is
-everything.
-
-"What makes the strength of the antique is the plan, the connection of
-all the profiles. The neo-Greeks say: 'The antiques are _line,_ and
-their works, in which all the lines, except two, dance about, show
-their error. The antiques, we will say, are _lines_ or rather _plan._
-Look at an antique; you can guess the full face from the profile.
-The eye cannot grasp the shape on the opposite side to that which it
-beholds, but it deduces it from this side: walk round, and the study
-of the profiles will afford you an _irrefragable_ proof by _rule of
-three._ The sculptor swells the half-tones by slight exaggerations, so
-as to heighten the light by a tone. The drapery lives; like the body
-that it hides, it receives life from that body without needing the
-subterfuge of wetted drapery.'[7]
-
-"There is in the antiques an astonishing mystery of life which causes
-all idea of dimension to disappear. A figure an inch or two high
-might just as well be life-size; when a thing is well organised, the
-greatness is in the modelling and not in the size. If one were to
-photograph a Tanagra figure and the Eiffel Tower, and were to show the
-two photographs to some person unacquainted with either object, I am
-sure he would declare the Tanagra figure to be larger than the tower. A
-pear or an apple, from the point of view of modelling, is as large as
-the celestial sphere. Thus the splendour of truth is such that finding
-no word to render it, we have called it 'Ideal.'"
-
-These quotations will suffice, I hope, to show Rodin's inmost thought.
-These judgments are implicit condemnations of the "École"; they are
-also definitions of his classical art, which is by no means "literary,"
-and which is governed, even in its lyrical and tragic developments,
-by good sense, that is to say, by an inborn taste for balance in the
-midst of boldness. If I am anxious to insist so strongly upon Rodin's
-profound _normality_, this is, I repeat, in order to forewarn the
-public against the declamations of some of his untoward admirers, who
-reckon one of his merits to be an "originality" which they confound
-with that exaggeration, that emphasis and eccentricity that never mark
-the great artist. Whatever tragic or passionate subject a great artist
-may treat, to whatever height of strangeness his imagination may rise,
-beauty of form will, if he is, like Rodin, a master of _technique_,
-confer upon _t_ him an exalted and permanent serenity. Rembrandt and
-Delacroix come from the depth of their vastly differing worlds to meet
-Raphael and Watteau in that conciliatory region where we admire the
-great masters--and Rodin is already placed in that region.
-
-
-[1] Rodin has never forgotten Falguière's loyalty at the time of _The
-Age of Brass_ affair.
-
-[2] A recent example in Paris is the double statue of the chemists
-who invented quinine. When will people understand that a discovery
-of this kind, however honourable, is nevertheless quite incapable of
-being associated with any plastic idea? The same thing is true of the
-statues of Chappe and Lavoisier, flanked by instruments of telegraphy
-and chemistry. These are ridiculous signboards, melancholy compliments
-translated by a tradesman's art that renders our streets hideous.
-
-[3] _Revue des Revues_ (of Paris), June 15th, 1898.
-
-[4] I find myself underlining-: it is not Rodin whose voice makes this
-emphasis. But I am attempting to mark out in this way the formulas
-which spring up in his conversation, and which, collected together,
-will give the public an idea of his instinctive synthesis, deduced from
-life.
-
-[5] The word _exalté_ has in this use no precise equivalent in English.
-"Enthusiast," as the eighteenth century knew the word--that is, with
-the infusion of a touch of lunacy--conies perhaps nearest.--TRANS.
-
-[6] An observation noted by Mlle. Judith Cladel in her curious volume,
-_Rodin, drawn from life._ (Éditions de La Plume, 1903.)
-
-[7] Loïe Fuller has obtained, by means of stuffs not wetted, the
-effects that the 'École' loves, because her plastic dance is logically
-derived from nature.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-WORKS SINCE THE "BALZAC"--SMALL WORKS IN MARBLE--PLAN OF THE MONUMENT
-TO LABOUR--DRAWINGS AND ETCHINGS
-
-
-"I shun father and mother and wife and brother, when my genius calls
-me. I would write on the lintels of the door-post, _Whim._ I hope it
-is somewhat better than whim at last, but we cannot spend the day in
-explanation.... Whoso would be a man must be a nonconformist ... must
-not be hindered by the name of goodness, but must inquire if it be
-goodness. Nothing is at last sacred but the integrity of our own mind.
-Absolve you to yourself, and you shall have the suffrage of the world."
-
-I quoted these high-minded words of Emerson's to Rodin at the time of
-the _Balzac_ incident. "They are," I said to him, "the very epigraph
-of your whole life." Nor have they ceased to epitomise the man and
-the artist. From the time of the _Balzac_ Rodin's work has proceeded
-very regularly and on the same principles. The _Victor Hugo_ is being
-finished in marble, in its two versions, in the studio of the Rue de
-l'Université. The group in which Hugo, his extended arm commanding
-silence of the waves, sits surrounded by Muses is almost ready; the
-other, in which Hugo, dreamily listening to the counsels of Iris,
-stands on the edge of a rock washed by waves, amid which Nereids are
-entwined, is not quite so far advanced. _The Gate of Hell_ is ready
-to receive its finally chosen and ordered figures. In the Salon of
-1902 Rodin exhibited the three _Shades_ from its summit, inspired by
-the celebrated _Lasciate ogni speransa._ In 1900 Rodin only showed
-two or three old productions at the Universal Exhibition, because his
-work was collected in a special pavilion at the Rond-point de l'Alma,
-the concession of which pavilion was made uncomfortable for him by
-his colleagues, so much so that the artist was obliged to remove on
-the very day of closing, with less delay and consideration allowed to
-him than to the most unimportant industrial exhibitor. This special
-exhibition was, nevertheless, a great international success for Rodin,
-and the amazing development of his fame may be said to date from it.
-Before 1900 Rodin stood in the position of an exceptional artist,
-celebrated but envied, isolated and challenged, whose relations with
-the Government were strained, whom a minority upheld, but on whom the
-official world looked coldly. Since that time his eminence is so firmly
-established that he now holds the rank that Puvis de Chavannes held
-in the estimation of all artists. His triumphant journey to Prague
-(1901-2), London's enthusiastic reception, and Rodin's recent election
-to be President of the Society over which Whistler presided, have
-finally given him the acknowledgment so long looked for. In 1903 his
-marble bust of Hugo aroused enthusiasm, and at the Salon of 1904 the
-colossal bronze _Thinker_ had a most flattering reception, and disarmed
-the last of his former detractors.
-
-A woman's bust accompanied _The Thinker_ to the Salon. Rodin, who does
-portraits now and again, had previously made an admirable one of Mme.
-Fenaille, wife of the art-patron who had been of such great service
-to him; and he is attempting a curious variation of it. He has just
-finished a bust of a helmeted Minerva, as impressive as a Donatello,
-and this, too, is a portrait.
-
-Various works have been produced by Rodin since the _Balzac,_ in
-addition to the _Monument of President Sarmiento,_ which shows an
-admirable bas-relief of a radiant Apollo. These works are nearly all
-in marble, and small. It is almost impossible to describe and classify
-them; a much larger book would be required, and my main purpose here
-has been to give a general idea of Rodin's art and an explanation
-of principles. I have spoken about some of his poems of the flesh,
-especially that _Eternal Idol_, which will be the glory of thought
-in modern sculpture. Rodin's recent works in marble have the same
-inspiration. Some demand special notice: _The Hand of God,_ a gigantic
-hand, between the fingers of which, and amid a handful of clay, two
-beings are tenderly embracing; _Icarus,_ falling from the sky to be
-crushed on the earth amid his whirling wings; several groups of lovers,
-entwined, and breathing immeasurable tenderness, the most celebrated
-of which is _Spring_ or _Love and Psyche._ Another _Psyche,_ alone,
-is discovering Love asleep, with extraordinary restrained emotion;
-and there are several attempts at _Poets and Muses,_ embracing or
-consoling one another, as well as a splendid sketch of the _Magdalen
-wiping Christ's Body with her Hair._ Rodin has thus sometimes touched
-religious subjects, but with an undogmatic symbolism, philosophic
-and wide. We may also enumerate another version in marble of the
-_Nereids_ of the Hugo monument, a winged _Inspiration_ coming to
-breathe upon the sleeping poet, and holding back the tips of her
-wings with one hand lest she should make a sound in closing them; a
-faun drawing towards him a nymph, who struggles in silent, fierce
-resistance; two high-reliefs of _Summer_ and _Autumn_ in stone; tall
-women with children, intended for the town of Evian, where Baron
-Vitta is accumulating treasures of modern art; _Pygmalion_ beholding
-his statue come to life, who, as soon as she feels herself live,
-turns from him with a surprising movement of coquetry and aversion.
-Such works as these cannot be described in words. In them Rodin has
-excelled to an unparalleled degree in rendering the profoundest
-psychological complexities, refined intentions, and the hesitations
-of feeling. I will further note a sketch of _Sappho_, seated at
-rest, with her arms leaning upon two little naked women, which is a
-work inspired equally by the Greeks and by the eighteenth century;
-it bears witness to the artist's wish of avoiding the massive, and
-making as many holes as possible within the general block, so as to
-give lightness and to allow a circulation of light, as the Greeks
-did in works that were meant to stand against a background of sea or
-of sky. Many studies of men and women crouching, or squatting, in
-curious attitudes, recall the art of the Japanese bronzes, which Rodin
-immensely admires. We must further note some groups of _Women Damned,_
-in which Rodin's art attains the highest point of voluptuous tension,
-audacious suggestiveness, and tragic eagerness of the flesh aspiring
-to impossible delight. This whole world of figures is ruled by the
-same lyrical and poetic imagination, the same symbolism incarnated
-in impeccable forms. Everywhere we find the same nervous art,
-agitating, sad, and ardent in its voluptuous character, expressing the
-insatiability of human souls; the aspiration of a troubled time towards
-an ideality which would deliver it from the solicitations of pessimism;
-the hope of escape by the way of desire; and love sought for in the
-over-excitement of neurosis. Rodin, gloomy psychologist of passion,
-understands the disease of the age, and at the same time pities it; a
-true thinker, he extracts its mournful beauty without ceasing to retain
-faith, admiration, and affection for the human creature. Bending over
-life and over his work, he is himself his own _Thinker_, attentive and
-reverent before an unknown and terrible divinity. Never did any other
-sculptor attempt to vivify his art with such intellectual superiority
-and by such meditations, and Rodin is at once the most realistic and
-most metaphysical of poets in stone and bronze.
-
-[Illustration: ISIS]
-
-Two or three works of more important dimensions stand out from his
-recent productions; besides a nude female torso (in bronze) of
-startling truthfulness, and two plaster studies that astonished at
-the Salons, and besides _The Christian Martyr_, so masterly in its
-modelling, Rodin has continued to work at his _Ugolino,_ taken out of
-_The Gate of Hell_, and has put the finishing touch to two plans. One
-of these is the _Monument to Labour_, a grand conception, which one may
-dream of seeing carried out and rising up in some square of busy Paris,
-but which want of money will prevent from ever being realised. It is a
-column upon a vast rectangular base, with a crypt in it. Two colossal
-figures of _Night_ and _Day_ would stand at the entrance. In the crypt
-would be shown, in bas-relief, different subterranean works--mining,
-etc. Around the column would run a covered spiral staircase, and upon
-the column itself would be figured in bas-reliefs all the various
-manifestations of labour, so that as one ascended the stairs all the
-divers phases of human genius could be successively studied. On the
-top would hover the _Benedictions_, two--winged spirits, descended
-from heaven, which are already executed in marble on a small scale,
-and are among Rodin's finest conceptions. This colossal project was
-conceived as long ago as 1897. The rough model is in the studio at
-Meudon-Val-Fleury.
-
-[Illustration: NUDE STUDY]
-
-The monument to Puvis de Chavannes was entrusted to his friend Rodin,
-and is already finished. Rodin conceived it in an original and charming
-way. Instead of making the customary statue, he considered the purely
-Greek quality of Puvis' genius and chose to pay homage to him in a form
-reproduced from the antique. The bust of the great painter is placed
-on a plain table, as the ancients placed those of their dead upon
-little domestic altars. A fine tree loaded with fruit bends over and
-shades the head. Leaning on the table behind the bust is a beautiful
-naked youth, who sits dreaming in a well-chosen supple attitude. The
-whole design is intimate, gentle, and pure. Placed on the ground in a
-garden this votive monument would show how much delicacy and caressing
-lightness sometimes lies in Rodin's sombre and pathetic thoughts.
-
-Another important group is that of _Orpheus and Eurydice._ Orpheus has
-fallen on one knee and is lifting his great lyre towards the gods whom
-he has just implored. Above him, almost on his back, suspended in a
-way that would appear to contradict the laws of equilibrium and the
-material conditions of sculpture, soars Eurydice, compassionate and
-almost vaporous, truly an immaterial shade, with a smile of despair.
-I regret that the unfinished condition of this model does not allow
-me to publish a photograph of it, for nothing would give a clearer
-impression of Rodin's originality in the matter of contour and in the
-mutual relation of figures. The extreme freedom of his attitudes and
-his caprices of balance are, indeed, the newest features that he has
-brought into his art and are not to be found in anyone else in any
-country or time. In these is his true signature, and by them his work
-might be recognised among a hundred statues of all periods. As to the
-expressive beauty of the faces and bodies, that is supreme. No one has
-better comprehended than Rodin all that can be rendered by the naked
-human body and all the intellectual significations that it can hide.
-The nude is to Rodin a whole language.
-
-In his latest spiritualised works there is something Correggio-like
-in the vibration of light upon the softened forms and amplified
-surfaces. They suggest the _Antiope,_ at once soft and muscular, and
-Rodin often speaks of "morbidezza" as a quality which he no longer
-distrusts, whereas he formerly banished it from his ascetic, sinewy,
-and dry figures. He gives his women the pulpy flesh of fruits. The
-lines of landscape seem to him to correspond to the planes of the body;
-he lately said to me that since he has lived at Meudon, opposite the
-flowing Seine, the wooded hills and the fields, he has found useful
-resemblances between the modelling of the body and that of a horizon. I
-have even once suggested to him the title of "The Hill" for the body of
-a young man reclining, the outline of which did in truth resemble the
-undulations of a hill, and he retained the name and the analogy, for he
-delights in everything that binds the human being to the earth, and,
-like a true metaphysician, conceives of nothing isolated or distinct in
-nature.
-
-I come now to Rodin's drawings, drawings which were not made to be
-shown, but which, having nevertheless become known, have surprised
-and puzzled people. Rodin's drawings, like some other drawings by
-sculptors, are not themselves works of art; they are thoughts noted
-down, and are not comprehensible unless they are seen with the statues
-of which they indicate the first idea, or some variation.
-
-Rodin has published some of his sketches; and has produced some
-dry-points (in particular the _Ronde_,[1] _Antonin Proust_, the three
-portraits of Henry Becque, full face and two profiles upon the same
-sheet, and two heads of Hugo), some drawings for books by M. Mirbeau
-and M. Bergerat, and a complete set of illustrations of the _Fleurs
-du Mal,_ in the form of marginal drawings for a unique copy belonging
-to M. Gallimard. Many drawings in black or colour have been published
-(by the clever lithographer Clot), and M. Fenaille has superintended
-an admirable _edition de luxe_ of 142 drawings by Rodin.[2]
-Notwithstanding this partial publicity, these works must be considered
-as _standing apart;_ and to consider them by themselves would actually
-be to injure Rodin with the public at large, since they form an
-integral part of his statues. For this reason I have not chosen to
-reproduce any of them here, studies so purely professional not seeming
-to fall within the scope of a work intended to give a general idea of
-an artist's work.
-
-Having said so much, I wish to dwell upon the great beauty of these
-drawings--a special and terrible beauty. Many deal with Dante. Rodin
-did some painting under Lecoq de Boisbaudron, landscapes, a portrait
-of his father, and sketches after Rubens; but there has never been
-any danger of painting intruding upon his vocation, and his sketches
-rapidly became nothing but notes for sculpture. The objective reality
-of his Dantesque figures is vague, if their subjective reality is
-intense. Rodin, anxious to note down his impressions, and not to
-_illustrate_, made his sketches into a sort of passionate writing, only
-devoting himself to the scheme and to the contrasts of black and white,
-and neglecting every detail. In these violent washes, these pencillings
-and pen-scribbles, the spectator who is not forewarned sees nothing,
-but the lover of art, who knows beforehand what to seek, follows the
-creative thought. Nothing can be less like what is generally known as
-"a drawing." After the regular drawings, the "painter's drawings" of
-his first period, which have but a restricted interest, and which are
-no longer known, those of his second manner are confusions of light and
-shadow, and show fantastically. I will quote at this point a passage
-from an essay by M. Clément Jasmin, a discerning critic, whose noisy
-rivals do not give him his due place, and who has described these works
-excellently.
-
-"These sketches are altogether the work of a sculptor, even in their
-colour, which seems to have sunk into plaster or clay, and especially
-in the firmness of their modelling, which is imparted by shaded touches
-of body-colour, on grey paper, or rendered by spaces left white. These
-blanks, these white spaces, are the extreme point of the modelling,
-the 'high light' of some projection, which lower down is wrapped in
-half-tints that carry the eye to the shadows of the inflections or
-the hollows. There is a constant relation between the contour and
-the interior modelling. A thrill is communicated by the fantastic
-lighting of some sketches. Rodin adds further strength to this dramatic
-distribution of lights and shadows by one or two tones that accentuate
-the impression or fix a plan. Often his ink will become blue or yellow,
-(water-colours, sepia, or coloured inks being employed), in order to
-settle a value or intensify a feeling. Such is the case in the Fenaille
-publication, with the gloomy red in the face of the Ugolino, of the
-Dantesque Mahomet, whose entrails are hanging out, and of some other
-figures dashed in, in black, on a violet background. One plainly feels
-the material in which the work, of which the sketch is the first idea,
-will be executed. It is always a sculptor who is at work, even when he
-exchanges the chisel for the pen or the brush."
-
-Painters would scorn these drawings. They commonly believe that
-sculptors cannot express upon a plane surface the mass and movement of
-a body. In reality a painter's sketch and a sculptor's sketch differ
-in intention and execution. Rodin's are translations of movements,
-in no way decorative and not attempting to express either modelling
-or detail, but, if we may say so, the abstract geometry, the thought
-that commands the movement. The use of coloured inks, which are solely
-meant to modify certain values that black or white would not express to
-Rodin's mind, has given rise to mistakes. These colours are not there
-to express real tints, as is the case in ordinary drawings thus touched
-up; inaccurate things have been said about these colourings, and about
-the fantastic and almost Japanese appearance of some of the plates.
-Rodin is certainly not thinking of prints in colour. He makes these
-notes instinctively, and displays not so much a deliberate thought as a
-natural faculty of transcription.
-
-In his early drawings Rodin _refers to_--for I must insist upon the
-point that the drawings do not _represent_ things--many of Dante's
-persons and many fanciful animals, and later, to his statues. Now he
-does not draw at all from literary impressions, but solely from the
-living model. He uses ordinary cheap paper, a pencil or a pen; he
-makes his model take some transitory, absolutely free position, often
-in the rest between two sittings, and rapidly draws contour without
-taking his eyes from the model and without looking at his sketch.
-Sometimes the stroke will fall upon emptiness, the sheet of paper will
-be too small, a head or a limb will fail to find its place. Naturally
-this instantaneous sketch will be deformed in the most unexpected
-way; the proportions are false, but the scheme of the contour and the
-modelling of each piece are true. Often the hurrying pencil will miss
-the curve of a breast or a leg. Then the artist will return to that
-point with hasty, intermingled, impatient strokes that play around the
-true line. His only concern is to fix the first view, the absolutely
-living impression. Afterwards, in tracing his sketch, he rectifies,
-but his chief aim is to amplify the impression of the life, taken
-spontaneously, according to his principle of enlarging the form, in
-order to place it better in the atmosphere (about in the proportion of
-5/4 instead of 4/4). Then he connects the contours and further enlarges
-the modelling, filling the outline with a wash of burnt-sienna, which
-gives the general value, or sometimes with blue or red water-colour.
-Rodin likes this practice in catching movements, and he has in his
-studio hundreds of drawings of this kind that differ from his early
-ones. Those aimed at the imaginative transcription of tragic and
-literary elements under strange illuminations, and were almost like the
-drawings of Odilon Redon; the later ones are merely graphic notes of
-movements, and are incapable of having any direct aim or meaning.
-
-I must add a few words upon a delicate point of which I should not
-have spoken if others had not spoken mistakenly upon the subject.
-Rodin's drawings, especially those of the present time, have shocked
-some people who have seen them by their licentious character. Why
-should we assume embarrassment in explaining this? In all Rodin's work
-there is a profound and violent sense of the voluptuous, and the stern
-painter of the vices and damnations of hell does not need to think of
-prudery. The elevation and dramatic character of his conceptions clothe
-the most daring attitudes with the severe chastity of the beautiful.
-In his sketches, made for himself alone, and in the privacy of his
-studio, Rodin no more fears erotic positions than did Hokusai. Beneath
-the original animality he perceives nature; and feminine sexuality,
-its movements, and impulses interest him, because therein woman is
-psychologically revealed. Everything, in physical desire, that exalts,
-maddens, contorts, and fevers the human body is, for the sculptor, the
-object of an intensely interested study that he does not communicate
-to the general public; nor is he the only one among the great artists
-of form whom the erotic has interested from this point of view. Only
-mediocre minds and minds capable of low intentions see anything low in
-the movements of life. Rodin's studies from the model, naked and free,
-without spectators, in the serious presence of work, never sully his
-grand and melancholy inspiration; and his daring art is assuredly that
-which most leads away the beholder from erotic ideas, because it notes
-in every human being the melancholy of the insatiable, and makes the
-pleasure of the senses a suffering of the flesh and the spirit. By this
-point he touches the profound morality of art, and his consciousness is
-free from any equivocation. The recent drawings in which he catches the
-animal attitudes of the model are thus no more questionable, from the
-delicate point of view of which I am speaking, than anatomical plates,
-or the sad immodesties of a post-mortem examination. He adds to them
-the power of expressing passion with which he is endowed, but since he
-only shows these drawings to friends and artists in whom nudity does
-not arouse silly thoughts, this concerns no one else. A comparison
-cannot even be ventured between these drawings and the masterly
-etchings of Rops, which are deliberate illustrations of licentious
-subjects, relieved only by beauty of execution, and which should only
-be shown with express reservations. Rodin admires certain bronzes in
-the secret museum at Naples, and certain Japanese prints, because in
-these, too, art has done its work by expressing a secret and essential
-spring of the nervous and psychological life of humanity; a fierce
-and serious subject which only fools consider laughable or indecent,
-because their minds approach it with indecorum and ridicule. But I
-do not know that Rodin ever even yielded to the fancy of modelling
-one of these subjects for himself, as Rubens and many others did not
-forbid themselves to do. It is time, therefore, to have done with this
-question in regard to the great French sculptor. I do not know for whom
-he intends these recent drawings, a whole framed collection of which
-occupies one of the storerooms of his country house. Perhaps he will
-have them destroyed; in any case, they are but studies of movements and
-masses, and in no way direct representations of life.
-
-Rodin's drawings are "rough drafts" to be compared with those of
-a writer. Some are very impressive, and all constitute precious
-evidence of his psychological preoccupations and of his desire for
-simplification. But they remain on the margin of his work, and neither
-the public nor the critics have those rights over them that belong to
-biographers and friends. That is a point to be plainly specified, and
-I desire to repeat that that is the reason this book contains none of
-them.
-
-
-[1] This word may mean either a certain sort of dance, or the "round"
-of a patrol.--TRANS.
-
-[2] Album of 142 sketches, reproduced in heliogravure by M. Manzi and
-published by Goupil, 1897. These sketches in wash or colour have been
-selected according to the advice of M. Fenaille, their owner, who lent
-them, from the most imaginative of Rodin's drawings in his second
-manner.
-
-
-
-
-V.
-
-
-RODIN'S PRIVATE LIFE--HIS PERSON, STUDIO, AND HOME--HIS INFLUENCE;
-SCULPTORS INSPIRED BY HIS IDEAS--RODIN'S PLACE IN THE FRENCH
-SCHOOL--HIS PRESENT POSITION IN RESPECT TO ACADEMIC SCULPTURE
-
-
-Auguste Rodin is in person a man of middle height, with an enormous
-head upon a massive torso. At first sight one sees nothing of him but
-this leonine bust, the head with its strong nose, flowing grey beard,
-and small, keen, light-coloured eyes, slightly veiled by short sight
-and by a gentle irony. The impression of power is accentuated by the
-rolling gait, the rocky aspect of the troubled brow under the rough
-brush of hair, the bony thickness of the aquiline nose and the ample
-curls of beard. But the first impression is partly contradicted by
-the reticent line of the mouth, the quick look, penetrating, simple,
-and arch, (one of the most composite glances I have ever seen), and
-especially by the voice, which is hollow, not easily modulated, with
-deep inflections and sudden returns to a dental pronunciation, and
-of which the meaning and intention are further modified by certain
-very expressive tossings of the head. He appears simple, precise,
-reserved, courteous, and cordial, without liveliness. Little by little
-his shyness gives place to a calm and remarkable tone of authority.
-He is neither emphatic nor awkward, and would seem rather dispirited
-than inspired. An immense energy breathes in his sober and measured
-gestures. The slowness and apparent embarrassment of his speech and
-the pauses in his conversation give especial significance to what he
-says; moreover, Rodin has acquired of late years a genuine case as a
-talker and even as a writer, which previously he did not possess. I was
-intimately acquainted with Stéphane Mallarmé, who, measured by Rodin,
-was incomparably eloquent, and I often associate these two men in my
-thoughts. The voices were alike, and Rodin, too, with his improvised
-phrases, has the same veiled circumspect way of speech, hitting
-suddenly upon words that illuminate the idea.
-
-[Illustration: AUGUSTE RODIN]
-
-Rodin, in speaking of any work of his, has a way of explaining it that
-is very elliptical, but very clear, and which has caused some brilliant
-chatterers to say, because he did not offer a prolix commentary, that
-he did not know what he had done. In reality he utters the essential,
-and his gesture, which seems to model his thought in space, completes
-his words. He looks lovingly on his creations, and sometimes seems to
-meditate in astonishment at the idea of having created them; he speaks
-of them as though they existed apart from himself.
-
-Gradually, beneath Rodin's essential simplicity, one discovers features
-that were at first hidden; he is ironical, sensuous, nervous, proud.
-He contains as possibilities all the passions that he expresses with
-so vibrating a magnificence, and one begins to perceive the secret
-links between this calm, almost cheerful man and the art that he
-reveals. At certain moments his clear and rather vague eyes become
-full of phosphorescent points, the face grows sardonic and almost
-faunlike; at others it saddens and discloses a sickness for infinity.
-This man is the comrade of his dumb white creatures; he loves them,
-follows their abstract life, has moral obligations towards them.
-Fundamentally the one thing with which Rodin is really concerned is
-the life of permanent forms. Of late celebrity, age, and experience
-have disposed him to become an adviser, a master, and he has begun
-to talk aesthetics. But his ideas and opinions are restricted. He
-perceives human beings only very summarily, his cordiality is a way
-of fulfilling his social duties hastily. He has, if I may venture the
-expression, very fine moral antennae, and they serve to recognise the
-persons whom he will like. Very capable of friendship, Rodin reduces
-friendship to tacit agreements upon the essential subjects of thought,
-and it is only if one meets him upon one of these points that one
-takes a place in his remembrance or his liking. He does not put his
-faith in individuals, but in general ideas. He loves nothing but his
-work, and endures everything else with civil boredom. He has a horror
-of debates and disturbances. I have never heard him speak ill of bad
-artists; he neglects, but does not criticise. He has a silent humour
-which leads him to make busts of official and mediocre sculptors, with
-an amusing good grace. Uncompromising in everything that touches his
-art, Rodin has throughout his whole career endured severe struggles
-and grave injustices, and, too proud to dispute, has never shown his
-secret revolts. At the time when the _Balzac_ was refused all Rodin's
-friends said to him: "Resist, force your work upon them; you ought,
-for the work's sake, and a court would surely decide for you, for your
-agreement is definitely in your favour." He listened and thanked them,
-always good-tempered, and then withdrew his statue without saying
-anything.
-
-It is not weakness, for Rodin has had an excessively hard life and
-is strong and patient; it is dignity of the inner life and profound
-indifference for the life about him. Rodin is a high dignitary of
-the Legion of Honour, a president of the judges of sculpture of an
-important society of artists (the Société Nationale), he is honoured
-all over Europe, has been received in England as a genius, and has
-succeeded Whistler as the head of a chosen band of artists; but he
-remains the man that he was when he was unknown and poor in his
-solitude at Brussels.
-
-He likes few things, but likes those thoroughly. He reads little, but
-what he reads strikes home to him as to no one else; Baudelaire and
-Rousseau, in whom he delights, are instances. He is passionately fond
-of music, especially of Gluck, but seldom speaks of it. He simplifies
-everything, sees only the main lines in morality as in art, lives by
-two or three principles, and has an aversion for everything that is
-not essential.
-
-[Illustration: A CORNER OF RODIN'S STUDIO AT MEUDON]
-
-When one knows Rodin well one ceases to be able to separate him from
-his work. He can no longer think otherwise than symbolically by slow
-deposits of accumulated sensation which work on in the deep strata of
-his consciousness and suddenly blossom and take a name. His statues are
-states of the soul. He is himself a representative being, surprised at
-his own immanence, and his intelligence is outdone by his instinct.
-That is how it comes about that he does not always know how to name
-the beings that he has discovered, as we discover, by means of pain,
-corners of our consciousness that we had not suspected. In the same way
-that Rodin seems to break away the fragments of a block from around
-an already existing statue hidden in it, he is himself a sort of rock
-concealing shapes within it and embracing in its secret recesses
-immense crystallised arborescences. With a simple enough personal
-psychology he expresses infinite shades and inflexions of emotion. His
-thought is like the monad of Leibnitz; it seems, when one sees the man,
-to have no window to the outer world.
-
-Rodin's opinions upon social life are vague. He contents himself with
-repeating that work lovingly done is the secret of all order and all
-happiness. To love life and natural forms, and to attempt nothing
-disobedient to Nature or her aims, that is his whole morality.
-
-He sees very few people and visits nobody. He would baffle visitors
-accustomed to elegant, literary, well-informed, brilliant artists. His
-studio in the Rue de l'Université, at the end of an old yard encumbered
-by blocks of marble and shaded by aged chestnut trees, is like the
-work-place of a poor beginner. Neither a carpet nor an ornament is
-to be seen; the stone floor, the bare walls, a few rush chairs, some
-modelling stands, some cloths, a shabby deal table loaded with papers,
-sketches piled up on shelves, blouses hanging on nails, a cast-iron
-stove--these and nothing more are found by the many foreign admirers
-who come to see Rodin, and whom he receives with invariable amiability
-amid his assistants at work upon the Hugo monument or upon some smaller
-piece of marble.
-
-[Illustration: A CORNER OF RODIN'S STUDIO AT MEUDON]
-
-Setting aside his journeys to London and Prague and his travels in
-Germany and Italy, Rodin leads an extremely retired life in Paris, and
-is rarely to be met. He invariably lunches at his own house at Meudon,
-then goes to the Rue de L'Université to work, and goes home again to
-dinner. Formerly, before he had his house at Meudon, he used to lunch
-at a _café_ in the Place de L'Alma, where he was to be seen for twenty
-years, and to which people used to go to see him, rather as people
-go to see Ibsen in Christiania. The house, of a sixteenth-century
-style, that Rodin has inhabited at Meudon since 1900, is situated amid
-vineyards, and stands alone at the end of a sort of cliff, overlooking
-all Paris, the Seine, and the Bois de Boulogne, and facing the wooded
-heights of Saint Cloud and Bellevue. The site is open and fine; Rodin
-enjoys immense expanses of sky, sunsets, storms, and moonlight nights
-that delight him. The house is spacious, light, furnished with extreme
-simplicity, and adorned by a few pictures, the works of friends (in
-particular his portraits by Sargent and Legros). Rodin has added to
-it the pavilion in iron and glass, in which he exhibited all his
-work, at the Rond-point de l'Alma, in the exhibition of 1900. This
-pavilion, rebuilt and full of brilliant sunlight, contains all the
-artist's statuary. There are also several small studios, in which
-Rodin has his marble rough-hewn, keeps the casts of his statues or
-accumulates the collections of bronzes, marbles, antique or Gothic,
-and fragments which he is never tired of finding out and buying. In
-this place, which, after a life of difficulties and worries, Rodin has
-been able to purchase, he leads a life that fully suits his tastes,
-among beautiful trees and flowers, with a majestic landscape before
-him. It is touching to see the man, here, amid the enormous mass of
-his work, a whole world of statues, with which he lives and which sums
-up all his labours and all his existence. A photograph which I am able
-to add to the illustrations of this volume will give a partial idea
-of that surprising and imposing cohort of figures in clay, marble,
-and bronze--that impassioned or tragic throng. Rodin receives very
-few visitors at Meudon--hardly any but old friends, and he spends his
-mornings in his garden or in his light and cheerful studio drawing or
-superintending his workmen. It is chiefly at Meudon that he prepares
-his rough drafts, the main lines of his compositions; and in order to
-see an effect he will often hastily put together with clay some of
-the plaster limbs that he keeps in a number of glass cases--quite an
-anatomical museum in fact, filling a whole storey, and containing
-hundreds of pieces and of attitudes piled together.
-
-[Illustration: STUDY (IN BRONZE) FOR THE "BALZAC"]
-
-Rodin appears to stand alone in his own time; first, by his genius;
-and secondly, by the special character of his artistic conception.
-This solitude, however, is only apparent. Rodin's ideas, as opposed
-to the teaching of the "École," form a body of logical principles
-which are slowly attracting the adhesion of young artists. The long
-struggle of impressionism against academism has now entered upon its
-last phase: the return to the French tradition, to national affiliation
-in opposition to the Roman neo-classicism. That idea, which is the
-programme of all independent and interesting critical intelligence in
-our country, finds in Rodin its perfect demonstration, and the only
-one afforded by contemporary sculpture. Until now Rodin has preached
-only by example, and we know how slow the critics and the public are in
-extracting from a work the ideas that it contains. But the extraction
-is now begun, and Rodin himself speaks with undisputed authority. Since
-the exhibition of 1900 his moral position stands ten times higher.
-Youth greets him as a chieftain and his detractors are silent. While
-the synthetic and symbolic mind of Rodin arouses the enthusiasm and
-inspires the thoughts of writers, the theory of the amplification of
-the modelling is making its way in the studios of sculptors. "Rodin has
-opened a large window in the pale house of contemporary sculpture,"
-declares Pierre Roche, the sculptor; "out of the timid and much
-impaired craft that was before his day he has shown that a bold art
-full of hope can be made." This opinion of one of the most delicate
-artists of our generation is precisely that of many independent
-sculptors. Among these we must quote Emile Bourdelle, Rodin's pupil
-and friend, an impassioned, vibrating, and generous artist, whose
-works are among those first looked for in each Salon. Others are the
-two brothers Gaston and Lucien Schnegg, the latter of whom exhibited
-in the Salon of 1904 so beautiful a head of Aphrodite, almost worthy
-in the mysterious and vaporous beauty of its planes, of the ancients,
-and of Rodin; Jules Desbois, of the first rank in technical skill and
-of a violently original temperament; Alexandre Charpentier, a former
-collaborator of Rodin's, whose success in applied art has not turned
-him aside from his expressive and vigorous work in statuary; Mlle.
-Camille Claudel, Rodin's pupil, who is the first woman sculptor of
-existing-art in France, and whose name has appeared upon admirable
-works; and finally, Pierre Roche, although his supple and decorative
-fancy denies itself the expression of the tragic. The Swiss sculptor
-Niederhausern-Rodo, George Minne, the sculptor of Ghent, who has a
-powerful creative genius, not understood, and the Italian sculptor
-Rosso, are also partisans of Rodin's art, and so is the Englishman
-Bartlett. In another direction it is very interesting to note the
-curious reciprocal influence of Auguste Rodin and Eugène Carrière,
-who are united by friendship and by the same aesthetic creed. Eugène
-Carrière, the most profound painter of the inner life existing in the
-French school of to-day, has great analogies with Rodin, both as a man
-and as an artist. He, too, reduces his art to essentials, to the main
-lines and the deliberate amplification of surfaces. Thus his figures,
-bathed in shadow, are akin to Rodin's statues, while the latter, bathed
-with dewy light, seem to be pictures by Carrière. The painter becomes
-massive and powerful, the sculptor becomes vaporous. Rodin seeks the
-bland, half-shadows of Correggio, and Carrière desires that his figures
-should have the powerful relief of bronze. The painter sacrifices
-colour to the sole study of values, and by his black-and-white comes
-back to sculpture. Very curious is this point of junction between
-two great artists. Rodin is beginning to explain himself with the
-pen; and Eugène Carrière has, for some years past, been writing--too
-rarely--passages upon art of which the style is admirable and the
-concentration of thought astonishing, passages which recall Mallarmé
-and Baudelaire, and leave far behind the commonplaces of journalistic
-criticism. Rodin and Carrière have their school, their circle of chosen
-admirers, and their double influence may soon be the most decisive, if
-not the most brilliant and the noisiest, in French art of to-day.
-
-NUDE FIGURE (PHOTOGRAPHED IN THE OPEN AIR AT TWILIGHT IN THE GARDEN AT
-MEUDON)
-
-The prevailing note of opinion about Rodin among his friends and his
-detractors is that he is like no one else, and that no statue can, in a
-manner, be looked at beside his, so individual is the conception from
-which they spring. By the mere fact that they exist, they compel us to
-choose between them and the others. Their silhouettes, their planes,
-the quality of their shadows, and their lights, make them technically
-works apart. If such a man understands sculpture thus, either he is
-right, against everybody, or he is totally mistaken; we cannot like him
-and also approve of ordinary statuary. His psychological and tragic
-genius conquers the admiration even of those who oppose his material
-execution. Rodin does not set himself up as a chief, nor recognise
-followers; yet he is a chief by his very work.
-
-He is the greatest living French artist, and one of the most complex
-and powerful movers of thought in modern art. He does not found a
-school, but he influences the soul of a generation. He remains alone,
-not susceptible of imitation; but if he did not exist sculpture would
-be deprived of its greatest regenerator.[1] By inscribing passions
-in symbols, he touches the sensibilities of all, and is a master
-to poets as much as to sculptors, because his subjects are moral,
-affecting, never commanded by an anecdote, bathed in the universally
-lyric. Attempts have been made to blame him because of the admiration
-of writers; it has been said, with an inflexion of scorn (especially
-in the circles of his fellow-artists), "he is a _littéraire_." An
-injustice easily committed at a time when the intellect of painters
-and sculptors seems to blush at itself, and when they make it a sort
-of false merit to show that their eye and hand are separate from their
-brain. Rodin's splendid technical power annuls the reproach and retains
-the praise. Resting firmly upon nature, his symbols may rise high.
-Rodin delights poets because he makes the infinite emanate from the
-most finite of arts.
-
-Everything has been patiently meditated by him. He dares, but is never
-overbold; his balance and his taste are those of a classic, despite
-the uncomprehending astonishment of the academic sculptors, hypnotised
-by the sophistry of _finish_ and _elegance_, and confusing the _exact_
-with the _true._ There is a synthesized form, that corresponds to
-reality synthesized in symbols, a _second truth;_ and that proportion
-is observed by very few artists. Most of them, contenting themselves
-with an immediate, momentary, anecdotic truth, translate it by
-picturesque observation, or by minutely detailed copying. This attempt
-of a sterile cleverness to transcribe the instantaneous is the very
-contrary of art, the first character of which is to display the laws
-of vital permanence underlying fugitive aspects. Herein lies the reason
-why sculptors become uneasy over Rodin, while writers, more familiar
-with general ideas, become enthusiastic. The impressionist crisis--the
-study, that is to say, of instantaneous lights and actions--hardly got
-over, he brings in this _second truth,_ the transcription of general
-and permanent feelings into a form that speaks as much to the mind as
-to the senses. Such a man dominates impressionism as much as he does
-academism.
-
-A whole order of curious and fundamental relations between nervous
-sensibility and thought has arisen out of his work. Rodin's personality
-is specially representative in the line of French sculptors. He goes
-back, as I have said, to the Egyptians and the Greeks in the matter
-of technical ideas. In his tragic feeling he proceeds directly from
-the Gothic artists. It is from them that he descends, and especially
-from the sculptors of the French Renascence, in particular Germain
-Pilon; and he blends his Greek remembrances, passed through an Italian
-influence, with a conception altogether national, vigorous, and
-decorative. Rodin's actual part is to take up sculpture exactly at
-the moment of the French evolution.[2] Since that time we have had
-some great masters; native genius has been triumphantly upheld, in
-opposition to the false school that came from the Alps, by Coysevox,
-Houdon, Puget, Pajou, Pigalle, Clodion, Falconet, Couston, Rude,
-Carpeaux, and Barye, a line of splendid inventors of shapes, all of
-whom, in contradistinction to the official school, have represented
-the inmost qualities of their race. All these men Rodin emulates by
-the importance of his work; perhaps the future may regard him as
-the magnificent outcome of their efforts carried on through three
-centuries. In this succession of artists, Puget, Rude, and Barye are
-those with whom his technical relations are closest.[3] But he has been
-less decorative than Puget and less hampered by the themes imposed
-upon him; he has gone further than the great Rude in the expression of
-inward emotion, and he surpasses even Barye in power of modelling and
-boldness of silhouette. He has created a world which is fully his own,
-a feeling and a pathos not to be found elsewhere, which are the very
-soul of his time.
-
-Rodin, then, can be set only beside Puget and Rude. Like Puget, he is
-overflowing with vitality and with passionate frenzy; he worships power
-and heroic beings; but his are sad, and nearer to Gothic asceticism
-and to the nervous derangement of Baudelaire than to the resplendent
-pomp of the seventeenth century, into which Puget transposed his
-heroes of Rome and of Corneille. Like Rude, he is attracted by deep
-things, by soul tragedies; but he is more abstract than the creator
-of the _Napoleon Awakening to Immortality_, the _Joan of Arc,_ or
-the _Marseillaise._ Rodin is more general, more synthetic; he turns
-his mind to permanent symbols, outside of ages and races. Taking up,
-as if in challenge, the mythological subjects that the "École" had
-most spoiled, he has shown how a great mind can renew all things and
-impress upon them the magic of its vision. He is the most symbolic
-of our men of genius; and if the modelling of the Greeks, Gothic
-austerity, the strength of Puget and of Rude, have helped Rodin to
-make up his personality, the fusion of these elements and the addition
-of a personal imagination and an extraordinary contemplative faculty
-have enabled him, like Wagner, who descended from Bach, Beethoven, and
-Liszt, to create, after and apart from all of them, work that resumes
-them and forgets them, to become in its turn an initiator. The point
-in which Rodin is inimitable is the expression of the voluptuous with
-all its latent woes; and this point strongly recalls to memory _Tristan
-and Isolde_, which is such a paroxysm as might touch the most perilous
-region of exceptional art; but Rodin is kept within the bounds of the
-normal, and protected from the audacities of his strange and troubled
-imagination, by his imperturbable technical certainty and by his
-admiration for some few masters. As was the case with Baudelaire and
-with Poe, his purity and grandeur of form save him; like Dante, this
-lover of gloomy beauty hangs over the verge of passion's hell without
-falling into it.
-
-Rodin's art is healthy because it feeds upon natural truth and general
-logic. He is the supreme painter of man bowed by intense, melancholic,
-feverish, constricting thought; but also, with a candid tenderness
-unknown to Wagner, he is the caressing creator of women in love, the
-poet of youth, embracing and radiant. Only a genius can have the
-diversity of mind that produces _The Burghers of Calais_, ascetic
-and mediæval, the spasmodic _Hell_, the almost abstract _Balzac_,
-the bronze busts worthy of Donatello, and the images of women carved
-in the radiant and golden marble of Attica by a sensuous and subtle
-enthusiast who has rediscovered the soul of Hellenic beauty. This union
-of technical skill, evolved according to the secrets of the antique
-with a power of expressing all human sentiments from gentleness to
-lewdness, from the mystic to the pathetic, from nervous disorganisation
-to carnal frankness, this union of contraries and this universality are
-not to be found in any of our forerunners. Not Puget, nor Rude, nor
-any of our masters has had such intellectual ubiquity, such strength
-of condensation; in these points it is allowable, even in our own day,
-to acknowledge Rodin as supreme in the rich French school, and thus to
-anticipate the judgment of the future, in whose eyes he will loom yet
-larger.
-
-In any case it was high time he should appear; he has been as useful
-as was Manet by his intervention in French art. In spite of Dalou,
-sculpture had fallen very low after the death of Carpeaux and Barye;
-the deplorable school of the Second Empire had brought it into
-degeneracy, and we could reckon no one in sculpture to correspond
-to the great impressionists. Such men as Dujalbert, Chapu, Mercié,
-Frémiet, Saint Marceaux, and Falguière, are but sham great sculptors,
-nothing of whose work will last; the "École" group, from Paul Dubois
-to Barrias, Aube and Guillaume, is a mere example of pretentious
-insignificance. The few vigorous temperaments, or workers of genuine
-technical merit, like Denys Puech, Jean Dampt, Gardet, Camille
-Lefèvre, Devillez, and Jean Bassier, did not know how to put together
-their efforts in such a way as to found a real school. They produced
-without attaining a cohesion of thought capable of guiding a fresh
-generation. Bartholomé, thoughtful, pure, dreamy, and proud, stands
-apart. Mme. Besnard and M. Théodore Rivière are charming, but without
-influence. I have spoken of the group that has spontaneously placed
-itself around Rodin. Amid this interesting, unequal, and scattered
-sculpture he appeared with the authority of a master and a prophet;
-his work set the question upon its true basis again, showing whence we
-came, what was to be avoided, and whither we were to go; and all this
-with such clearness of evidence that the appearance of Rodin becomes,
-in like degree with that of Goujon and that of Puget, a capital date
-in the history of the French school, I declared in the Preface my
-intention to avoid any extravagant eulogy of Rodin, and have uttered
-my dislike of the idolatry by which some people think it necessary
-publicly to emphasise their admiration, with its snobbish accretions.
-But I should fall into the opposite fault if I did not declare the
-truth and the importance of what such an artist brings to his art, and
-did not mark his exact place in the line of his country's sculpture.
-Henley has called Rodin the Michael Angelo of the modern world. That
-opinion of a foreign critic, a critic justly esteemed one of the most
-upright in contemporary literature, France may justly make her own,
-far from extravagant and puerile praises, and in the face of the work
-accomplished. I shall be but too happy if I have contributed to make
-clearer to the public certain secret reasons, certain inner frameworks,
-of that logical and beautiful work.
-
-
-[1] A vehement but indiscriminating critic, M. Octave Mirbeau, has seen
-good to write, by way of affirming that Rodin's art moved him strongly:
-"A style takes rise from him." I have neither the space nor the wish to
-recriminate; but it would be dangerous to let such artistic heresies
-pass without protest. Rodin is an admirable example, but to say that
-a style arises from him is to say that he may become the creator of a
-perishable formula, and to understand nothing about his art.
-
-[2] Some surprise may be felt at my having failed to insist upon the
-name of Michael Angelo. Everybody has hit upon the obvious comparison.
-It is the exceeding obviousness that leads me to distrust it. Rodin is
-much nearer to Puget than to Michael Angelo, who is muscular strength
-carried to heroic proportions. Rodin, like Puget, and more than Puget,
-is nervous strength. Rodin appears much more akin to Michael Angelo
-than he really is. Careful study causes us more and more to leave
-behind that preliminary likeness which has sufficed so many critics.
-
-[3] We might perhaps say the same in regard to the great Carpeaux, too,
-who carried the art of movement and expression to so high a degree, and
-who did the same liberal work against the "École" as Rodin was to do at
-a later time. But their visions, aims, and minds differ profoundly.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-APPENDIX--CHRONOLOGICAL LIST OF RODIN'S PRINCIPAL WORKS--LIST OF THE
-PRINCIPAL BOOKS OR ARTICLES WRITTEN ABOUT HIM--QUOTATIONS REFERRING TO
-HIM--AN OPINION OF EUGÈNE CARRIÈRE'S; AN OPINION OF HENLEY'S--VARIOUS
-NOTES
-
-
-Chronological catalogue of Rodin's works is almost impossible to draw
-up. I do not think Rodin himself could do it. It must be remembered
-that before 1877 he made a quantity of studies which he destroyed,
-and such a producer as he is willing to neglect things of which
-others would keep count. In his poor and wandering days Rodin must
-have abandoned many things. How would it be possible to recount the
-figures that were retouched or even executed at Carrier-Belleuse's,
-the earliest independent works, the characters executed by him at
-Brussels, the statues that were planned and left unfinished for lack
-of money, those that were broken or that failed--all the immense store
-of work accomplished in the course of twenty years by a man who worked
-every day? How would it be possible even to enumerate the sketches
-and varied renderings of different subjects piled up in the studio at
-Meudon, in the Clos Payen, in the Rue des Fourneaux, and at Vaugirard?
-It is a whole world. I will confine myself, therefore, to a statement
-of known and exhibited works: and these, indeed, are what is essential.
-
-
-LIST OF THE PRINCIPAL EXHIBITED WORKS
-
-1864. _The Man with a Broken Nose._
-
-1865-70. Works in the studio of Carrier-Belleuse.
-
-1872-77. Friezes upon the Bourse and various works at Brussels.
-
-1877. _The Primitive Man (The Age of Brass)._ Decorative work on the
-Trocadéro.
-
-1878-80. _Saint Jerome. Saint John the Baptist._ Works in the
-manufactory of Sèvres. Competition for the National Defence Monument.
-
-1881. _Adam_ (destroyed). _Eve._
-
-1882. _Ugolino_ (a sketch taken up again later). Busts of _Alphonse
-Legros_ and _IV. E. Henley._ Studies for _The Gate of Hell._
-
-1883. _Bellona. General Lynch_ (equestrian statue). _The Genius of
-War._
-
-1884. Monument of _President Vicunha. Bust of a Young Woman._
-
-1885. _The Man and the Serpent._ Busts of _Dalou, Hugo,_ and _Antonin
-Proust._
-
-1886. First sketch of the Hugo monument. Drawings dealing with _The
-Gate of Hell._ Bust of _Henry Becque. The Kiss_ (a small group).
-
-1887. _Perseus and the Gorgon. Head of St. John beheaded._
-
-1888. _The Danaid. Alan Walking._ Nude study for one of the _Burghers
-of Calais._ Several little groups.
-
-1889. Studies for the _Gate of Hell_ and the monument to _Claude
-Lorraine. Torso of a Woman._ Group of _The Dream. The Dream of Life.
-Women Damned_ (in marble). _Hecuba._ Bust of _Roger Marx. Destitution.
-Thought_ (in marble).
-
-1890. _Bust of a Young Woman_ (in silver). _Torso of Saint John.
-Brother and Sister._
-
-1891. _The Caryatid. The Young Mother. A Nymph._
-
-1892. Busts of _Puvis de Chavannes_ and _Henri Rochefort. Grief.
-Claude Lorraine. The Burghers of Calais._
-
-1893. _The Death of Adonis._ Medallion of _César Franck. Galatea._
-Bust of _Séverine. The Crest and the Wave. Resurrection. The Child
-Achilles_ (group in clay).
-
-1894. _Eternal Spring. Hope_ (a reclining figure in back view.)
-_Orpheus and Eurydice_ (first version). _Christ and Magdalen._
-
-1895. Inauguration of _The Burghers of Calais. Illusion,_ the _Daughter
-of Icarus._ Medallion of _Octave Mirbeau._ Nude studies for the
-_Balzac. Man Crouching._
-
-1896. _The Inner Voice. The Muse of Anger_ (for the Hugo monument).
-_The Conqueror. Minerva. The Poet and the Life of Contemplation. Women
-Bathing._ Studies for the _Balzac._
-
-1897. _Victor Hugo. Balzac._ Monument of _President_ _Sarmiento._
-
-1898. Statue of _Balzac._ Bust of a _Young American._ Bust of _Madame
-F._ Statue of _Sarmiento,_ with a high relief of Apollo in marble.
-Monument of _Labour. The Benedictions_ (marble). _Twilight. Clouds._
-_The Parcæ and the Young Girl._
-
-1899. Works for the Hugo monument.
-
-1900. Marble groups. Exhibition at the Rond-point de l'Alma.
-
-1901. _Shades_ (for _The Gate of Hell)._
-
-1902. Groups in marble. _The Hand of God._ Busts.
-
-1903. Bust of _Hugo. The Poet and the Muse._ Various sketches.
-_Ugolino_ (fresh version). _The Prodigal Son._
-
-1904. _The Thinker_, and various works in marble in process of
-execution.[1]
-
-The work of Rodin may thus be estimated at about ten works on a grand
-scale, forty groups or statues, some thirty important busts, and
-perhaps two hundred figures or portraits, without counting sketches,
-from 1877 to 1904.
-
-I come now to the mention of some significant writings that deal with
-his aesthetic theory or with his work; and, as may be supposed, I leave
-out of question a quantity of valueless articles, for Rodin has been
-directly or indirectly the pretext for a great mass of writings, and
-is the modern French artist who has been most talked of, justly or
-unjustly. The works quoted are such as may be consulted with advantage.
-
-
-[1] To these may be added, in 1905, a bust of the Rt. Hon. _George
-Wyndham_, and _The Hand of God._
-
-
-
-
-ARTICLES OR BOOKS RELATING TO RODIN
-
-"Balzac and Rodin," by Roger Marx (_Le Voltaire,_ March, 1892).
-
-"Claude Lorraine," by Roger Marx (_Le Voltaire,_ June, 1892).
-(Excellent studies in the criticism of sculpture.)
-
-"Auguste Rodin," by Roger Marx (_Pan,_ and _The Image,_ September,
-1897).
-
-Drawings by Rodin, 129 plates, containing 142 heliogravures (Goupil and
-Co., 1897), from the suggestions and loans of M. Fenaille.
-
-"Rodin's Studio," by Edouard Rod (_Gazette des Beaux Arts,_ May, 1898).
-
-"Rodin," by Gabriel Mourey (_Revue illustrée,_ October, 1899)
-
-_Exhibition of 1900: Rodin's Works,_ with four prefaces by Eugène
-Carrière, Jean Paul Laurens, Claude Monet, and Albert Besnard.
-
-"Rodin and Legros," by Arsène Alexandre (_Figaro,_ June, 1900).
-
-"The Gate of Hell," by Anatole France (_Figaro,_ June 1st, 1900).
-
-_La Revue des Beaux Arts et des Lettres,_ January 1st, 1900.
-
-_La Plume,_ 1900. Special number.
-
-_Les Maîtres Artistes,_ special number, October 15th, 1903.
-(Illustrated collections, containing a certain number of critical
-studies by various authors.)
-
-_Rodin,_ by Léon Riotor: a pamphlet, reproducing in French, German,
-English, Italian, Spanish, and Russian, a study that appeared in the
-_Revue populaire des Beaux Arts,_ April 8th, 1899.
-
-_Rodin, the Sculptor,_ a volume of criticism, illustrated; by Léon
-Maillard (Floury); 1899.
-
-_The Sculptor Rodin, drawn from life._ A volume by Mlle. Judith Cladel
-(_La Plume_ office, 1903).
-
-_Rodin,_ a study by L. Brieger-Wasser (Vogel. Strassburg; 1903).
-
-_Rodin,_ by George Treu (_Jahrbuch der bildenden Kunst._ Berlin,
-Marstersteig, 1903).
-
-_Rodin,_ by R. M. Rilke (Berlin, Bard, 1903).
-
-"Rodin." Articles upon, by W. E. Henley, 1890; D. S. MacColl, 1902;
-Henri Duhem, 1890; Karel B. Made (Prague); Vittorio Pica (Rome).
-
-Of these various writings devoted to Rodin, those of Roger Marx should
-be particularly noted, on account of their technical understanding;
-Léon Maillard's volume is a sincere, well-informed, well-illustrated
-book, produced by a man who comprehends. The book by Mlle. Judith
-Cladel, daughter of the distinguished novelist, is an originally
-conceived volume, the only one that relates certain conversations, and
-attempts, with charming acuteness, to present Rodin in his private
-character. It is a work that deserves to be much better known and
-appreciated, and of which Rodin's first panegyrists, jealous of being
-the only "inventors" of the artist, have been very careful not to
-speak. The article by the graceful painter, Henri Duhem, is likewise
-excellent; and I consider Mr. MacColl's very remarkable, on account of
-its elevation and precision of judgment. The others have such value
-as belongs to admiring articles written hurriedly in newspapers: they
-express sympathetic feelings, or comment in a poetical way upon the
-subjects, but their critical value is négligeable, and there is nothing
-to be quoted from them for the information of my readers. The _Balzac_
-gave rise to a shoal of newspaper articles. Georges, Rodenbach, and
-France, on that occasion, said the acute and witty thing's about
-Rodin that they say about all manifestations of thought, and M.
-Mirbeau made Rodin the theme of some of those polemical variations,
-conjoining hyperbolical praise with abuse of his adversaries, which
-he is accustomed to offer as art-criticisms, and which have gained
-him a reputation of a certain kind. There is nothing to note in these
-pamphlets mixed with eulogistic effusions, the whole of which do not
-contain the substance of twenty lines by Henley or of Eugène Carrière's
-admirable Preface, which I am desirous of reproducing here because it
-is a masterpiece of synthetic divination.[1]
-
-
-[1] Preface to the Catalogue of the Rodin exhibition in the Pavillon
-de l'Alma, 1900. (The work mentioned above; other prefaces by Claude
-Monet, A. Besnard, and J. P. Laurens.)
-
-
-
-"THE ART OF RODIN
-
-
-"Rodin's art comes from the earth and returns to it, like those giant
-blocks--rocks or dolmens--which mark deserts, and in the heroic
-grandeur of which man recognises himself.
-
-"The transmission of thought by art, like the transmission of life, is
-the work of passion and of love.
-
-"Passion, whose obedient servant Rodin is, makes him discover the laws
-that serve to express it; she it is that gives him the sense of volumes
-and proportions, the choice of the expressive prominence.
-
-"Thus the earth projects external apparent forms, images, and statues
-that fill us with a sense of its internal life.
-
-"These terrestrial forms were the real guides of Rodin. They have set
-him free from scholastic traditions, in them he found his being and the
-creative instinct of men whom humanity celebrates.
-
-"Trees and plants revealed to him their likeness to those fair women,
-with sleek limbs rising, like delicate columns, to the moving torso and
-swelling breast, above which the head hangs heavily in the company of a
-strong and supple neck, even as a fine fruit full of savour weighs down
-its branch.
-
-"The massive brow overshadows the eyes, and the cheek brings the lip
-softly to the lover's entreaty.
-
-"Forms seek and meet in voluptuous desires of violence and of
-resignation, rebellious and obedient to laws from which nothing
-escapes; everywhere conscious logic triumphs.
-
-"The generalising spirit of Rodin has imposed solitude upon him. It
-has not been his lot to work upon the cathedral that is not, but his
-desire of humanity links him to the eternal forms of nature."
-
-After such a passage, in which every word is significant and eloquent,
-and is a great artist's reflection, everything seems pale. I will not,
-however, confine myself to a mere dry mention of the essay by Vittorio
-Pica, the great Italian critic, who generously arranged for Rodin's
-participation in the Venetian Exhibition (Gallery of Modern Art, 1897),
-and I should have liked to quote Anatole France's fine article, and
-some assertions of Mr. MacColl's, who very logically recalls to our
-memory the sculptor Auguste Préault, who is too much forgotten, and
-who was, indeed, a sort of imperfect precursor of Rodin. I must at
-least transcribe a few lines from W. E. Henley, who was, from the very
-beginning, a clear-sighted admirer of Rodin, and who spoke of him with
-eloquence and passion:--
-
-"M. Dalou ... has declared that when the century goes out it will
-remember the aforesaid doors" (i.e. _The Gate of Hell_) "as its heroic
-achievement in sculpture. And if that be true--as I believe it to be
-true--then where, between himself and Michael Angelo, is there so
-lofty a head as Rodin's?... His busts alone were enough to place him
-in the future, the style of them is so complete, the treatment so
-large and so distinguished, the effect so personal, yet so absolute in
-art.... Here, if you will, are a thousand hints of the possibilities of
-human passion: from Paolo and Francesca melting into each other:
-
- "'La bocca mi bacio tutta tremante'
-
-as no man and woman have done in sculpture since sculpture began....
-Here is sculpture in its essence.... You may read into it as much
-literature as you please, or as you can; but the interpolation is
-not Rodin's, but your own.... It is not literature in relief, nor
-literature in the round; it is sculpture pure and simple.... Passion is
-with him wholly a matter of form and surface and line, and exists not
-apart from these.... He is our Michael Angelo; and if he had not been
-that, he might have been our Donatello. And with Phidias and Lysippus
-all these some-and-twenty centuries afar, what more is left to say of
-the man of genius whose art is theirs?"
-
-We see that Henley's admiration returns to the comparison of Michael
-Angelo and Rodin. I persist in thinking that the resemblance rather
-lies in moral identity, in conception than in technicalities. The
-muscular enlargement of the Italian hero is not Rodin's amplification
-nor his expressiveness, _which is altogether nervous._ It is none the
-less true that these two men are the only ones who have imagined and
-realised a sculpturesque conception of so vast a reach. Not even Puget
-and Rude, who came between them, ventured such wholes as _The Tomb of
-the Medici_ or _The Gate of Hell._
-
-
-MUSEUMS
-
-Rodin has in the Luxembourg Museum (Paris) the following works:--
-
-_The Age of Brass,_ originally placed in the Luxembourg Gardens near
-the School of Mines.
-
-_The Danaid_ (marble).
-
-_Thought_ (marble).
-
-_St. John the Baptist Preaching_ (bronze).
-
-_The Fair Helmet-maker_ (bronze).
-
-Bust of _Jean Paul Laurens_ (bronze).
-
-_The Kiss_ (marble).
-
-Bust of _Mme. V._ (marble).
-
-At the Petit Palais (Ville de Paris), one work.
-
-At Beziers, Cognac, Dijon, Douai, Lille, and Lyons, several works.
-
-At Brussels, one work.
-
-At Copenhagen, several works.
-
-At New York, Boston, Chicago, and Philadelphia, works. At Helsingfors,
-one work.
-
-At Rotterdam, one work.
-
-At Geneva (Rath Museum), three works.
-
-At Venice, Christiania, St. Petersburg, Stockholm, Düsseldorf, Munich,
-Weimar, Vienna, Prague (town hall), one work in each town.
-
-At Hamburg, three works.
-
-At Hagen, three works.
-
-At Berlin (new gallery of Charlottenburg), five works.
-
-At Crefeld, two works.
-
-At Buda-Pest, five works.
-
-In London (Victoria and Albert Museum), two works; (British Museum),
-one work.
-
-At Glasgow, one work.
-
-Museum of Marseilles, _The Inner Voice_ (clay).
-
-The new works in these various museums are originals or casts.
-
-
-PRIVATE COLLECTIONS
-
-M. Vever (_Eve,_ in marble).
-
-M. Pontremoli (the _National Defence._)
-
-M. Antony Roux (_The Kiss_).
-
-M. Roger Marx (bust, _The Young Mother_).
-
-M. Blanc (_The Eternal Idol._)
-
-M. Desmarais (the _Idyll._)
-
-Mme. Durand (_Thought_, in marble, given to the Luxembourg).
-
-M. Peytel (various groups).
-
-Mme. Russell (_Minerva._)
-
-M. Fenaille (_The Spring, Bust of Mme. F., The Poet and the Life of
-Contemplation,_ a twisted column with figures, surmounted by a mask).
-
-Baron Vitta (high-reliefs in stone).
-
-The Marquise de Carcano (_Head of St. John beheaded,_ marble).
-
-This, of course, is a very cursory list, and includes only collections
-in Paris.
-
-I must add separately to the works published about Rodin those for
-which I am responsible: (1) a study, called "The Art of M. Rodin,"
-_Revue des Revues,_ 15th June, 1898; this has been approved by the
-artist, and very frequently reproduced. (2) A lecture delivered on
-the 31st of July, 1900, at the Rodin exhibition, and published by
-_La Plume_, with four unpublished drawings. (3) An essay upon the
-surroundings, personality, and influence of Rodin, which appeared in
-the _Revue Universelle_ in 1901, and has likewise been reprinted,
-particularly in the _Maîtres Artistes_ (special number, 15th October,
-1903).
-
-The high price of the work published by Messrs. Goupil (_A Hundred
-and Fort-two Drawings by Rodin_) prevents that fine volume from being
-accessible to the public. The amateur photographer Druet has taken
-photographs of all Rodin's work, which are rather misty, but which
-render admirably the caressing touch of light on the main planes, and
-which in a measure reproduce the artistic atmosphere of the statues.
-Messrs. Haweis and Coles have likewise taken some beautiful and curious
-proofs. More classic, but also more definite, are the fine photographs
-which the art publisher Buloz has recently taken, and which have been
-employed to illustrate this volume.
-
-
-PORTRAITS
-
-There is a remarkable portrait of Rodin by Mr. John Sargent (dating
-from about twenty years ago). Another, by M. Alphonse Legros (a
-profile), is more of a fancy head, and wears a sort of tiara. A more
-recent portrait has been produced by Mr. Alexander. There is a very
-forcible bust by Mile. Camille Claudel, as well as a bust by J.
-Desbois, a lithograph by Eugène Carrière, and some amusing studio
-sketches by Mile. Cladel. An interesting lithograph of "Rodin in his
-Studio," by W. Rothenstein, appeared in the _Artist-Engraver,_ April,
-1904.
-
-A curious photograph, taken by M. Steichen; a poster for the Rodin
-exhibition, containing a portrait, and drawn by Carrière; and some
-excellent photographs taken at Prague (of which the one here reproduced
-is astonishingly faithful) complete this list of likenesses.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
- _Achilles, The Education of_
- _Adam_ (destroyed)
- _Adonis, The Death of_
- _Age of Brass, The_
- Antiope (of Correggio), The
- Antique, The, influence of, on Rodin
- Rodin's analysis of
- its right use
- its truth and beauty
- Aphrodite (by Lucien Schnegg)
- _Apollo,_ the two reliefs
- Aube
- _Autumn_ (stone)
- _Avarice and Lewdness_
-
- _Balzac, Statue of_
- Barrias; his monument to Hugo
- Bartholomé
- Bartlett
- Barye
- Bassier, Jean
- _Bastien-Lepage, Statue of_
- Baudelaire
- Beauvais
- _Becque, Henry, Bust of_
- dry-point portraits of
- _Bellona_
- _Benedictions, The_
- Bergerat, M., Rodin's drawings for his book
- Besnard, Mme.
- Boisbaudron, Lecoq de
- Boucher, the sculptor
- Bourdelle, Emile
- _Broken Nose, The Man with the_
- _Brother and Sister_
- Brussels
- _Burghers of Calais, The_
- Burgundian sculptors, 38
- Busts, Rodin's portrait, 17, 18, 21, 29, 31, 33, 84
-
- Carcano, Marchioness of
- Carpeaux
- Carrier-Belleuse
- Carrière, Eugène
- his opinion of Rodin's art
- _Caryatid, The_
- Celtic genius, The
- Chaplin
- Chappe, A statue of
- Chapu
- Charpentier, Alexandre
- Chartres, The cathedral of
- _Christ and the Magdalen_
- _Christian Martyr, The_
- Cladel, Mlle.
- Classicism, Rodin's
- Clodion
- Clot, lithographer
- _Conqueror, A, holding a Statue of Victory_
- Corneille
- Correggio
- Costume in sculpture, The question of
- Couston
- Coysevox
- _Crouching Man, The_
- Dalou; Rodin's bust of
- Dampt, Jean
- _Danaid, The_
- Dante
- David of Angers
- Devillez
- _Day_
- Delacroix
- Delaplanche
- Desbois
- Donatello
- Drawings and sketches, Rodin's
- _Dream-Group_
- Dry-points, Rodin's
- Dubois, Paul
- Duhem, Henri
- Dujalbert
- Dutch painting
-
- Egyptian sculpture
- Eiffel Tower
- Emerson quoted
- Erotic subjects, Rodin's treatment of
- Etchings, Rodin's
- _Eternal Idol, The_
- _Eve_
- Exhibited works
- Exhibition with Claude Monet, the
-
- Fagel
- Falconet
- Falguière
- his "Balzac"
- Rodin's bust of
- _Faun and Nymph
- Fauns and Bacchantes_
- _Fenaille, Bust of Mme._
- Fenaille, M.; his edition of
- Rodin's drawings
- _Fiennes, Jean de,_
- Finish, False notions of
- Flemish primitives
- Fleurs du Mal, Baudelaire's
- Rodin's illustrations to
- Florence Baptistery Gates, as model of _The Gate of Hell_
- France, Anatole
- _Franck, Medallion of Cæsar_
- Frémiet
- Fuller, Loïe
-
- _Galatea_
- Gallé, Emile
- Gallimard, M.
- Gardet
- _Gate of Hell, The_
- _Genius of War, The_
- Gluck, 105
- Gothic sculptures, Rodin's study of
- Goujon
- Greek sculpture
- Guillaume
-
- _Hand of God, The_
- _Hecuba_
- _Helmet-maker, The Fair_
- Henley, W. E.
- his opinion of Rodin's art
- Hokusai
- Houdon
- _Hugo, Victor, Bust of_
- dry-point portraits of
- the _Monument to_
-
- _Icarus_
- _Illusion, the Daughter of Icarus_
- _Inferno,_ Dante's
- Inspiration
- _Iris_
- Italy, Rodin's travels in
-
- Japanese bronzes and prints, Rodin's admiration of
- Jasmin, Clément
- Joan of Arc, Rude's
-
- _Kiss, The_
-
- _Labour, Monument to_
- Lamartine
- _Laurens, Jean Paul, Bust of_
- Lavoisier, A statue of
- Lefèvre, Camille
- Legros, Alphonse; bust of
- _Lorraine, Claude, The Monument to_
- Louvre, the
- _Love and Psyche_
- _Lovers, Groups of_
- Luxembourg, The
- _Lynch, Statue of_
-
- MacColl, D. S.
- _Magdalen, The_
- _Mahomet_ (drawing)
- Mallarmé, Stéphane
- Manet
- _Man Walking_
- _Man with the Broken Nose, The_ (clay head)
- (marble)
- Marseillaise, Rude's
- Marx, Roger
- bust of
- _Meditation_
- Meudon, Rodin's house and studio at
- Michael Angelo
- _Minerva_ (helmeted bust)
- (marble and silver)
- Minne, George
- Mirbeau, Octave
- bust of
- medallion of
- Rodin's drawings for his books
- Monet, Claude
- _Monument to the Defenders of the Nation_
- Morbidezza
- _Mother, The Young_
- _Muse of Anger_
-
- _Muse of the Inner Voice_
- Museums
-
- Nancy
- Naples Museum
- Napoleon Awakening to Immortality,
- Rude's
- Neo-Greek School, Errors and defects of
- _Nereids, The_
- Niederhausern-Rodo
- _Night,_
- Nude, The
- _Nymph, A,_
-
- _Orpheus and Eurydice_
-
- Paintings, Rodin's
- Pajou
- Pantheon, The
- _Perseus and the Gorgon_
- Pica, Vittorio
- Pigalle
- Pilon, Germain
- Poe
- _Poet and the Life of Contemplation, The_
- _Poets and Muses_
- Préault, Auguste
- Private Collections
- _Proust, Antonin, Bust of_
- dry-point of
- _Psyche_
- Puech, Denys
- Puget
- Puvis de Chavannes; bust of
- monument to
- _Pygmalion_
-
- Raphael
- Redon, Odilon
- Rembrandt
- Renascence, Rodin's admiration for the, 63-5
- _Rimini, Paolo and Francesca da_
- Rivière, Théodore
- _Rochefort, Bust of_
- Roche, Pierre, in
- Rodin, Auguste, birth, parentage, and schooling
- early art-training
- under Barye
- works for ornament-maker
- in Carrier-Belleuse's studio
- early works in sculpture
- goes to Brussels; work there
- friendship with Legros
- takes painting lessons from Lecoq de Boisbaudron
- accepted at Salon
- accused of casting from life
- his first sale
- cleared of accusations
- sudden emergence from obscurity
- slow development
- attitude to academic art
- his originality and power noticed
- studios granted him by Government
- works at Sèvres
- his stay in Brussels a formative time
- deeply impressed by Dante and Baudelaire (and see under these names)
- monument to Hugo described
- impatience of officialism
- _Gate of Hell_ described
- exhibition with Claude Monet in 1889
- monument to Claude Lorraine described
- _Burghers of Calais_ described
- friendship with M. Fenaille
- the _Balzac_ and the controversy it excited
- visits to Italy; articles
- in the _Musée_ quoted at length
- at the Paris Exhibition of 1900
- visit to Prague, 84; welcomed in London
- elected President of the International Society
- honours
- personal appearance
- portraits of him
- private life and home
- house and studios
- tastes
- travels
- as a talker
- social opinions
- influence
- friends and pupils
- characteristics of his art
- artistic descent and affinities
- place in the French school
- lost works
- paintings
- dry-points
- drawings and treatment of voluptuous subjects
- photographs of his works
- essentially a poet; as thinker
- classicism, his
- his symbolism
- his composition
- his conception of his art analysed
- fondness for small groups
- his treatment of costume
- his treatment of flesh
- his principles of portraiture
- his endeavour to give atmosphere
- his works treated to be viewed from all sides
- his modelling
- his study and power of representing movement
- dynamic character of his art
- his synthetic power
- his veracity
- his favourite type of woman, 42;
- influence and value of the antique
- _Ronde, The_ (dry-point)
- Rops
- Rosso
- Rousseau
- Rubens
- Rude
-
- _St. John Baptist_
- _St. John Baptist_ (torso)
- _St. John, Head of the Beheaded_ (marble)
- Saint Marceaux
- _St. Pierre, Eustacede_
- Salon, the
- _Sappho_
- Sargent
- _Sarmiento, Monument to President_
- Schnegg, Gaston and Lucien
- _Séverine, Bust of Madame_
- Sèvres
- _Shades, The_
- Société des Gens de Lettres
- _Spring, Eternal_
- _Spring_
- _Summer_
-
- Tanagra figures
- _Thinker, The_
- Thomas
- _Thought,_
- _Torso_ (nude female bronze)
- Turquet
-
- _Ugolino_
- (drawing)
-
- Values in painting and sculpture
- Van der Meer
- Van Rasbourg
- _Venus and Adonis_
- _Vicunha, Monument to the President_
- Villon
-
- Wagner, 119, 120
- Watteau, 81
- _Wave, The_
- Whistler
- _Wissant, Jacques and Pierre de_
- _Woman, Bust of_
- _Woman, Bust of a Young_
- _Woman, Bust of a Young_ (silver)
- _Women and Children_
- _Women Bathing_
- _Women Damned_
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Auguste Rodin, by Camille Mauclair
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Auguste Rodin
- The Man - His Ideas - His Work
-
-Author: Camille Mauclair
-
-Translator: Clementina Black
-
-Release Date: December 11, 2015 [EBook #50665]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AUGUSTE RODIN ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Marc D'Hooghe at http://www.freeliterature.org
-Images generously made available by the Internet Archive.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<h1>AUGUSTE RODIN</h1>
-
-<h2>THE MAN&mdash;HIS IDEAS&mdash;HIS WORKS</h2>
-
-<h3>BY</h3>
-
-<h2>CAMILLE MAUCLAIR</h2>
-
-<h6>AUTHOR OF<br />
-"THE GREAT FRENCH PAINTERS AND THE EVOLUTION OF FRENCH PAINTING FROM 1830"<br />
-"THE FRENCH IMPRESSIONISTS," ETC.</h6>
-
-<h3>TRANSLATED BY</h3>
-
-<h4>CLEMENTINA BLACK</h4>
-
-<h4>WITH FORTY PLATES</h4>
-
-<h5>NEW YORK</h5>
-
-<h5>E. P. DUTTON &amp; CO.</h5>
-
-<h5>1905</h5>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 425px;">
-<a id="rodin001a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_001a.jpg" width="425" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">ETERNAL SPRING</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-<p><a href="#CONTENTS">Contents</a></p>
-
-
-<h6>TO</h6>
-
-<h5>EUGÈNE CARRIÈRE</h5>
-
-<h6>AND</h6>
-
-<h5>ROGER MARX</h5>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p class="block" style="margin-left: 15%;">MY DEAR FRIENDS,</p>
-
-<p class="block" style="margin-left: 15%;">One of you is a great painter, whose art and mind are
-fraternally akin to Rodin's. The other is the first French
-Art critic of our day, and has nobly defended Rodin from the
-outset.</p>
-
-<p class="block" style="margin-left: 15%;">For these reasons I felt it just and natural to dedicate
-this book to both of you, as a testimony of my affection,
-given in the presence of the English public, and under the
-auspices of a name that unites all three of us in the love
-of beauty.</p>
-<p class="block" style="font-size: 0.8em; margin-left: 75%;">C. M.</p></blockquote>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-<blockquote>
-<p class="block">The photographs used as illustrations to the present volume are kindly
-lent by M. Buloz, art publisher of Paris, to whom we offer our sincere
-thanks; and for five of them&mdash;very remarkable in their effect (the
-<i>Bellona,</i> the bust of <i>Hugo</i>, the two studies of torsos for the <i>St.
-John the Baptist,</i> and the <i>Fair Woman who was a Helmet-maker</i>) we are
-indebted to Messrs. Haweis and Coles, to whom we are no less grateful.
-The very faithful portrait of M. Rodin is the work of M. Eckert, of
-Prague.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[Pg ix]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h4><a name="PREFACE" id="PREFACE">PREFACE</a></h4>
-
-
-<p>Auguste Rodin is certainly the contemporary French artist about whom
-most has been written, especially during the last ten years. In
-addition to innumerable articles in newspapers and reviews, several
-books have been devoted to him. In offering the present work to the
-English public I think it desirable to define exactly the aim which I
-propose to myself. To begin with, as my limits of size are somewhat
-narrow, I shall endeavour to condense into a restricted space as many
-interesting details as I can give, and to neglect nothing that may
-contribute to a clear and precise presentment of Rodin's personality
-and work. But such details have already been collected in some French
-works; and if I were to content myself with presenting a new version of
-them to the public I should have fulfilled but half of my task and my
-duty.</p>
-
-<p>The other half interests me far more keenly. It seems to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[Pg x]</a></span> me that
-after having told the reader all that he ought to know about a man, a
-critic should then try to make a closer and deeper study of him&mdash;come
-into contact with his ideas and his soul, form an original judgment of
-him, and in short pass from the iconographie or biographic side to the
-artistic and psychological side of his work. I have tried, therefore,
-to begin where my fellow-workers have left off and to say exactly what
-they do not appear to me to have said.</p>
-
-<p>The things written about Rodin have been mainly literary compositions,
-admiring and lyrical passages, to which his favourite subjects have
-served as texts. Much less has been heard about his personal ideas upon
-the technical principles of sculpture, or about his methods of work.
-The reason of this is primarily a fear of fatiguing the public, to
-whom the technicalities of an art&mdash;which involve dry explanations&mdash;are
-less interesting than the results. Moreover, it must be owned that
-few writers understand these questions. In painting, as in sculpture,
-persons who do not practise these arts, or who are not sufficiently
-familiar with the brush and the chisel to understand the secrets of
-works of art, even if not to produce them, generally prefer to avoid
-these dangerous aspects and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[Pg xi]</a></span> keep to literary eulogy. A work is
-proclaimed great, and the reader is adjured to believe it so, but it is
-infinitely more difficult to give him a clear, technical explanation of
-why that work is great. Towards that quarter, therefore, I have chosen
-to turn, expecting to find there things to say that cannot be read
-elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p>Rodin has not merely created beautiful statues. He is an innovator, (or
-rather a renovator), in his methods of sculpture, and that fact has
-called down severe criticism on his head. A long-standing friendship,
-which I reckon as an honour, has allowed me to have numerous
-conversations with him upon the very basis of his art, upon the manner
-in which he practises it, and upon his ideas in relation to his own
-work and to ancient and modern sculpture. To these ideas the synthetic
-mind of Rodin imparts so much vigour that they are the motives of his
-work and cannot be separated from it. My desire has been to present
-them; and instead of giving the public my own opinions, in passages of
-more or less brilliancy, I wished to give those&mdash;so infinitely more
-interesting&mdash;which have been uttered by the artist himself. Often,
-in the course of this book, I shall be merely the transcriber while
-he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[Pg xii]</a></span> speaks, and I think my readers will be grateful to me for that.
-Furthermore, in regard to technical points and to the way in which
-Rodin conceives composition and modelling, I may&mdash;and even, in order to
-inspire a just and necessary confidence, I should&mdash;say that when Rodin
-exhibited his <i>Balzac</i> his first innovation in his present manner, he
-had so much faith in my friendship and in my critical powers that he
-entrusted to me the duty of explaining these delicate points in the
-French reviews,<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> and in a later lecture given at the Paris Exhibition
-of 1900, in the pavilion where he was exhibiting the whole of his
-works. These explanations, in their main lines, I have rewritten here.
-In that portion I have endeavoured to do original critical work, after
-having satisfied the biographical demands of the reader. I have avoided
-discussions of too abstract an æstheticism; I believe that everything
-can be said simply and in simple forms; I believe also that even in the
-most subtle questions of art there is an inner light that renders them
-accessible to all whose minds are sincere, and whose hearts are open to
-emotion. But I hope that, in reading<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiii" id="Page_xiii">[Pg xiii]</a></span> this book, people will understand
-very exactly why a statue by Rodin is different from any other statue,
-and why he made it so&mdash;a matter which too few writers have explained.
-It is not so much my business to display abundantly the admiration
-which I feel, but which, no more than my friendship, shall induce me to
-turn my essay into a hymn of praise.</p>
-
-<p>Rodin himself is the first man to be wearied by some praises, and a
-just observation upon his methods gives him much more pleasure. Like
-every man of high intelligence, he would rather be understood than
-praised.</p>
-
-<p>I believe myself to be filling a gap and satisfying a wish by giving
-at the end of this volume some remarks upon the artists whom Rodin has
-influenced. He is commonly treated as "a force of nature"; "an isolated
-phenomenon"; people affect to consider him as a sort of immense
-unconscious producer. These are absurd hyperboles. Rodin is a man of
-strong will, logical, and conscious of what he is doing, and strongly
-linked to the Greeks and to the Gothic school; he has very definite
-theories, and several sculptors, of whom Rodin's extreme admirers do
-not speak, preferring to leave their divinity alone in the clouds, draw
-their inspiration from his views. I shall<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiv" id="Page_xiv">[Pg xiv]</a></span> name some men to whom Rodin
-is much attached and in whose work he takes pleasure in following the
-development of his principles, for he knows what he wishes, whence
-he comes and whither he goes, and has a horror of being thought a
-visionary&mdash;a phenomenon, as people say in their indiscreet zeal; on the
-contrary, he holds himself to be a real classical artist, whose example
-cannot possibly be harmful. I have thought it well, also, to conclude
-by a summary of the principal works or essays dealing with Rodin, at
-least in France; and by a chronological list of his statues&mdash;that is to
-say, of course, an approximate list, for many fragments of this great
-mass of work have been destroyed by Rodin himself, especially in the
-earlier part of his career, before 1877. No such list has ever been
-made, and it may add to the interest of the present volume; I give
-it under the artist's authorisation, for I made it in his house and
-according to his advice.</p>
-
-<p>It is bad to repeat oneself. Yet I am anxious to say once more&mdash;and my
-insistence will be understood&mdash;that my long friendship and personal
-admiration for Auguste Rodin and my gratitude for the affectionate
-regard that he shows me count for nothing here. A study is asked
-of me, not a panegyric.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xv" id="Page_xv">[Pg xv]</a></span> When I have reckoned up the vast quantity
-of work, the maker's life, theories, talks, doings, and influence,
-very little room will be left for compliments. It will be for the
-reader to think them. Many people who would have had a difficulty
-in talking of sculpture have found Rodin a convenient subject for
-literary declamations&mdash;too many for me to wish to imitate them. Such a
-course would be pleasing neither to the artist nor to the public, and
-would content them no more than it would content me. Precise details
-about the man, the work, and the iconography; clear explanations of
-technicalities and ideas&mdash;these form all my ambition. The statement of
-facts will be enough to arouse love and admiration for Rodin; louder
-than all praises and with a stronger claim speaks the work of thirty
-years.</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 75%; font-size: 0.8em;">C. M.</p>
-
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> "The Art of Rodin," <i>Revue des Revues,</i> Paris, 15th June,
-1898; and lecture, 31st July, 1900.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xvii" id="Page_xvii">[Pg xvii]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h4><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS</a></h4>
-
-
-<p class="block">PREFACE</p>
-
-<p class="block">I. YOUTH AND EARLY WORK OF RODIN&mdash;HIS FIRST ATTEMPTS; HIS TIME AT
-CARRIER'S&mdash;HIS STAY IN BRUSSELS AND WORK THERE&mdash;"THE AGE OF BRASS" AT
-THE SALON OF 1877; THE INCIDENT ARISING IN REGARD TO IT&mdash;THE "ST. JOHN
-THE BAPTIST"; BEGINNING OF RODIN'S REPUTATION <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_1">1</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="block">II. RODIN'S STUDIO&mdash;HIS WORKS FROM 1880 TO 1889&mdash;"EVE"; SOME BUSTS;
-THE MONUMENT TO VICTOR HUGO&mdash;"THE GATE OF HELL"&mdash;"THE DANAID"&mdash;THE
-"THOUGHT"&mdash;THE EXHIBITION OF CLAUDE MONET AND RODIN, IN 1889&mdash;THE
-MONUMENT TO CLAUDE LORRAINE AT NANCY (1892)&mdash;"THE BURGHERS OF CALAIS"
-(1888-1895) <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_13">13</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="block">III. RODIN'S WORK FROM 1895 TO 1898&mdash;SMALL GROUPS&mdash;THE STATUE OF
-"BALZAC"&mdash;THE INCIDENT OF THE SOCIÉTÉ DES GENS DE LETTRES&mdash;THE
-"TECHNIQUE" OF THE "BALZAC"&mdash;RODIN'S IDEAS UPON MODELLING AND
-COMPOSITION&mdash;HIS OPINIONS ABOUT THE GREEKS, THE GOTHIC STYLE,
-CLASSICISM, AND MYTHOLOGICAL SUBJECTS&mdash;RODIN'S "ANTIQUE" PERIOD <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_40">40</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="block">IV. WORKS SINCE THE "BALZAC"&mdash;SMALL WORKS IN MARBLE&mdash;PLAN OF THE
-MONUMENT TO LABOUR&mdash;DRAWINGS AND ETCHINGS <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_82">82</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xviii" id="Page_xviii">[Pg xviii]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="block">V. RODIN'S PRIVATE LIFE&mdash;HIS PERSON, STUDIO, AND HOME&mdash;HIS INFLUENCE;
-SCULPTORS INSPIRED BY HIS IDEAS&mdash;RODIN'S PLACE IN THE FRENCH
-SCHOOL&mdash;HIS PRESENT POSITION IN RESPECT TO ACADEMIC SCULPTURE <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_101">101</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="block">VI. APPENDIX&mdash;CHRONOLOGICAL LIST OF RODIN'S PRINCIPAL WORKS&mdash;LIST
-OF THE PRINCIPAL BOOKS OR ARTICLES WRITTEN ABOUT HIM&mdash;QUOTATIONS
-REFERRING TO HIM&mdash;AN OPINION OF EUGÈNE CARRIÈRE'S; AN OPINION OF
-HENLEY'S&mdash;VARIOUS NOTES <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_123">123</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="block">INDEX <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_141">141</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xix" id="Page_xix">[Pg xix]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-<p class="block" style="font-weight: bold;">LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</p>
-
-<p class="block">
-ETERNAL SPRING (photogravure) <span class="tabnum"><i><a href="#rodin001a">Frontispiece</a></i></span><br />
-THE AGE OF BRASS <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin002a">6</a></span><br />
-THE AGE OF BRASS <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin003a">9</a></span><br />
-ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST PREACHING <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin004a">10</a></span><br />
-EVE <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin005a">12</a></span><br />
-SKETCH FOR THE MONUMENT TO THE DEFENDERS OF THE NATION <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin006a">14</a></span><br />
-UGOLINO AND HIS CHILDREN <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin007a">16</a></span><br />
-BELLONA <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin008a">17</a></span><br />
-BELLONA <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin009a">17</a></span><br />
-VICTOR HUGO (dry-point) <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin010a">18</a></span><br />
-VICTOR HUGO (dry-point) <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin011a">18</a></span><br />
-BUST OF VICTOR HUGO <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin012a">21</a></span><br />
-MONUMENT TO VICTOR HUGO (fragment) <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin013a">21</a></span><br />
-VICTOR HUGO (fragment) <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin014a">21</a></span><br />
-NEREIDS (group at base of the Victor Hugo monument) <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin015a">24</a></span><br />
-SHADES (for the top of <i>The Gate of Hell</i>) <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin016a">25</a></span><br />
-THE THINKER <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin017a">27</a></span><br />
-DANAID <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin018a">28</a></span><br />
-DANAID <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin019a">28</a></span><br />
-THOUGHT <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin020a">28</a></span><br />
-THE FAIR HELMET-MAKER <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin021a">29</a></span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xx" id="Page_xx">[Pg xx]</a></span>
-A NYMPH (bronze) <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin022a">30</a></span><br />
-PUVIS DE CHAVANNES <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin023a">33</a></span><br />
-JEAN PAUL LAURENS <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin024a">33</a></span><br />
-BUST OF MADAME V. <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin025a">34</a></span><br />
-THE BURGHERS OF CALAIS <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin026a">36</a></span><br />
-A BURGHER OF CALAIS <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin027a">39</a></span><br />
-A BURGHER OF CALAIS <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin028a">39</a></span><br />
-A BURGHER OF CALAIS <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin029a">39</a></span><br />
-BALZAC <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin030a">47</a></span><br />
-BALZAC <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin031a">49</a></span><br />
-PRIMITIVE MAN <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin032a">74</a></span><br />
-YOUNG WOMAN BETWEEN GOOD AND EVIL COUNSEL <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin033a">78</a></span><br />
-IRIS <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin034a">88</a></span><br />
-NUDE STUDY <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#rodin035a">89</a></span><br />
-AUGUSTE RODIN <span class="tabnum"><a href="#rodin036a">102</a></span><br />
-CORNER OF RODIN'S STUDIO AT MEUDON <span class="tabnum"><a href="#rodin037a">106</a></span><br />
-CORNER OF RODIN'S STUDIO AT MEUDON <span class="tabnum"><a href="#rodin038a">107</a></span><br />
-STUDY IN BRONZE FOR THE "BALZAC" <span class="tabnum"><a href="#rodin039a">110</a></span><br />
-NUDE FIGURE (photographed in the open air, at twilight,
-in the garden in Meudon) <span class="tabnum"><a href="#rodin040a">113</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h3><a name="AUGUSTE_RODIN" id="AUGUSTE_RODIN">AUGUSTE RODIN</a></h3>
-
-
-<h4><a id="I"></a>I</h4>
-
-<p class="block">YOUTH AND EARLY WORK OF RODIN&mdash;HIS FIRST ATTEMPTS; HIS TIME AT
-CARRIER'S&mdash;HIS STAY IN BRUSSELS AND WORK THERE&mdash;"THE AGE OF BRASS" AT
-THE SALON OF 1877; THE INCIDENT ARISING IN REGARD TO IT&mdash;THE "ST. JOHN
-THE BAPTIST"; BEGINNING OF RODIN'S REPUTATION</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>Auguste Rodin was born in Paris, in the Val de Grâce quarter, on the
-14th of November, 1840, of a family of humble employés. The child
-at first attended a day-school in the Rue Saint Jacques, then went
-to a boarding-school at Beauvais, kept by his uncle. At fourteen he
-returned to Paris and entered the school of art in the Rue de l'École
-de Médecine. A period of desperate industry at once set in for him.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to the lessons of this little school, where from eight
-to twelve young Rodin learned the elements of drawing, and later on
-of modelling, copied drawings in crayons and reliefs in the Louis
-XVI. style, he went twice a week to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span> Barye's classes at the Jardin
-des Plantes; "Barye," he says, "did not teach us much; he was always
-worried and tired when he came, and always told us that it was very
-good." But Rodin, together with Barye's son and some other lads, had
-arranged a sort of studio for themselves in a cellar of the museum,
-making seats of tree-trunks, and already attempting sculpture. At
-six in the morning he used to go to draw animals, then he copied the
-anatomical objects in the Museum. He remembers that, being too poor to
-buy an anatomy of the horse, he copied it piece by piece. After Barye's
-class, or the classes of the Rue de l'École de Médecine, he would lunch
-on a bit of bread and some chocolate and hasten to the Louvre, and
-in the evenings he would go to draw and study at the Gobelins. Then
-he worked for a maker of ornaments, since it was necessary to earn a
-living. From fourteen to seventeen years old Rodin led this fevered
-existence. "In those three years," he has often repeated to me, "I came
-to understand the meaning of a drawing from the life, the synthesis of
-my art, and the rhythm of animals. I remember that a companion of those
-days,<a name="FNanchor_1_2" id="FNanchor_1_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_2" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> of whom I have since lost sight, made me see,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span> in a couple
-of hours, on a very true and simple principle, an observation of the
-necessary equilibria of movement not taught in the schools, the secret
-of the plans of a figure. That lesson has influenced my whole life. As
-for the ornament-maker, in whose workshop I earned a scanty wage, I
-long deplored being constrained to do so, but I have since thought with
-affection of it, understanding that there are as many sources of beauty
-in ornament as in the face."</p>
-
-<p>His work at the ornament-maker's allowed Rodin to earn his living as an
-art-worker and as a strenuous and silent student; and he vegetated in
-this manner until he attained his twenty-fourth year, never ceasing,
-in spite of his poverty and of his daily labour, to work at sculpture.
-Then he offered himself as an assistant and pupil at the studio of
-Carrier-Belleuse. Carrier-Belleuse was then at the full height of his
-reputation as an elegant sculptor, whose real gifts of spontaneous
-invention were being rendered insipid by his desire to please. Rodin
-remained six years at Carrier-Belleuse's, and worked there without
-gaining much instruction. But he meditated and taught himself. From his
-twenty-fourth year dates the head known as <i>The Man with the Broken
-Nose</i>, which is a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span> masterly work, strongly inspired by the antique,
-and already foreshadowing all his future. This clay head, which the
-young man sent to the Salon of 1864, was refused. From time to time
-Rodin tried to compete for admission to the École des Beaux Arts; he
-was thrice refused. This disgusted him with the usual career upon which
-his lack of any income invited him to enter. His ideas, his independent
-temper, his presentiments, and his love of an art personal to himself,
-showed him that he would never gain anything, and never have the
-academic discipline necessary to succeed. He took advantage of an
-opportunity. Carrier-Belleuse had a commission at Brussels and did not
-care to execute it; Rodin got permission from his master, who esteemed
-him, to undertake it in his name, and, after having spent six years
-in the fashionable sculptor's studio, he went to Brussels, where Rude
-had already spent a considerable time. He was destined to remain there
-until 1877, working with the Belgian sculptor, Van Rasbourg, at the
-pediment of the Bourse, where his sign manual may still be seen, as it
-may upon some caryatids of a house on the Boulevard d'Anspach and upon
-some other works.</p>
-
-<p>Of this exile at Brussels we know that the artist retains<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span> only kindly
-memories, but he is too sparing of personal details to enable us to
-analyse with any certainty this part of the life of a tenacious,
-concentrated man who, entirely occupied with his dreams, with
-indefatigable study, the anxieties of poverty, and his lonely pride,
-had no desire to be known.</p>
-
-<p>"I worked very hard over there," he says, to sum up the matter. It
-is certain that Rodin was at this time already in possession of
-that formidable will which led to his success, and also of that
-disdainful obstinacy which prefers obscurity and lack of success to
-any compromise. He speaks little or not at all of the drama that was
-being worked out in him at this time, or of the way in which he refined
-and cultivated his perceptions, nor of the painting lessons that he
-took of Lecoq de Boisbaudron, in company of Alphonse Legros, who
-became his intimate friend; but this influence of Lecoq de Boisbaudron
-must not pass unnoted. It does great honour to that master teacher
-who has formed so many eminent modern artists. His seven years' stay
-at Brussels allowed Rodin to live modestly but decently, amid quiet
-surroundings, to reflect, and to shape himself intellectually; it was a
-sort of spiritual retreat that did him good, apart from the fact that
-he gained<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span> a thorough knowledge of the Flemish Primitives and of the
-Gothic masters who were so strongly to influence him. No biography,
-however, could render comprehensible the way in which, for example, the
-brain of a low-born and poor child was able, amid poverty and incessant
-manual labour, to grow into the wide and deep brain of a thinker
-familiar with the synthesis of art; these things are the secrets of
-personality.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 475px;">
-<a id="rodin002a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_002a.jpg" width="475" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">THE AGE OF BRASS</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>Rodin was destined to emerge suddenly from obscurity at the age of
-thirty-seven, that is to say, at a time of life when many men think
-themselves hopelessly sacrificed, and when he had already produced
-much and suffered much; for it may be said that the whole of his work
-from 1855-75 is unknown and lost, and yet what labour it represents!
-Except <i>The Man with the Broken Nose</i>, none of it is ever mentioned;
-the pediment of the Bourse at Brussels is crumbling away, time is
-devouring Rodin's work upon it no less than Van Rasbourg's; he will not
-speak of the many figures that he made to the order of Carrier-Belleuse
-and interpreted according to his own free inspiration; and he only
-occasionally alludes to a large figure that was broken in a household
-removal, and was, in his opinion, one of the best he ever made in his
-life. In 1876<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span> <i>The Man with the Broken Nose,</i> in marble, was admitted
-to the Salon. This determined Rodin in 1877 to send in his statue, <i>The
-Age of Brass,</i> and this gave rise to an incident, the very injustice of
-which was to bring him into notice.</p>
-
-<p>The jury,<a name="FNanchor_2_3" id="FNanchor_2_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_3" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> astonished by this work, admitted it, but accused the
-artist of having taken a cast from life, so perfect was the modelling.
-The practice of taking a cast from the life is unhappily frequent,
-and we know he praised academicians who employ this artistic fraud
-without any scruple. Rodin protested. He had had a Belgian soldier for
-his model in Brussels: he had photographs taken of him and sent them
-to the jury, who did not even open the packet, and persisted in the
-allegations. Three sculptors, however, Desbois, Fagel, and Lefèvre, who
-thenceforward became Rodin's friends, protested in his favour, some
-critics spoke of the affair, and Rodin's work made so much impression
-that the secretary of the Fine Arts, Turquet, bought <i>The Age of Brass</i>
-(which stood for a long time in the Luxembourg Gardens and is now in
-the museum).</p>
-
-<p>Rodin waited until 1880 to exhibit <i>St. John the Baptist</i>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span> Meanwhile
-Turquet had conceived a friendship for him and wished to wipe out the
-unjust accusation brought against <i>The Age of Brass.</i> The inspectors
-of the Fine Arts department disowned the purchase of that work and
-declared it cast from life. Rodin, discouraged, remained silent; a
-chance saved him. As he was continuing to look for work in order to
-support his young wife and himself, and to defray the expenses of his
-art, he chanced to be executing a group of children in a composition
-for the sculptor Boucher. His facility was prodigious; Boucher saw
-him improvise the group in a few hours and went, thunderstruck, to
-tell some of his friends. He had the honesty to declare that such
-a man, having done thus before his own eyes, was capable of making
-<i>The Age of Brass.</i> Chapu, Thomas, Falguière, Delaplanche, Chaplin,
-Carrier-Belleuse, and Paul Dubois insisted loyally, and Rodin's cause
-was won. Turquet, delighted, and free to act, bought the <i>St. John the
-Baptist</i> and gave Rodin a commission. Then the artist answered: "I
-am ready to fulfil it. But to prove surely that I do not take casts
-from the life I will make little bas-reliefs&mdash;an immense work with
-small figures, and I think of taking the subject from Dante." This
-was the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span> origin of that celebrated <i>Gate of Hell</i>, which is not yet
-completed, and which, continually handled afresh, has finally become
-the central motive of all Rodin's dreams, the storehouse of his ideas
-and researches.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 475px;">
-<a id="rodin003a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_003a.jpg" width="475" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">THE AGE OF BRASS</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>From that time forward (1880) Rodin was what he is to-day; he had
-emerged, once for all, from obscurity, and went on to display without
-interruption and without hesitation the succession of works that have
-rendered him celebrated. He knew his path, his method, his field of
-thought. From the age of sixteen to that of forty he had, by unknown
-persistent labour, been ripening his individuality. And his work,
-from <i>The Age of Brass</i> to the <i>Balzac</i>, is but a visible development
-of that hidden period. The period from the <i>Balzac</i> to our own day
-testifies to a new theory that he has framed. But one may say that
-the Rodin of the years from 1877 to 1897 was entirely contained in
-the unknown man of the preceding period. It was, indeed, that slow
-preparation that gave to the revelation of the works that appearance
-of certainty, of sudden mastery, which so struck people's minds. We
-are accustomed to see artists make youthful successes with works of
-brilliant promise, then we follow their course and see them growing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>
-greater. Rodin came to light in twenty-four hours. He was thought to
-be a young beginner; his past struggle was unknown; people were aware
-of him only when he had done with scruples and had, as he says, "made
-peace with himself." From this fact came his prestige. From it came
-also his well-defined attitude in regard to academic art.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<a id="rodin004a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_004a.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST PREACHING</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>We need to recall the graceful, effeminate, and conventional statuary
-of the generation from 1865 to 1875 in order to comprehend fully
-what <i>The Age of Brass</i> and <i>St. John the Baptist</i> brought into the
-exhibitions when they made their appearance there. Rough truth, a sense
-of movement, an intense realism, an absolute scorn of the pleasing, a
-lofty style, a deep feeling of organic life, power due to the eager
-love of form, of muscular formation and physical activity; all these
-things inevitably shocked the gentle sculptors who were enamoured of
-the academic style and of mythology. Moreover, Rodin was unknown;
-he had no claim, knew nobody, had never asked for anything, and was
-a son of the people. That Carrier-Belleuse's former workman should
-take upon himself to make statues all by himself aroused scorn. His
-technical skill was so great that there could be no possibility<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span> of
-denying it. Therefore, in spite, the accusation of casting from the
-life was invented. The accusers did not reflect upon the splendid
-testimonial that would be given to the artist if he should succeed in
-proving that his skill alone had created this perfection. The amusing
-thing is that the same people who declared this skill too great to be
-anything but a reproduction, accused Rodin, twenty years later, over
-his <i>Balzac</i>, of not knowing his craft! Apart from this question of
-fact, and these professional jealousies, the style of these works could
-not fail to displease. In them there was already a sort of symbolic
-and savage beauty, which has become a characteristic of Rodin's art.
-The pained, awakening movement of the man in <i>The Age of Brass</i>, the
-gesture of <i>St. John the Baptist</i>, and still more his wild face with
-its open mouth, were so much outside the usual conventions as to make
-everybody feel that here was an artist resolved to take no account of
-the "École" and its principles. These two splendid studies of the nude
-already contained a very special thought. Rodin, therefore, was hated
-in the first place as a man who would be revolutionary. He was hated
-because he was powerful, because he emerged suddenly from obscurity,
-and because he was felt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span> to possess an obstinate individuality. It was
-also for these very reasons that warm sympathies went out to Rodin
-from among artists opposed to the spirit of the "École," and from
-independent writers who divined in him a man capable of expressing in
-his art thoughts and emotions that had ceased to be found in art.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<a id="rodin005a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_005a.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">EVE.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_2" id="Footnote_1_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_2"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> This unknown student was called Constant Simon. Rodin
-remembers him as a remarkable man.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_3" id="Footnote_2_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_3"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> The hanging committee of the Salon is called a
-"jury."&mdash;TRANS.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h4><a name="II" id="II">II</a></h4>
-
-
-<p class="block">RODIN'S STUDIO&mdash;HIS WORKS FROM 1880 TO 1889&mdash;"EVE"; SOME BUSTS;
-THE MONUMENT TO VICTOR HUGO&mdash;"THE GATE OF HELL"&mdash;"THE DANAID"&mdash;THE
-"THOUGHT"&mdash;THE EXHIBITION OF CLAUDE MONET AND RODIN, IN 1889&mdash;THE
-MONUMENT TO CLAUDE LORRAINE AT NANCY (1892)&mdash;"THE BURGHERS OF CALAIS"
-(1888-1895)</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>Rodin's previous works, from 1881 to 1889, had been produced in modest
-abodes in the Rue des Fourneaux and the Boulevard de Vaugirard, and
-later, in a little studio, granted by the Government, at the Dépôt des
-Marbres, in the Rue de l'Université, where a certain number of studios
-are given to sculptors. From 1889 onwards the Government granted Rodin
-two larger studios there, which he still occupies. At a later date
-he also had, at his own expense, a studio in an odd corner of the
-Boulevard d'Italie, at a place called the Clos Payen, besides a house
-at Sèvres, and eventually one at Meudon, in which he still lives and of
-which I shall speak again. Among these<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span> were distributed his studies
-and his finished works: <i>The Gate of Hell</i> was sketched in at the Rue
-de l'Université, and there, too, Rodin's assistants are at work upon
-his present groups.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
-<a id="rodin006a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_006a.jpg" width="400" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">SKETCH FOR A COMPETITION. MONUMENT TO THE DEFENDERS OF
-THE COUNTRY</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>From 1879 Rodin worked at Sèvres, having been introduced by
-Carrier-Belleuse, and a vase decorated by him may be seen there.
-In 1880 he made a fine competitive design for the <i>Monument to the
-Defenders of the Nation,</i> which was not accepted. In 1881 he made a
-figure of <i>Adam</i>, which he destroyed, and an <i>Eve,</i> which must be
-reckoned among his noblest creations&mdash;an <i>Eve</i> ashamed of her faults,
-bowed down by terror, vaguely tormented less by remorse for her sin
-than by the idea of having created beings for future sorrow. This
-<i>Eve</i> is a bronze of formidable appearance and all Rodin breathes in
-it. As in the <i>St. John the Baptist,</i> we feel the effect of a definite
-conception of sculpture, but here the design is more spiritual and the
-scheme of modelling simpler and larger. From that time onward we shall
-find the artist producing regularly, putting forth a peaceful power,
-and working in complete possession of himself, not free certainly
-from doubts and searchings, but allowing nothing of the sort to be
-seen. Rodin's way of working<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span> is very peculiar; he does not begin one
-piece of work, carry it to its conclusion, and then devote himself to
-another. He has had from the outset a certain number of thoughts that
-correspond to forms, and although he has only shown his works one after
-another, he has nevertheless elaborated them side by side, working at
-them simultaneously and modifying them one by another. Thus <i>The Gate
-of Hell</i> has been made and remade for more than twenty years; thus
-the monument to Hugo, not yet handed over, goes back, by the sketches
-for it, to 1886; while the studies for <i>The Burghers of Calais</i> date
-from 1888, though the monument was only completed in 1895; thus, too,
-among the little groups on which Rodin is still at work, are many that
-have grown out of rough sketches made fifteen years ago. Rodin has a
-store of ideas and emotions dear to him, upon which he has patiently
-meditated, which he has promised himself to execute, and which he
-brings to ripeness in silence, remaining throughout long years without
-appearing to concern himself with them. "Strength and patience" might
-be his characteristic motto. Like all great artists, he thought out
-the essential lines of his work at once, lines that I shall define at
-the end of this book. His is a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span> synthetic and generalising mind, which
-can only begin its active course after slow meditation, and conceives
-no isolated thing; spontaneous and at the same time prudent. He had
-that time of meditation at Brussels, not hastening to produce, not
-permitting himself to express an idea until he had prepared in detail
-the technical expression, the necessities of the craftsman.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<a id="rodin007a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_007a.jpg" width="600" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">UGOLINO AND HIS CHILDREN</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>The <i>Ugolino</i>, a cast, of which Rodin exhibited the first sketch in
-1882, is the first sign of that preoccupation with Dante, which was to
-be shown in all his later work. He has read comparatively few things,
-and that designedly; he attaches himself strongly to a few great and
-profound works, and meditates upon them indefatigably. His whole
-symbolic imagination has been fed by Dante and his whole sensuous
-imagination by Baudelaire. These two gloomy poets have impressed him,
-and it may be said that he has absorbed them. Almost all Rodin's great
-symbolic figures refer to the <i>Inferno</i>, and all his little groups of
-lovers have the neurotic subtlety, the refined, homesick melancholy
-of the <i>Fleurs du Mal.</i> He has a constant need to evolve from realism
-to general ideas, from thought to delight or sorrow, and the ideal of
-Dante<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span> or of Baudelaire is strangely mingled in him with love of the
-antique and worship of mythology. It is, indeed, this quite individual
-fusion that forms the basis of his personality. The <i>Ugolino</i>, which
-was exhibited, first alone and then with his dying children, over
-whom he is crouching, haggard and already almost like a wild beast,
-is a tragic and powerful work. The same year Rodin produced the bust
-of Alphonse Legros, which has taken so high a place in England in
-the opinion of the best judges, and in that of the lamented W. E.
-Henley, whose penetrating criticism paid homage from the first to our
-sculptor's art.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="rodin008a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_008a.jpg" width="550" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">BELLONA</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="rodin009a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_009a.jpg" width="550" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">BELLONA</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p><i>The Genius of War,</i> the <i>Monument to General Lynch</i>, and the very
-curious <i>Bellona,</i> date from 1883; the <i>President Vicunha</i><a name="FNanchor_1_4" id="FNanchor_1_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_4" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> and a
-<i>Bust of a Young Woman</i>, from 1884. This was rather a period of groping
-than of production; Rodin was continuing his studies, and becoming
-more confirmed in his technical methods. We must go on to the year
-1885 to reach the revelation of three of his finest sculptures&mdash;the
-three busts<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span> of <i>Dalou</i>, <i>Victor Hugo,</i> and <i>Antonin Proust</i>, which
-powerfully declare his personality. These are works that are not
-disputable, that cannot be accused of having a "literary" intention,
-mere bits of sculpture giving evidence of mastery and showing surfaces,
-planes, and high lights worthy of the very finest busts of the French
-school. As time goes by, the ideas, the philosophy, the symbolism,
-the "dramatisation" of Rodin's compositions may come to be disputed,
-or exact comprehension of them may be lost; but works like these will
-always, by their mere professional worth, bear witness for him. Life,
-thought, strength, and character are carried as far as is possible. The
-bust of Hugo was the outcome of some few studies that the artist was
-able to make from the life. Hugo declared David of Angers to have made
-so good a bust of him that he considered it unnecessary ever to sit
-again. Rodin wished to obtain sittings, but failed; the poet admitted
-him to his table, and merely said to him, "Come when you like, observe
-me ... and do what you can." At table Rodin took sketches of Hugo in
-cigarette-paper books; he had a stand and some clay in the ante-room,
-and from time to time he would run in to note down anything that had
-just struck him.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<a id="rodin010a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_010a.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">VICTOR HUGO. (DRY POINT)</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<a id="rodin011a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_011a.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">VICTOR HUGO. (DRY-POINT)</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In this manner was that admirable bust completed, which (with the two
-etchings here reproduced) was the only material of which Rodin could
-make use for the Hugo with the bowed head of his future monument, the
-commission for which was given him by the Government after the death of
-the national poet in 1883, and which is on the eve of completion.</p>
-
-<p>The next year (1886) Rodin exhibited the scheme of the monument itself,
-which has since undergone several variations, but of which the central
-theme is always as follows: Hugo, naked and half-draped, like a god,
-is seated on a rock at the edge of the sea. With his outstretched left
-arm he makes a silencing gesture towards the sea and the Nereids,
-and thus begs them to let him listen to the Muse of his Inner Voice,
-who rises, pensively, behind him, and to the Muse of Anger, who,
-crouched on a rock above his head, seems ready to fly up into the
-sky. This Muse may also be interpreted as an Ins, the messenger of
-the voices of the elements, and the Muse of the Inner Voice is also
-called Meditation. She is of the greatest beauty; hers is one of the
-figures in which, before the <i>Balzac</i>, Rodin indicates his new method
-of amplifying the relief and systematically altering the proportions,
-in order&mdash;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>according to an idea which I shall analyse in detail in
-the next chapter&mdash;to secure a decorative effect. Nothing can be more
-expressive and more supernatural than the harmonious sadness of this
-great drooping shape; it is really a soul incarnated in a movement of
-modesty and secret contemplation that disturbs and moves us as we gaze.
-The Hugo himself is truly Olympian in the majesty of his gesture, the
-vastness of his heroic nudity, and the magic of the shadow that bathes
-his face bowed partly down over his breast; and the monument as a whole
-is of magnificent decorative unity. There are to be two monuments
-to Victor Hugo, one for the Pantheon, the other for the Luxembourg
-Gardens, and they are to have slight variations, not in the attitude
-of Hugo himself, but in the significance and style of the adjacent
-figures. These two monuments, however, have not been accepted without
-great difficulties caused by the very nature of Rodin's conception; and
-the fact that they are accepted has not prevented the Place Victor Hugo
-from being disfigured by a hideous and gigantic monument, the work of
-Barrias, which fills the place of those that Rodin had not completed.
-Rodin's slowness, which arises from the scrupulous circumspection<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
-of his mind&mdash;never satisfied with itself&mdash;and from his habit of working
-simultaneously at several subjects, has always contributed towards
-driving away official commissions from him; while the jealousy of
-his fellows and the exceptional character of his work have further
-helped to bring about strained relations between him and the official
-circle. Rodin does not care about pleasing or about being understood
-by everybody, and he has no idea of concessions. Thus almost all his
-important works have given rise to incidents likely to disturb his
-peace and hinder his work.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<a id="rodin012a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_012a.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">BUST OF VICTOR HUGO.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="rodin013a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_013a.jpg" width="550" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">VICTOR HUGO MONUMENT. (A FRAGMENT)</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="rodin014a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_014a.jpg" width="550" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">VICTOR HUGO. (A FRAGMENT)</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>Together with the sketch of the Hugo monument, a bust of Henry Becque,
-and a curious etching made from it, Rodin exhibited in 1886 the first
-drawings belonging to <i>The Gate of Hell</i>, or at least to the work which
-people have agreed to call by that title. I have already related the
-origin of that Government commission. In the beginning Rodin had been
-asked to make a door in high-relief, intended for the Musée des Arts
-Décoratifs. But the sculptor's imagination, beset by ideas of Dante,
-soon deviated from the original scheme. The door really exists in the
-studio of the Rue de l'Université, under the aspect of a vast rough
-model in plaster and beams, in the very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span> simple shape of a two-leaved
-door 19 ½ feet high, with a frieze, a tympanum, and two lateral
-capitals. It was, at first, to have been surmounted by the two figures
-of Adam and Eve, but Rodin gave them up. He now seems determined to
-place the <i>Shades</i>, here reproduced, in the highest plane.<a name="FNanchor_2_5" id="FNanchor_2_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_5" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> On the
-uppermost beam <i>The Thinker</i> is to be seated. In the panels of the door
-and upon the wide uprights are enshrined figures&mdash;to the number of over
-a hundred&mdash;detached in high-relief, exactly as upon the gates of the
-Baptistery in Florence, which Rodin has, quite simply, taken as his
-model. These figures were, at first, direct interpretations from Dante,
-in particular Paolo and Francesca da Rimini and divers inhabitants
-of the Inferno. Then Rodin intermingled figures due solely to his
-inspirations from Baudelaire and to his own sharp perception of tragic
-perversity. He enlarged Dante's conception as he modernised it, and
-has ended by making this door into what he smilingly calls "my Noah's
-Ark." That means that he is continually putting in little figures which
-replace others; there, plastered into the niches left by unfinished
-figures, he places everything
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>that he improvises, everything that seems to him to correspond in
-character and subject with that vast confusion of human passions. The
-size of these figures is greatly restricted; the largest scarcely
-exceed thirty-nine inches in height. The dimensions of the final
-rendering, however, still remain to be fixed. The splendid figure
-called <i>The Thinker</i> is carried out in bronze larger than life, and
-Rodin is credited with an intention of bringing up all the other
-figures to the same dimensions, which would represent an unheard-of
-outlay and a gate nearly a hundred feet high&mdash;a Cyclopean work indeed!
-<i>The Thinker</i>, who has been so called on account of the likeness
-between his attitude and that of Michael Angelo's <i>Pensieroso</i>, is
-much more truly an image, with his stunted body and a primitive man's
-face, of the cave-dweller, the prognathous savage beholding the crimes
-and passions of his progeny unroll themselves below him. Immediately
-beneath him may be seen the most celebrated characters of the Dante
-cycle, notably the lovers of Rimini entwined and falling into hell.<a name="FNanchor_3_6" id="FNanchor_3_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_6" class="fnanchor">[3]</a>
-Then as we descend towards the ground the figures <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>become more
-independent of the subject, more personally invented by the artist, and
-at the foot we find "women damned," such as Baudelaire conceived, amid
-characters from heathen mythology.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<a id="rodin015a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_015a.jpg" width="600" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">NEREIDS (Group at the base of the Victor Hugo monument.)</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>It may thus be said that, although, perhaps, the celebrated doorway
-may never be finished, it is a storehouse of Rodin's creations. It
-stands by him as a theme for inspirations, and he brings into it a
-whole category of thoughts and works, never troubling himself about the
-architecture or the actual scheme. He will be for ever improvising some
-little figure, shaping the notation of some feeling, idea, or form, and
-this he plants in his door, studies it against the other figures, then
-takes it out again, and if need be, breaks it up and uses the fragments
-for other attempts. Many of these little figures have developed into
-important separate groups. Rodin is ruled primarily by the need to
-create and to satisfy an irresistible vocation; he cares little what
-may be the ultimate transformation of his inventions, and his sculpture
-is, furthermore, so conceived that it may be executed on a large scale
-or a small; this is indeed so much the case that it is often impossible
-to judge from a photograph what are the dimensions.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<a id="rodin016a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_016a.jpg" width="600" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">SHADES (For the top of "The Gate of Hell".)</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p><i>The Gate of Hell</i> might therefore better be called "the Pandemonium,"
-or some quite other name. If it were to be carried out it could not
-contain all the figures destined for it by the artist. There they
-stand, innumerable, ranged on shelves beside the rough model of the
-door, representing the entire evolution of Rodin's inspiration, and
-forming what I call, with his consent, "the diary of his life as a
-sculptor." To enumerate these figures and groups would take too long;
-suffice to say that the larger part of Rodin's small marbles and
-bronzes are but completions of these sketches, and that on account of
-the essentially decorative character of the outlines and the intense
-originality of the proportion and balance of the figures, they can
-be conceived either as statuettes or as lifesized works. Such as it
-is, <i>The Gate of Hell</i> is the plan of a piece of work unique in the
-sculpture of modern days, a plan slowly elaborated, and of which every
-detail has been foreseen and analysed for years. No one has dared to
-undertake so audacious an assemblage of figures upon such a scheme, and
-the scheme is present to Rodin in its entirety. He by no means forgets
-the decorative effect nor the harmonious aspects, the concords that the
-gate should have, and if ever<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span> Government should require him to deliver
-his work he would be able to do so without delay. Twenty years in the
-studio have matured it in his mind. The work that Dante inspired has
-assumed a more general significance. Low-relief, high-relief, figures
-standing free, groups, single figures, all the styles of sculpture are
-gathered into the symphony of a throng, lost amid whirling mists of
-hell and converging towards the figure of the Thinker. The conception
-embraces centuries. Ugolino is there, and so are centaurs, female
-fauns, satyrs, and creatures dreamed of by Baudelaire, abstract
-personifications of vices&mdash;in particular, there is the extraordinary
-group of the miser dying of hunger over his treasure beside a
-prostitute <i>(Avarice and Lewdness).</i> The Thinker, in his austere nudity
-and pensive strength, is at one and the same time the alarmed Adam,
-the implacable Dante, and the compassionate Virgil of this frightful
-unrestrained humanity, but he is, above all, the ancestor, the first
-man, simple and unconscious, looking down on what he has begotten. The
-symbolism and philosophy of the artist are independent of any religious
-doctrine; his spiritual ardour excels in setting free the symbols of
-the various creeds, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span> he is supported mainly by deep and incessant
-consultation of nature, and by his exceptional sense of expression
-in movements. He attains the decorative harmony of his work not by
-additions, but by systematic suppressions, as the Gothic artists and
-those of the Renascence did.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="rodin017a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_017a.jpg" width="550" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">THE THINKER</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p><i>The Gate of Hell</i> is the outcome of studies made by Rodin from the
-Gothic sculptors, during his stay in Brussels. In this, and in <i>The
-Burghers of Calais</i>, he resumes the deep influence that he there
-underwent. As to the influence that the antique had upon him, that only
-showed itself later, in his smaller works in marble, and especially
-in the <i>Balzac</i> and recent productions. The <i>Gate</i> corresponds to the
-period in which Rodin's great aim was to create, through intensity
-of movement and originality of attitude and outline, a <i>new system
-of the dramatic</i> in his art, which the taste of the day had frozen
-into a false "neo-Greek nobility," obtained by immobility, by inertia
-of outline, and by a fear of seeing too living a movement break the
-general harmony. To seek a fresh harmony in the very study of movement,
-to create, side by side with <i>static</i> art, a <i>dynamic</i> art, such, in a
-brief formula, was Rodin's idea.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He was shortly to exhibit a work which was still more significant of
-the thoughts with which he was busy. For, though I have spoken at once
-of that famous <i>Gate,</i> which is the <i>leit-motiv</i> of Rodin's art, it
-must be remembered that in 1886 nothing was known of it but drawings.
-Only by degrees have groups and fragments of it been seen, and the
-work itself has never left the studio in the Rue de l'Université. It
-was <i>The Burghers of Calais</i> which revealed most clearly to the public
-Rodin's capabilities in the way of style and of composing a whole work,
-and I will speak of the <i>Burghers</i> in this chapter, although the work
-was not completed until 1892 and was not set up in Calais until 1895.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<a id="rodin018a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_018a.jpg" width="600" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">DANAID</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<a id="rodin019a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_019a.jpg" width="600" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">DANAID</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<a id="rodin020a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_020a.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">THOUGHT</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>In 1887 we may note <i>Perseus and the Gorgon</i>, and a marble <i>Head of
-the beheaded St. John</i>, which belongs to the Marchioness of Carcano.
-In 1888 was exhibited the exquisite <i>Danaid,</i> one of the most tender
-female figures that were ever lovingly moulded by this sculptor of
-the energetic, and one which has a subtle delicacy of soul that seems
-strangely placed between two works of power. At the same time a naked
-figure was also shown at the Exposition des Beaux Arts, in Brussels&mdash;a
-<i>Man Walking</i>, which was no other than<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span> one of the <i>Burghers,</i> and
-of which the robust execution made an impression. The year 1889 marked
-an increase of the artist's activity. He was busy upon preparatory work
-for the monument of Claude Lorraine, which he had been commissioned to
-make for Nancy. He was going on with <i>The Gate of Hell.</i> He completed a
-statue of Bastien-Lepage for the cemetery of Damvilliers. He began upon
-the busts of the art critics, Octave Mirbeau and Roger Marx, finished
-an admirable little <i>Dream-Group</i> in marble, in which a young man is
-lying back and trying to hold fast a sphinx-woman who takes flight,
-wild and fateful. An impressionist sketch of <i>Hecuba</i>, crouching down
-and shrieking, and <i>Thought</i>, in marble, completed the record of this
-well-filled year. <i>Thought,</i> a proud, sweet head rising from a block,
-is one of Rodin's best known works and the very symbol of his art.
-It occupies a place in the Museum of the Luxembourg, where it is in
-company with <i>The Danaid,</i> the <i>St. John, The Kiss,</i> a masterly female
-bust, and a bronze statuette. <i>The Fair Helmet-Maker,</i> from Villon's
-poem, is a work on a very small scale, but containing the depth and
-strength of tragedy&mdash;the whole drama of a human body's ruin.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="rodin021a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_021a.jpg" width="550" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">THE FAIR HELMET-MAKER</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
-In 1889 Rodin and Claude Monet together held, in the George Petit
-gallery, an exhibition which has remained famous and which united
-our two greatest artists. Rodin sent to it the <i>Women Damned</i>, the
-<i>Beheaded St. John</i>, some <i>Fauns</i> and <i>Bacchantes</i>, <i>Bastien-Lepage,</i>
-in all some thirty works, among which was <i>The Burghers of Calais</i>,
-shown complete for the first time. The sensation produced was immense.
-Rodin now tasted unmistakable fame, and his reputation spread all over
-the world. This fame, however, did not disarm the official circle, and
-not until the last three or four years have the critics been unanimous
-in their praise of the great French sculptor, whose every important
-work has given occasion to a battle, because its beauty arose from
-principles opposed to the whole system taught in the schools.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<a id="rodin022a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_022a.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">A NYMPH (BRONZE)</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>The five following years were marked by various works which did not,
-however, interfere with the threefold parallel continuation of the
-<i>Victor Hugo, The Burghers of Calais,</i> and <i>The Gate of Hell</i>, which
-were exhibited in various states in the Salon. Rodin considers it his
-duty, indeed, to submit to the public the phases of his work, rough
-attempts, clay, marbles,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span> or bronzes, before the final completion; and
-understanding very well that his style is, or seems to be difficult,
-he thus explains himself to the public in the exhibitions, and allows
-people to follow the stages through which his thought passes. In
-addition to these works may be noted, for the year 1890, the bust
-of a young woman, in silver, <i>Brother and Sister</i>, bronze, and the
-<i>Torso</i> of St. John the Baptist. In 1891, <i>The Caryatid</i>, a marble
-figure of a young woman with a stone upon her shoulder, the group of
-<i>The Young Mother</i> (first bronze and then marble), and <i>A Nymph.</i> In
-1892, the busts of <i>Rochefort</i> and of <i>Puvis de Chavannes,</i> which, with
-those of <i>Dalou, Jean Paul Laurens</i>, <i>Hugo</i>, and <i>Falguière,</i> form
-an incomparable series from Rodin's hand of portraits that surpass
-all modern French sculpture, and are admirable alike in execution and
-expression. The <i>Puvis de Chavannes</i> is perhaps the finest; it is a
-work that does not pall even beside Donatello himself. In 1892 the
-<i>Burghers</i> and the <i>Claude Lorraine</i> were completed. The <i>Burghers</i>
-waited three years for their setting up, but the monument to Lorraine
-was inaugurated immediately, thanks to the devoted efforts of that
-great art-worker in glass, Émile Gallé, and of Roger Marx,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span> who by
-his writings and his incessant activity has had a most noble effect
-upon modern French art. These two eminent men, both natives of Nancy,
-enforced the acceptance of the work. The monument consists of a statue
-of Lorraine, standing, palette in hand, his head raised eagerly towards
-the east, and of a pedestal from which Apollo and his rearing horses
-stand out in splendid high-relief. Thus did Rodin seek to pay homage
-to the master-painter who adored movement in light, by acclaiming
-both these in his turn. Fault has been found with the importance of
-the pedestal in comparison with the statue, the objectors failing to
-understand that this allegory of Apollo incarnated the very soul of
-the great artist whose effigy towered over the whole work, and that
-this whole could not be dissevered. The idea animating this composition
-was criticised by the authorities. Here, once more, Rodin with his
-symbolic vision, his tendency to bold simplifications of the general,
-synthetic idea, was found disturbing. He was asked for the <i>sculptured
-portrait</i> of a man, and he preferred to give prominence to a symbol
-that expressed the dream and the essential genius of that man, the
-sun-painter&mdash;an idea which was logical, but which ran counter to
-the received prejudice<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span> as to portrait statues. The propagandist
-persistence of Gallé and Roger Marx, however, convinced the people of
-Nancy, who are now very proud of their monument. The horses and the
-Apollo are the most living, palpitating, and lyrical things that Rodin
-has produced.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<a id="rodin023a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_023a.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">PUVIS DE CHAVANNES</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<a id="rodin024a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_024a.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">JEAN-PAUL LAURENS</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>In 1893 Rodin made the bust of Madame <i>Séverine,</i> the medallion of
-<i>César Franck,</i> and several works in marble; <i>Galatea, The Death of
-Adonis, The Education of Achilles,</i> and <i>The Wave.</i> From 1894 date
-the <i>Eternal Spring,</i> one of his tenderest and purest works, besides
-an <i>Orpheus and Eurydice,</i> an <i>Adonis and Venus,</i> and finally <i>Christ
-and the Magdalen.</i> For, by degrees, he was returning to religious and
-mythological subjects, after having expressed only general symbols
-or pieces of pure realism; and I shall have to call attention at a
-later point to the original manner in which Rodin was bold enough to
-interpret these subjects which the academic classicism seemed to have
-worn out and left insipid for ever.</p>
-
-<p>The year 1895 at last beheld the inauguration, on the 3rd of June, of
-<i>The Burghers of Calais</i> at Calais. To the same year belongs another
-fine work in marble: <i>Illusion, the Daughter of Icarus,</i> besides
-a vigorous bronze, <i>The Crouching<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span> Man,</i> a medallion of <i>Octave
-Mirbeau,</i> and&mdash;at this early date&mdash;some nude studies for the <i>Balzac,</i>
-for the <i>Balzac</i> was studied minutely in the nude, a point of which
-many people know nothing, before appearing draped in the famous
-dressing-gown which was destined, in 1898, to arouse so much clamour.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<a id="rodin025a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_025a.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">BUST OF MADAME V.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>The <i>Burghers</i> were set up, by subscription, in a square in Calais.<a name="FNanchor_4_7" id="FNanchor_4_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_7" class="fnanchor">[4]</a></p>
-
-<p>The monument is one in which Rodin has deliberately departed from
-all the rules of official art. These require that the effect should
-be pursued primarily by a compact grouping, the same thought being
-translated by the same gesture from all the persons. Rodin, on the
-contrary, desired to leave their full individuality to his six burghers
-going in their shirts and with halters on their necks to surrender
-themselves to King Edward, and he has isolated them on their one
-base. These six men are walking, one behind the other, two by two,
-half naked and miserable, with their emaciated faces&mdash;men besieged,
-sacrificed. One devotion unites them in the name of their town's
-salvation, but their characters and their thoughts<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span> remain distinct,
-and in each may be read a different drama of the conscience. They
-have not the factitious enthusiasm and the declamatory gesture with
-which an ordinary sculptor would have thought well to furnish them;
-they are simply citizens who have resolved to fulfil a fatal duty,
-and are going to perform it without cowardice, but nevertheless were,
-yesterday, trades-people and family-men with no pretensions to the
-heroic. They bear with them their regrets, their inner heartbreak, and
-are not thinking of striking an attitude in the eyes of history. They
-are the unknown, obscure heroes of a fatality such as often arose in
-their rough times; and of how many dead men, devoted like them, has
-history forgotten the deeds and names! There is Eustace de St. Pierre,
-with his shaven magistrate's face, stiff and controlled, carrying the
-key of the town; behind him Andrieux d'Andres, with his hands clenched
-over his sobbing face, turns back, this last time, towards the city.
-Jean de Fiennes, with his rough beard and weak, old man's shoulders, is
-listening to Jean d'Aire, who, younger than he, is murmuring words that
-perhaps confide to him his horror of death, and entreat from the old
-man encouragement in renunciation. But in front of all the others the
-two brothers,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span> Jacques and Pierre de Wissant, advance resolutely; and
-one turns back to hasten his friends, while one exhorts them, pointing
-with a restrained gesture towards heaven.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 650px;">
-<a id="rodin026a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_026a.jpg" width="650" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">THE BURGHERS OF CALAIS</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>The entire reality of these figures is no less striking than their
-ideality, just as is the case in the beautiful creations of the
-"Primitives." These are men whose absolutely real nakedness reveals
-itself beneath the coarse sacks that clothe them, a nakedness not
-harmonised into any style, but shown in all its veracity by an artist
-who has chosen models suitable to his characters without any care to
-arrange them or to give them that pretended <i>beauty</i> which would be
-merely a falsehood and an enfeeblement. These are six wretched men,
-shivering with cold and anguish. The scene is as close as possible
-to history, and the faces are real&mdash;ugly or ordinary. But an idea
-transfigures them. The tragedy of their sacrifice gives them a strange
-greatness, and they become fine because their soul is fine. We guess
-the gradation of their reflections: none faces his fate just like
-another, and the reason is that, though what they will is one, what
-they leave is different for each, and everything in them speaks, from
-their faces down to the least attitude of their limbs. Their expression
-is sober; a heavy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span> silence enwraps them; we follow them with our
-eyes as the dwellers in Calais must have done from the heights of
-their walls; and they are so grouped that from every point we see them
-separately, presenting a distinct aspect, and yet the one base unites
-and uplifts them. This is a marvel of psychological composition.</p>
-
-<p>Technical skill assists this composition; we find the power of the
-<i>St. John</i>, but more simplification. Only the essential lines attract
-the eye, the details are subsidiary to the whole. Admirable bits of
-flesh modelling are only noticed after long examination; the substance
-is scarcely thought of, so much is the mind held at first by the
-intellectual drama, and this was what Rodin desired. These six beings,
-side by side, are august in their sorrow, and they move us by means of
-their simplicity and by the absence of any theatrical gesture. We feel
-the bodies under the shirts, for Rodin made six complete models in the
-nude before he threw upon them these rags of stuff and knotted ropes.
-The feet are strongly attached to the earth; we guess that their limbs
-are heavy, because, though their will bids them walk, every step leads
-towards death. The impression is extraordinary and such as perhaps no
-sculpture<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span> ever gave before. This is a reality of all time: the epic of
-the sacrifice of the humble. As for the style, it recalls the Gothic
-sculptors by the rugged power of the moulding, the asceticism of the
-heads, and the strength of the knotty limbs. We are compelled to think
-of the Flemish "primitives," and especially of those genial Burgundian
-sculptors and image-makers of genius who produced the immortal figures
-of Philippe Pot's tomb in the Louvre. There is the same desire for
-expression in sculpture, which seeks beauty solely in intensity of
-character, and finds style in the sincere study of reality&mdash;all
-these things concurring towards the greater synthesis of the work's
-general thought. Rodin there shows himself an essentially French and
-northern artist, alien from all that the academies, hypnotised by the
-Italianism of the second Renascence, have chosen to invent as dogmas
-of beauty. <i>The Burghers of Calais</i> is a work of the true French
-classic tradition&mdash;of the national classicality which has nothing in
-common with that classicality imported from Italy in 1550 by which our
-indigenous artists have so long been oppressed, thanks to the "École
-de Rome." Standing before such a creation we recognise this truth
-sharply&mdash;this truth which is the secret of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span> Rodin's genius and of
-the enthusiasm that he aroused. Better than Rude, better than Barye,
-better even than Carpeaux, has he found the way to free himself, and to
-go back, by power of thought and mastery, to our true national lineage.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
-<a id="rodin027a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_027a.jpg" width="400" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">A BURGHER OF CALAIS</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:500px;">
-<a id="rodin028a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_028a.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">A BURGHER OF CALAIS</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 525px;">
-<a id="rodin029a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_029a.jpg" width="525" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">A BURGHER OF CALAIS</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>The <i>Burghers</i> ought, according to Rodin's idea, to be placed in front
-of the old Hotel de Ville of Calais, facing the sea; and he wished
-the group to be placed on a very high pedestal, so that the figures
-should stand out against the open sky, or else, on the other hand,
-almost on the level, so that everyone could walk round them, live with
-them, almost elbow them. A bad site has been chosen and a pedestal of
-moderate height and ordinary appearance. The <i>Burghers</i> are very fine
-all the same, and are certainly the most powerful piece of sculpture
-of the epoch. I have promised to be sober in my praises of Rodin, but
-I do not see why in speaking of such a work as this I should hide my
-convictions. Those who have seen it cannot fail to consider it, as I
-do, the work of a thinker and of an artist of genius.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_4" id="Footnote_1_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_4"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> It Is curious to recollect that the very fine equestrian
-statue of General Lynch and the monument to President Vicunha, sent to
-America by Rodin, were never paid for, and that, owing to revolutions,
-they actually disappeared, so that these works may be considered lost.
-Only the spoiled rough models and some photographs remain.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_5" id="Footnote_2_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_5"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> These <i>Shades</i> are a symbolic representation of men who
-are just dead, and who are bending down with folded hands in misery and
-terror gazing at the hellish crowd into which they are about to fall.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3_6" id="Footnote_3_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_6"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> The final version of this group has been treated by Rodin
-separately, and is known by the name of <i>The Kiss</i>. The marble group is
-in the Museum of the Luxembourg.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4_7" id="Footnote_4_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_7"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> A statue of Eustace de St. Pierre had been asked for.
-Rodin sent the six effigies of burghers, and this gave rise to fresh
-difficulties with the authorities.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h4><a name="III" id="III">III</a></h4>
-
-
-<p class="block">RODIN'S WORK FROM 1895 TO 1898&mdash;SMALL GROUPS&mdash;THE STATUE OF "BALZAC"
-&mdash;THE INCIDENT OF THE SOCIÉTÉ DES GENS DE LETTRES&mdash;THE "TECHNIQUE"
-OF THE "BALZAC"&mdash;RODIN'S IDEAS UPON MODELLING AND COMPOSITION&mdash;HIS
-OPINIONS ABOUT THE GREEKS, THE GOTHIC STYLE, CLASSICISM, AND
-MYTHOLOGICAL SUBJECTS&mdash;RODIN'S "ANTIQUE" PERIOD.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>The year 1896 was occupied by the continuation of work for the Hugo
-monument. The <i>Muse of Anger</i> and the <i>Muse of the Inna' Voice</i> were
-brought to their full completion. In addition to these Rodin made a
-very fine head of <i>Minerva,</i> in marble, with a silver helmet; a statue
-of a <i>Conqueror</i>, holding a statue of <i>Victory;</i> and two groups&mdash;<i>The
-Poet and the Life of Contemplation</i> (for M. Fenaille, the faithful
-admirer, who was, at a later date, to publish his sketches) and <i>The
-Eternal Idol,</i> a marvel of inspiration. A young naked woman is in a
-half-sitting posture, her head bent, her gaze lost in a dream. A man
-kneeling before her, his arms behind him and his desire restrained,
-puts<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span> his head gently forward and kisses the idol beneath the left
-breast over the heart, with mute fervour, and with a mystic, amorous
-concentration of his whole being. Rarely does sculpture allow of so
-much pulsating life and so much psychological emotion united to plastic
-perfection and originality of arrangement.</p>
-
-<p>From 1897 date the marble group of the <i>Women Bathing,</i> the last
-studies for the <i>Balzac,</i> and the studies for the <i>Monument to
-President Sarmiento</i>, a statue upon a pedestal in high-relief. Small
-groups in marble and in bronze are a form of which Rodin is fond. He
-has been led to devote himself largely to them on account of <i>The Gate
-of Hell,</i> the dimensions of which necessitated small figures. Moreover,
-Rodin reserves this form of art for certain categories of works that
-have a character of passion and intimacy. It should be possible to pass
-easily round them, to lean over them, almost to touch them and move
-them about; one should be able to live with them, as one cannot do with
-large figures meant to be looked at from below. The happy form of the
-small sculptured block, which the eighteenth century had employed to
-so much advantage, allows this constant communion of the spectator and
-the work of art. Rodin,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span> who executes his bigger figures in so large a
-style, reserves for these a style that is minute but never mannered.
-The outlines remain large, so much so, indeed, that the work would
-always bear an enlarged scale; but the modelling is wrought with an
-almost caressing touch and with a strange love of form. Here the rough
-sculptor, so Gothic in his austerity, fingers the marble with the care
-and the delicacy of a lover; he reveals himself as a fervent adorer of
-smooth, womanly flesh; he plays with the subtlest variations of light
-upon the inflexion of marble surfaces, and the man who is reproached
-with caring for nothing but "character" and with despising "beauty"
-creates arms, necks, knees, and bosoms of exquisite perfection. His
-favourite type of woman is the long, delicately made woman, with
-a small bust, largely curved hips, and a face full of will, the
-nervous, feline, voluptuous woman, of head rather than of heart, such
-as Baudelaire and Rops have imagined. The characteristic feature of
-Rodin's small groups is the seeking after new combinations of movement.
-I have said already that his essential idea was the production of
-<i>dynamic</i> art; that is to say that, finding himself face to face
-with an academic school that had grown inert owing to its care for
-pseudo-harmony,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span> he had determined to draw sculpture out of this blind
-alley and to show, before all things, how the expression of movement
-might lead to an entirely new conception of decorative outline. From
-this endeavour arose those little groups of lovers in which the
-attitudes are so infinitely varied, those curious presentments in
-which the arms and legs are placed as freely as in a painting. But the
-painting has the help of shadow, of backgrounds, and of values, which
-allow the light to be concentrated on a single point and the rest to be
-blurred. Rodin has attempted so to compose his most audacious movements
-that, in walking round, a new aspect of them is constantly presented,
-whereas ordinary sculpture, meant to be seen from a single point, does
-not allow the spectator to pass behind it. This difficulty and this
-main idea have led Rodin to treat modelling and composition in a way
-upon which I shall dwell more fully later on, and to invent a style of
-statuary which borrows some of the laws of painting.</p>
-
-<p>These thoughts had long been ripening in Rodin when at last he resolved
-to apply them to his <i>Balzac</i>, which was really not his first attempt
-in this direction, but the first that was seen in public. When this
-statue appeared in the Salon of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span> 1898, it created such a commotion that
-for a week the public forgot, over it, the events of that vast serial
-story, the Dreyfus affair. The clamour was extraordinary; some people
-raged at what they considered a scandalous practical joke, others
-warmly defended the new work. The Société des Gens de Lettres, already
-irritated by Rodin's delays in finishing the statue, declared plainly
-that it refused the <i>Balzac</i>, a decision which led to the resignation
-of the committee. Rodin might have brought an action and won it,
-for, strictly speaking, his agreement required the society to accept
-the work such as he delivered it. He preferred to withdraw his work
-without claiming its price or discussing the matter. Once again his art
-encountered violent opposition from the official camp&mdash;but to struggle
-is repugnant to his temper. Inflexible in his will as a producer, he is
-timid and proud in his attitude towards contradictions. Opportunity,
-moreover, offered him a roguish and witty revenge. Falguière was
-commissioned to make a <i>Balzac.</i> This put Falguière in a very awkward
-position; after all the fuss made about Rodin's statue, he must needs
-produce something finer, or at the very least equally interesting. He
-was certain of a bad reception at the hands of Rodin's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span> admirers and he
-was bound to please the others. Falguière only succeeded in producing a
-mediocre work. The <i>Balzac</i> that may be seen at the present time in the
-Avenue de Friedland is nothing but a half-hearted imitation of Rodin's;
-it is Rodin's <i>Balzac</i> seated, and without character or interest. This
-work appeared in 1900, at a time when opinion was already beginning
-to recognise the injustice done to Rodin, and it pleased nobody.
-Then Rodin, to show that the incident had in no way altered his
-friendly relations with Falguière,<a name="FNanchor_1_8" id="FNanchor_1_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_8" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> made an admirable bust of his
-fellow-worker, which was as fine as the second <i>Balzac</i> was poor, and
-thus gave to Falguière and to the public, also, a silent and ironical
-lesson.</p>
-
-<p>What, then, was this <i>Balzac</i> which was so much detested, and about
-which the most abusive and extraordinary things were written? Merely
-the image of the great writer, draped in a dressing-gown, with empty,
-hanging sleeves; he has risen in the night and is walking up and down,
-disturbed and sleepless, pursuing an idea that has suddenly presented
-itself. He is bent forward, his head thrown back, the eyes deep-set,
-and the mouth contracted in a smile of challenge. The powerful<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>
-neck&mdash;the neck indeed of a bull&mdash;emerges from the open wrapper. Rodin
-made use of various daguerreotypes, and especially of a celebrated
-portrait of Balzac, that shows him in shirt-sleeves with one brace,
-and folded arms. The enormous proportions of the head, the amazing
-strength of the thorax, the monstrous and leonine character of the face
-are all exact. "His was the countenance of an element," said Lamartine
-of Balzac, "with a torso that was joined to the head by an enormous
-neck, short legs, and short arms." These words absolutely justify the
-statue. Rodin had made studies for it in the nude (there are some fine
-clay models of the subject in his studio), then he clothed it with a
-gown (or to be more exact, with a bath-wrap, for that is what Balzac's
-famous monk's robe was), and proceeded to simplify the folds until
-he had left only the two or three essential ones. The result thus
-obtained, with the disproportion of body and legs, led Rodin to hide
-the short, ugly, useless arms under the drapery, and the figure thus
-assumed pretty much the appearance of a mummy, of a sort of monolith,
-from which nothing stood out but the one point of interest, the savage
-and magnificent animality of the head, with its darkened gaze and the
-bitterly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span> curved mouth, of which Rodin had made a separate small study
-in bronze. A great heave of the shoulders throws the body slightly
-backward, causing it to rest upon one leg, which is apparently bent,
-while the other is moved forward to walk.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="rodin030a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_030a.jpg" width="550" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">BALZAC</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>The whole work gives the impression of a <i>menhir</i>, a pagan dedicatory
-stone. Interest is concentrated solely upon the head. Rodin considered
-that the representation of a celebrated figure offered no corporeal
-interest. It is evident that a great error prevails on this subject.
-The ancients have transmitted to us naked or draped statues. It must
-be remembered that this homage was almost always paid to warriors,
-athletes, or courtesans; to represent these at full length was to
-express their fame. Their beautiful shape received fit homage. The gods
-were conceived as incarnations of moral beauty in physical beauty.
-But as time and morality have gradually brought us to honour men who
-are great in thought, the bodily representation of them has strayed
-into an extremely false path. Dress and physical exterior ceased to be
-of plastic interest, but the manner of our homage remained the same.
-Busts with pedestals commemorating in writing the deeds or the works
-would have been the right form of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span> celebration. But this, the only
-intelligent form, appeared to our modern statue-maniac ages too scanty.
-This heretical opinion has given birth to the gentlemen in frock-coats
-who disfigure our present towns and are hoisted upon pedestals in our
-public squares. To this absurd point have we come: in order to honour
-the soul we reproduce its husk, the body, which is destined to the
-nothingness of the grave, and we represent the shoes and coats as
-exactly as the head. We attempt in our pious regard for the essence
-of a thinker to represent that part of him which was transitory. The
-result is photography in bronze, a wretched artistic contradiction.
-Nevertheless, if we are to bow to custom and represent a man at full
-length of whom the head is the only important fact, we must indeed
-give him a body that is like reality; but the artist should try to
-concentrate interest as much as possible on the face. So illogical
-is this style in itself that the bodies and clothes are copied from
-chance models; the head of the person to be glorified is stuck on to
-them, and it is the merest bit of luck if it has been possible to shape
-this head itself from actual evidence! For plenty of statues represent
-individuals who never looked like them, and of whom no authentic
-likeness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span> exists, which is the height of absurdity and the very
-burlesque of an honour.<a name="FNanchor_2_9" id="FNanchor_2_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_9" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="rodin031a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_031a.jpg" width="550" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">BALZAC</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>In such cases an allegorical monument should be a matter of necessity;
-yet we behold hundreds of such statues, all the same, and our prejudice
-in favour of verisimilitude requires us to contemplate the embroidery
-of their doublets or the trimming of their coats.</p>
-
-<p>Rodin, for his part, to whom such ideas, which degrade his art to the
-lowest level, are revolting, believes that composition and expression
-should be so arranged as to make the spectator forget the <i>plastique</i>
-of the body. In his busts he neglects the inevitable linen collar,
-coat-collar, and necktie. The graceful dress of <i>Claude Lorraine</i>, the
-shirt and rope of <i>The Burghers of Calais,</i> had served his purpose
-well, and in the statues of <i>General Lynch</i> and <i>Bastien-Lepage</i> he
-had reduced the modern dress to large bronze reliefs without precise
-details. Especially in the image of a thinker he seeks<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span> to annul the
-costume. The Olympian character of Hugo allowed of the nude; for the
-massive deformity of Balzac the dressing-gown was appropriate. The
-majority of those who mocked did not even know that this careless
-costume was habitual to the author, and that Rodin chose to surprise
-him in his home and in the fever of work, instead of showing him in the
-street with a hat and stick, as they would no doubt have expected.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Balzac</i>, then, presents the aspect of a sheath of stone pushed out
-by a few twisting folds, which give it the appearance from behind of
-an upright sarcophagus. The size of the head, the abnormal largeness
-of the chest and neck, which have aroused mockery, are historic. Apart
-from these points, one honestly wonders what it is that can have
-shocked people in this bold and sincere work. The face is admirable in
-its pride, its strength of will, its haughty irony, and penetrating
-power of thought. The modelling and the leading lines are masterly.
-The rather ghostly look of the clay disappears in the bronze, as may
-be seen from the little head in that material, of which the monument
-was to be made. It is the freedom, the spontaneity, the life of the
-statue, which, as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span> in the case of the <i>Burghers,</i> gave a shock to the
-conventions of the official world and disturbed the ideas of the public
-at large.</p>
-
-<p>It is true, nevertheless, and is generally admitted even by its most
-active adversaries that this great figure possesses a strange haunting
-power; when one had seen it in the Salon one could see nothing else
-after it, and could not succeed in getting away from it. People
-returned to it, in order to attack it, but they did return to it
-inevitably. The same official sculptors who in 1877 had accused <i>The
-Age of Brass</i> of being cast from life because the figure was so exact
-did not shrink from accusing this same Rodin, matured by twenty years
-of work, of "not knowing the figure" and hiding his Balzac under a
-robe out of weakness. Besides these reproaches, which were made in
-bad faith, reproaches arose which exclaimed at Rodin's madness or
-hypocritically regretted that a man of so much talent should have made
-so great a mistake. But one thing which the <i>Bahac</i> never encountered
-was indifference; what was the spell which compelled everybody to
-regard it as an irritating puzzle, as a challenge, as a work out of the
-ordinary run? Plenty of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span> hostile faces were to be seen, but many of
-them showed a secret fear of being in the wrong, of misunderstanding a
-fine thing, a work which was a forerunner. This same fear might have
-been read as early as 1867 upon the faces of the detractors who stood
-in a ring around Manet's first works.</p>
-
-<p>The spell lay in the extreme simplification, the reduction of the
-elements to a powerful unity, according to a scheme with which Rodin
-had made experiments in silence and which he now revealed. And at
-this point I am led to a brief explanation of Rodin's ideas upon the
-technical part of his art.</p>
-
-<p>At the time of the <i>Balzac's</i> appearance I gave an account of the way
-by which Rodin had been led to a new conception of sculpture. This was
-in an article<a name="FNanchor_3_10" id="FNanchor_3_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_10" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> that has been reproduced more or less everywhere, and
-that Rodin has been good enough to consider as the emanation and direct
-expression of his artistic wishes. I cannot enter into all the details.
-The scale of this book would not allow of that, but the following are
-the principal points of that evolution.</p>
-
-<p>Rodin's is above all a temperament inclined to the expression of
-passionate and tragic character. Thence comes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span> his constant study of
-movement. As I said before, that study has led him to give unlooked-for
-values to the general outline and to produce works which may be viewed
-on all sides and which continually show a fresh and balanced aspect
-that explains the other aspects: otherwise the daring gestures and the
-bold combinations of the limbs would have given an air of absurdity
-to the groups. Rodin is at the same time very reflective and very
-instinctive. He matures a thought slowly, but he often passes by
-chance from that thought to its realisation. This is the predominant
-feature of his nature, and it explains his entire art. Rodin often
-appears unconscious, astonished at what he had in him and at what he
-has brought into existence, to such a degree that he explains it badly
-enough. He sees his thought in the whole of nature and finds it there
-again; that thought, indeed, is fed by general ideas, and is, if I may
-say so, almost "elemental." From this point of view Rodin's <i>genius</i>
-is independent of his <i>talent</i> as a sculptor. It sometimes happens to
-him to see a block of marble or a knob of wood, and the form of such an
-object will show him what he will make and the movement of the figure.
-He adapts to it one of the ideas which he always has in reserve: the
-aspect<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span> of the wood or the marble determines the passage of the thought
-to the material which will incarnate it. I said one day to Rodin: "One
-would say that you knew there was a figure in that block, and that you
-do nothing beyond breaking away the stone that hides it from us." He
-answered that that was exactly his feeling as he worked. Upon the naked
-figure Rodin has ideas that are peculiar to his nature as a mystic and
-a realist. He considers the body with its four limbs as a cypher, of
-which the combinations are infinite. That is an old idea that was held
-by primitive theologians of the Eastern religions. And it is the fact
-that Rodin has invented an immense series of attitudes and combinations
-that one would not have thought possible: he attaches little groups to
-the side of a block of marble with the freedom of a painter throwing
-a figure upon a background. He makes his people light, he makes them
-soar, he entwines them in surprising positions.</p>
-
-<p>It was therefore absolutely essential that he should find means to
-constitute a logical harmony <i>on every side</i> of his works. Scholastic
-statuary is opposed to this principle. Its tendency is to treat groups
-as bas-reliefs. The spectator must stand in front, at a certain spot,
-and whatever is behind<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span> is accessory: the decorative line produces its
-effect only from that point. So true is this that statues are very
-often so placed in public squares that people cannot pass round them.
-The academic sculptors treat a piece of sculpture like a picture; it
-has a right side and a wrong side. Rodin, shocked at this method, began
-by working in quite a different way. He made successive sketches of all
-the faces of his works, going constantly round them so as to obtain a
-series of views connected in a ring. Travels in Italy had led him to
-think that the ancients proceeded in this manner and that their great
-endeavour was to get the design of the outline by means of movement,
-which continually modifies the anatomy. Anatomy, indispensable to
-the artist, becomes the source of all the academic errors if once
-we forget that it is but inertia, the state of non-action, and
-consequently incapable of expressly teaching us about life and about
-the modifications that thought imposes upon flesh. The real value of
-a living figure is given by profiles studied successively in a full
-light. Rodin was delighted by this way of working. But his pictorial
-inclinations, his ideas about the possible formation of a <i>background</i>
-in sculpture as in painting, were not satisfied.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>When the academic school wishes to make use of a background to a figure
-it confines itself to a hollow or a relief. Rodin desired that a statue
-should stand free and should bear looking at from any point, but he
-desired nevertheless that it should remain in relation with light and
-with the surrounding atmosphere. He was struck by the hard, cut-out
-aspect of ordinary statues, and asked himself how an atmosphere might
-be given to them. Painting has two means to this end: of which the
-first is <i>values. Values</i> are independent of colour. Values, an element
-common to both arts, are in painting and sculpture <i>the relations as
-to opacity or transparence of an object and the background against
-which it is seen.</i> They may be dark on a light ground, light on a dark
-ground, or light upon a ground that is likewise light; but they are
-always the very life of the outline, and the important point is to fix
-that outline first of all. When we see a person placed between the
-sun and ourselves, against the light, we do not at first perceive the
-details within the outline, but we do see the general mass of the body,
-and that mass is filled with more or less intense colour, in which we
-presently distinguish details. Our perception at the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span> moment is as much
-sculptural as pictorial. Rodin, struck by the importance of this idea,
-devoted himself to obtaining, <i>at once and together,</i> the <i>volume;</i>
-that is to say, the equivalent in sculpture of the <i>value,</i> and the
-design of <i>successive views of one movement.</i></p>
-
-<p>But the second means in painting is the employment of intermediate
-tones encircling the figure and combining with the background. How
-could an equivalent be found for that? Logic led Rodin on to a step
-which alarmed him: he made experiments after examining the antiques
-very closely. He took fragments of his statues and began to raise them
-in certain places by layers of clay, intensifying the modelling and
-enlarging the lines. He observed that the light now played better upon
-these enlarged lines; the refraction of light upon these amplified
-surfaces was softer, the hardness of the cut-out outline vanished,
-and a radiant zone shaped itself around his figures and united them
-gradually with the atmosphere. In this way, therefore, by means of
-this systematic accentuation of the outlines, an intermediate tone, <i>a
-radiancy of the forms,</i> was produced.</p>
-
-<p>Rodin understood at once that he had found his way<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span> to the deepest
-secret of his art; that is to say, to the ideal limit where through its
-hidden laws a plastic art touches the other arts in a negation of all
-that is merely materialistic. The intermediate tones in painting, the
-radiating surfaces in sculpture, are the same principle as the nervous
-radiations noted in photographing a hand, where it may be seen that
-the fingers are prolonged by emanations. Nothing is fixed, limited,
-or finished in nature, and the radiating state is the only real one.
-But this was a dangerous discovery for a sculptor, since people would
-immediately exclaim upon the <i>deformation</i> <i>of what was seen</i>, the
-alteration of the fact, the falsification of anatomy. Therefore Rodin
-proceeded in silence and with very great prudence. The point was not,
-of course, <i>to enlarge</i> <i>all surfaces equally</i>, for that would have
-produced only an increase of scale. The thing was <i>to amplify</i>, with
-tact, <i>certain parts of the modelling</i>, the edges of which were swept
-by the light, so as to give a halo to the outline. At the same time,
-Rodin experimented in a series of drawings made on purpose, forbidding
-himself to give any detail, tracing only the outlines of bodies filled
-in with one wash of water-colour that gave the <i>value.</i> I shall return
-to these sketches. They<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span> cannot be understood without a knowledge of
-their original purpose.</p>
-
-<p>This theory, to which Rodin approved of my giving the name of
-<i>deliberate amplification of surfaces</i>, is simply the critical
-principle of Greek sculpture, which has been entirely misunderstood
-by the academic school. That school, which is supposed to honour the
-Greeks, is really false to their spirit and their teaching. Moreover,
-this principle, which belongs to all the primitive statuary that
-was made for the open air, is to be found among the Egyptians and
-the Assyrians. It calls in question the academic tradition whereby
-<i>exactitude</i> is confounded with <i>truth.</i> In reality it may be said
-to be a profoundly classic principle which has been denied by the
-academic school. Here, as in painting, classicism is opposed to the
-academic. Hence it should be concluded that in reality Rodin is by
-no means an <i>innovator</i> opposing himself to a school that retains
-classic traditions, but, speaking precisely, a classic, returning to
-nature, replacing himself in the state of mind of a Greek before his
-model, and opposing himself to a school that has overloaded art with
-methods, formulas, and expedients that change the character of antique
-and Gothic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span> art. Rodin has a horror of what is called "originality,"
-and an even greater horror of what is called "inspiration." He only
-trusts completely to work and to minute, sincere observation of nature.
-"Slowness is a beauty," he often says. He has the greatest antipathy
-for "sculpture with literary meanings," and has often been galled,
-without saying so, by certain praises, in which writers, reeling off
-pages of description about his works, have thought to please him by
-dwelling on the idea and not on the execution. "I invent nothing,"
-he says; "I rediscover. And the thing seems new because people have
-generally lost sight of the aim and the means of art; they take
-that for an innovation which is nothing but a return to the laws of
-the great sculpture of long ago. Obviously, I think; I like certain
-symbols, I see things in a synthetic way, but it is nature that gives
-me all that. I do not imitate the Greeks; I try to put myself in the
-spiritual state of the men who have left us the antique statues. The
-'École' copies their works; the thing that signifies is to <i>recover
-their method.</i> I began by showing close studies from nature like <i>The
-Age of Brass.</i> Afterwards I came to understand that art required a
-little more largeness, a little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span> exaggeration, and my whole aim, from
-the time of the <i>Burghers</i>, was to find a method of exaggerating
-logically: that method consists in the deliberate amplification of the
-modelling. It consists also in the constant reduction of the figure to
-a geometrical figure, and in the determination to sacrifice any part of
-a figure to the synthesis of its aspect. See what the Gothic sculptors
-did. Look at the cathedral of Chartres; one of the towers is massive
-and without ornament: they sacrificed it to give value to the exquisite
-delicacy of the other tower.</p>
-
-<p>"In sculpture the projection of the muscular <i>fasciculi</i> must be
-accentuated, the foreshortening forced, the hollows deepened; sculpture
-is the art of the hole and the lump, not of clear, well-smoothed,
-unmodelled figures. Ignorant people, when they see close-knitted true
-surfaces, say that 'it is not finished.' No notion is falser than that
-of <i>finish</i> unless it be that of <i>elegance</i>; by means of these two
-ideas people would kill our art. The way to obtain solidity and life is
-by work carried out to the fullest, not in the direction of achievement
-and of copying details, but in that of truth in the successive
-schemes. The public, perverted by academic prejudices, confounds art
-with neatness. The simplicity of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span> 'École' is a painted cardboard
-ideal. A cast from life is a copy, the exactest possible copy, and
-yet it has neither motion nor eloquence. Art intervenes to exaggerate
-certain surfaces, and also to fine down others. In sculpture everything
-depends upon the way in which the modelling is carried out with a
-constant thought of the main line of the scheme, upon the rendering of
-the hollows, of the projections and of their connections; thus it is
-that one may get fine lights, and especially fine shadows that are not
-opaque. Everything should be emphasised according to the accent that
-it is desired to render, and the degree of amplification is personal,
-according to the tact and the temperament of each sculptor; and for
-this reason there is no transmissible process, no studio recipe, but
-only a true law. I see it in the antique and in Michael Angelo. To work
-by the profiles, in depth not by surfaces, always thinking of the few
-geometrical forms from which all nature proceeds, and to make these
-eternal forms perceptible in the individual case of the object studied,
-that is my criterion. That is not idealism, it is a part of the
-handicraft. My ideas have nothing to do with it but for that method; my
-Danaids and my Dante figures would be weak, bad<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span> things. From the large
-design that I get your mind deduces ideas."</p>
-
-<p>Rodin, then, is convinced that he is classical, and rebels against the
-"École" which claims to be so. He has the greatest admiration for the
-Renascence, but declares that he does not so clearly understand the
-genius of the Gothic sculptors. He admires it, but has not thoroughly
-penetrated it. "I feel it, but I cannot express it," he says. "I cannot
-analyse the Celtic genius to my own satisfaction. In the Middle Ages
-art came from groups, not from individuals. It was anonymous; the
-sculptors of cathedrals no more put their names to their works than
-our workmen put theirs on the pavement that they lay. Ah! what an
-admirable scorn of notoriety! The signature is what destroys us. We do
-portraits, but what we do is not so great. These kings and queens, on
-the cathedrals, were not portraits. The fellow-workers stood for one
-another, and they interpreted; they did not copy. They made clothed
-figures; the nude and portraiture only date from the Renascence. And
-then those fellows cut with the tool's end into the block, that is why
-they were called sculptors. As for us, we are modellers. And<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span> what a
-disgraceful thing that casting from life is, which so many well-known
-sculptors do not blush to use! It is a mere swindling in art. Art was
-a vital function to the image-makers of the thirteenth century; they
-would have laughed at the idea of signing what they did, and never
-dreamed of honours and titles. When once their work was finished,
-they said no more about it, or else they talked among themselves.
-How curious it would have been to hear them, to be present at their
-gatherings, where they must have discussed in amusing phrases, and with
-simple, deep ideas!... Whenever the cathedrals disappear civilisation
-will go down one step. And even now we no longer understand them, we
-no longer know how to read their silent language. <i>We need to make
-excavations not in the earth, but towards heaven.</i>..." An admirable
-saying that Rodin has often repeated to me and that I have never heard
-without deep emotion! He has the secret of these true formulas, and
-his words, which are not eloquent, but, rather, obscure, are suddenly
-lighted up by them. His speech, like his sculpture, is born from
-sincere contact with the essence of nature. In regard to the Renascence
-and Michael Angelo, he reports that he received no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span> decisive lesson
-from either until after a journey to Italy in 1875. "I believed before
-that," he says, "that movement was the whole secret of this art, and
-I put my models into positions like those of Michael Angelo. But
-as I went on observing the free attitudes of my models I perceived
-that they possessed these <i>naturally</i>, and that Michael Angelo had
-not preconceived them, but merely transcribed them according to the
-personal inspiration of human beings moved by the need of action. I
-went to Rome to look for what may be found everywhere: <i>the latent
-heroic in every natural movement.</i> <a name="FNanchor_4_11" id="FNanchor_4_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_11" class="fnanchor">[4]</a></p>
-
-<p>"Then I gathered the elements of what people call my symbolism. I do
-not understand anything about long words and theories. But I am willing
-to be a symbolist, if that defines the ideas that Michael Angelo gave
-me, namely that the essence of sculpture is the modelling, the general
-scheme which alone enables us to render the intensity, the supple
-variety of movement and character. If we can imagine the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span> thought of
-God in creating the world, He thought first of the construction, which
-is the sole principle of nature, of living things and perhaps of the
-planets. Michael Angelo seems to me rather to derive from Donatello
-than from the ancients; Raphael proceeds from them. He understood that
-an architecture can be built up with the human body, and that, in
-order to possess volume and harmony, a statue or a group ought to be
-contained in a cube, a pyramid; or some simple figure. Let us look at a
-Dutch interior and at an interior painted by an artist of the present
-day. The latter no longer touches us, because it does not possess the
-qualities of depth and volume, the science of distances. The artist who
-paints it does not know how to reproduce a cube. An interior by Van
-der Meer is a cubic painting. The atmosphere is in it and the exact
-volume of the objects; the place of these objects has been respected,
-the modern painter places them, arranges them as models. The Dutchmen
-did not touch them, but set themselves to render the distances that
-separated them, that is, the depth. And then, if I go so far as to say
-that <i>cubic truth, not appearance, is the mistress of things,</i> if I
-add that the sight of the plains and woods and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span> country views gives me
-the principle of the plans that I employ on my statues, that I feel
-cubic truth everywhere, and that plan and volume appear to me as laws
-of all life and all beauty, will it be said that I am a symbolist, that
-I generalise, that I am a metaphysician? It seems to me that I have
-remained a sculptor and a realist. Unity oppresses and haunts me."</p>
-
-<p>"What," says Rodin again, "is the principle of my figures, and
-what is it that people like in them? It is the very pivot of art,
-it is balance; that is to say, the oppositions of volume produced
-by movement. That is the striking, material fact in art, with all
-due deference to those persons who conceive art as distinct from
-'brutal' reality. Art is like love. For many people it is a dream, a
-psychological complication, a palace, a perfume, a stage scene; but
-nothing of the sort! The essential of love is the pairing; all the
-rest is only detail, charming, and full of passion, but detail. It is
-the same in art: people come and praise my symbols and my expressions
-to me; but I know that the plans are the essential thing. Respect the
-plan, make it exact from every point; movement intervenes, displaces
-these volumes and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span> creates a fresh balance. The human body is like a
-<i>walking temple,</i> and like a temple it has a central point around which
-the volumes place and spread themselves. When one understands that,
-one has everything. It is simple, but it must be seen, and academism
-refuses to see it. Instead of recognising that that is the key to my
-method they prefer to say that I am a poet. That expression signifies
-that people feel, confusedly, the difference between an art resting
-on conventions and one derived from truth; only they think that the
-'poetic' art is the conventional one. They call that <i>inspiration.</i>
-That is the belief that has led to the theory of genius being madness.
-But men of genius are just those <i>who, by their trade-skill, carry the
-essential thing to perfection.</i> People say that my sculpture <i>is that
-of an 'exalté.'<a name="FNanchor_5_12" id="FNanchor_5_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_12" class="fnanchor">[5]</a></i></p>
-
-<p>"I do not deny that there is exaltation in my works; but that
-exaltation existed not in me, but in nature, in movement. The divine
-work is naturally exalted. As for me, all I do is to be true; my
-temperament is not 'exalted'; it is patient.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span> I am not a dreamer,
-but a mathematician; and if my sculpture is good it is because it is
-geometrical."</p>
-
-<p>From these fragments of conversation the reader will conceive how
-Rodin's generalising spirit leads him from the realism of his daily
-work to the synthesis of a sort of ideo-realistic metaphysical system.
-He has the sense (belonging only to genius) of the <i>continuity of
-the universe</i>, and he certainly had it at a time when, unlettered
-as he was, he would not have known how to explain it specifically
-to himself. He constantly formulates this metaphysical system, as I
-have seen it formulated by Stéphane Mallarmé, who could never see
-anything without instantly bringing together two ideas or images that
-no one would ever have thought of connecting. Spontaneous analogy
-is the mark of genius and the secret of all real poetry. This is
-why I consider Rodin as a very great poet&mdash;not in the sense that he
-dislikes, but on the contrary, by giving to the word "poet" its deep
-etymological significance according to the Greek, that of "making,
-creating, vivifying." We may understand, too, in how great a degree an
-intellectuality of this kind offers a living challenge to the ideas
-of the "École." The man who thinks thus is necessarily isolated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span> and
-has struggled all his life, never making a concession and saying
-nobly, "The artist, like the woman, has an honour to preserve." I will
-further quote from Rodin the following reflection<a name="FNanchor_6_13" id="FNanchor_6_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_13" class="fnanchor">[6]</a>: "Where you follow
-nature, you get everything. When I have a beautiful woman's body for
-a model the drawings that I make from it give me images of insects,
-birds, and fishes. That seems improbable, and I had no suspicion of
-it myself. Formerly I used to be seeking shapes for vases, either to
-use them at Sèvres, where I used to work, or elsewhere.... I never
-succeeding in finding a beauty of proportions and lines such as I had
-the feeling of, because I only founded my attempts upon <i>imagination.</i>
-Since that time I have drawn women's bodies, and one of these bodies
-gave me, in the synthesis of it, a magnificent shape for a vase, with
-true and harmonious lines. The point is not to create. Creation and
-improvisation are useless words. Genius only comes to the man who
-understands with his eye and his brain. Everything is in the things
-about us. Manufacture and ornamental art want reforming according to
-these ideas. I should have liked<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span> to see that. Everything-is contained
-in nature. There is an harmonious, continual, uninterrupted movement. A
-woman, a mountain, a horse, in conception they are all the same thing,
-they are made on the same principles. Young artists compose instead of
-following their models and understanding that therein lies infinity."
-Here Rodin directly touches a scientific truth&mdash;the relative monotony
-of Nature's productive forms. Nature does everything with very few
-forms: the variations are so infinite that there are no two leaves
-alike, but the nerves of a leaf, the lines of a vein, an artery, a
-bird's wing, a fishbone, a nerve-cell, are identical; multiplicity
-derives from identity and returns to it, so that everything is reduced
-to a fundamental geometry which perhaps is but the effect of a single
-cellular generation. In this respect the laws of art and of science
-are the same, even as among all the arts there is a synthesis of
-common laws, an identity where we seem to behold a difference. Recent
-work in science, by establishing the existence of states of radiation
-(Crookes, Röntgen, Hertz) is busy undermining our old conception of
-matter, showing us the identity of it with the immaterial, and thereby
-abolishing our preconceptions about the idea and the fact, music and
-sculpture,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span> considered as different manifestations. I remember that I
-one day kept Rodin's curiosity excited for a long time by explaining
-the details of this theory to him; he was not acquainted with it,
-and listened to me as to a writer in love with general ideas. But it
-was clear that in his mere province as a sculptor he knew far better
-and had penetrated far more deeply into this enthralling problem of
-identity. His is a luminous mind, of the same kind as the electric
-rays; it rather penetrates than surrounds what is obscure to it. On
-that day he was disturbed, and I was irritated by certain declamations
-which had been written about his "philosophy," and of which the author
-had assuredly not comprehended the logical consequences; and we came
-to the conclusion that it would be much better for Rodin's peace of
-mind to keep silent upon these points, for his "philosophy" could only
-be made comprehensible to those who could understand the method of his
-sculpture.</p>
-
-<p>It is time, however, to pause in this path and to return simply to
-the question of sculpture. Nor was it my purpose to tire the reader
-by these abstractions when I began to say a few words about Rodin's
-opinions concerning the antique. It must be understood, then, that the
-<i>Balzac</i> and even the <i>Hugo</i>,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span> as well as some figures, were the result
-of all these preceding reflections. "When I saw my <i>Balzac</i> brought
-into the yard from the storehouse of the statues in order to go to
-the Salon," says Rodin, "I had it purposely placed beside <i>The Kiss,</i>
-which had been finished rather earlier. I was not dissatisfied with the
-simplified vigour of that group, to which I had already applied these
-experiments. But I saw that it looked slack, that it did not hold its
-place beside the <i>Balzac</i> as Michael Angelo's torso does beside a fine
-antique, and then I understood that I was in the right path. I have
-had hesitations, you know, pangs that I do not speak of. And then,
-little by little, as I looked at nature, as I came to understand it
-better and to throw aside my prejudices more frankly, I took courage.
-It seemed to me that I was doing better. When I began I did skilful
-things, things that were smartly done, but they were thin and dry, but
-I felt there was something beyond, and that something is amplification.
-I only ventured on it when I was over fifty years old, but do you not
-think I have a right now to disregard the objections of the mob and the
-newspapers? I have taken time to know why I was doing as I did. The
-essential things of my modelling are there, and they would be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span> there
-in less degree if I 'finished' more. As to polishing or repolishing a
-toe or a curl, I find no interest in it; it impairs the large line,
-the soul of what I desired to do, and I have nothing more to say to
-the public on that point. There the line of demarcation comes between
-the confidence that the public ought to have in me and the concessions
-that I ought not to make to the public." To this firm and discreet
-resolution Rodin has kept in all the works wrought out by him since
-1898.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="rodin032a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_032a.jpg" width="550" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">PRIMITIVE MAN.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>I cannot better set forth his opinions about the antique than by
-quoting the following fragments from two articles that he wrote for
-the <i>Musée</i>, a review of ancient art, in January and February, 1904;
-for Rodin sometimes writes, quite unpretentiously, but with the same
-lucidity of thought that he shows in his familiar conversation. One of
-these articles refers to a Greek statuette in the Museum of Naples, the
-other to the lesson that the ancients give us.</p>
-
-<p>"In the first place, the Antique is Life itself. Nothing is more alive,
-and no style in the world has rendered life as it has. The ancients
-were the greatest, most serious, and most admirable observers of nature
-who have ever existed. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span> antique was able to render life because
-the ancients saw the essential thing in it&mdash;large blocks. They confined
-themselves to the large shadows cast by these large blocks, and as
-truth itself lies in that, their figures being so made could never be
-feeble. Moreover, the antique is simple, and that gives it astonishing
-energy. And then there is much more study in it than appears; that
-was brought home to me once. When I had finished my <i>Age of Brass</i>, I
-went to Italy and I found an Apollo whose leg was in exactly the same
-position as one in <i>The Age of Brass</i> that had taken me six months'
-work. Then I saw that though on the surface everything seems to be done
-at a stroke, in reality all the muscles are built up and one sees the
-details come to light one by one. That is because the ancients studied
-everything in its successive profiles, because in any figure and every
-part of a figure no profile is like another; when each has been studied
-separately the whole appears simple and alive.</p>
-
-<p>"The great error of the neo-Greek school is really this: it is not
-<i>type</i> that is antique, but modelling. For want of having understood
-that, the neo-Greek school has produced nothing but papier-mâché. It
-is bad to put the antique before<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span> beginners; one should end, not begin
-with it. If you wanted to teach someone to eat, you would give him
-fresh food, that he might learn to chew; it would never occur to you
-to give him food already triturated to exercise his teeth upon. Well,
-when you want to teach sculpture to anyone, set him face to face with
-nature, and when he has gained plenty of power to deal with nature,
-then say to him: 'Now, here is what the antique has done.' And that
-will give him a new source of energy. Whereas if you give the antique
-to the beginner who has never struggled with nature, he does not
-understand anything about it, and loses his individuality over it.
-You make a plagiarist of him, and instead of making his own prayer to
-nature he will repeat the prayer of the antique without understanding
-the words of it. He will die an old pupil; he will not die a man.</p>
-
-<p>"To teach the antique at the outset of a man's studies is to render
-the antique incomprehensible. In the first place, no one can teach the
-antique, it is not possible; that art of truth and simplicity cannot
-be taught. The sculptor works from nature, and afterwards he goes to
-look, in the galleries, and see how the antique rendered what he has
-been trying for from the life.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span> But if he goes straight to the antique,
-shutting his eyes to nature, as the antique has always been done from
-nature, our sculptor will only be able to carry that vision into his
-own work in a factitious way; he will be neither antique nor modern,
-but bad.</p>
-
-<p>"A man may do antique work in our day, not in the false sense of
-producing the <i>antique type,</i> but in the true sense of <i>modelling
-like the antique.</i> Such a man (painter, etcher, or sculptor) will
-take nature, and if he has the power of the antique he will produce
-antique work, which will entirely disagree with what is taught as
-such, but will agree with that in the museums. The 'École' begins
-at the end; when a man begins with nature, he may go on to the most
-improbable inventions; the antiques themselves show that. Do you know
-of anything more impossible than the centaur? But is there anything
-finer in Olympia? The ancients knew nature so well that they became her
-fellow-workers and created, not phantoms, but beings that were alive in
-spite of physical impossibilities. To my mind it would be better not
-to study the antique than to study it wrong. It is not the artist's
-alphabet, but the reward of his work. The command which it gives us is
-not to copy it, but to do like it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span></p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<a id="rodin033a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_033a.jpg" width="600" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">YOUNG WOMAN BETWEEN GOOD AND EVIL COUNCIL.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>"To say that the antiques, which portray the plain marvel of life,
-are beautiful is a superficial sort of praise. Beauty is not the
-starting-point, but the point of arrival; a thing can only be beautiful
-if it is true. Truth itself is only a complete harmony, and harmony
-is finally only a bundle of utilities. The miracle of life could not
-be perpetuated but for the constant renewal of universal balance. The
-ancients felt that vast rhythm, and their art, being modelled upon it,
-appears to us as a natural and sublime expression of beauty.... One
-of the ancients made a statue. How did he set about it? It is useless
-to bring in rules that only grew up in the brains of commentators
-dissecting a series of works, centuries afterwards. The antique remains
-uncomprehended because we have not a simple enough spirit. It is not
-by studying the antique that we shall learn its secret; in order to
-understand, not its nomenclature, but its spirit, we must begin by
-studying nature. Rembrandt cannot be understood by copying him at the
-Louvre, he can only be understood when we travel through nature to him.
-Well, nature is always there, waiting patiently for antiques to be
-made afresh; the model is there waiting for someone to come at last,
-no matter whence. For it is an error<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span> to think the antique comes from
-the south: it comes from everywhere. The antique can be produced from a
-Dutch woman or an American woman; the type is nothing, the modelling is
-everything.</p>
-
-<p>"What makes the strength of the antique is the plan, the connection of
-all the profiles. The neo-Greeks say: 'The antiques are <i>line,</i> and
-their works, in which all the lines, except two, dance about, show
-their error. The antiques, we will say, are <i>lines</i> or rather <i>plan.</i>
-Look at an antique; you can guess the full face from the profile.
-The eye cannot grasp the shape on the opposite side to that which it
-beholds, but it deduces it from this side: walk round, and the study
-of the profiles will afford you an <i>irrefragable</i> proof by <i>rule of
-three.</i> The sculptor swells the half-tones by slight exaggerations, so
-as to heighten the light by a tone. The drapery lives; like the body
-that it hides, it receives life from that body without needing the
-subterfuge of wetted drapery.'<a name="FNanchor_7_14" id="FNanchor_7_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_14" class="fnanchor">[7]</a></p>
-
-<p>"There is in the antiques an astonishing mystery of life which causes
-all idea of dimension to disappear. A figure an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span> inch or two high
-might just as well be life-size; when a thing is well organised, the
-greatness is in the modelling and not in the size. If one were to
-photograph a Tanagra figure and the Eiffel Tower, and were to show the
-two photographs to some person unacquainted with either object, I am
-sure he would declare the Tanagra figure to be larger than the tower. A
-pear or an apple, from the point of view of modelling, is as large as
-the celestial sphere. Thus the splendour of truth is such that finding
-no word to render it, we have called it 'Ideal.'"</p>
-
-<p>These quotations will suffice, I hope, to show Rodin's inmost thought.
-These judgments are implicit condemnations of the "École"; they are
-also definitions of his classical art, which is by no means "literary,"
-and which is governed, even in its lyrical and tragic developments,
-by good sense, that is to say, by an inborn taste for balance in the
-midst of boldness. If I am anxious to insist so strongly upon Rodin's
-profound <i>normality</i>, this is, I repeat, in order to forewarn the
-public against the declamations of some of his untoward admirers, who
-reckon one of his merits to be an "originality" which they confound
-with that exaggeration, that emphasis and eccentricity that never mark
-the great artist. Whatever tragic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span> or passionate subject a great artist
-may treat, to whatever height of strangeness his imagination may rise,
-beauty of form will, if he is, like Rodin, a master of <i>technique</i>,
-confer upon <i>t</i> him an exalted and permanent serenity. Rembrandt and
-Delacroix come from the depth of their vastly differing worlds to meet
-Raphael and Watteau in that conciliatory region where we admire the
-great masters&mdash;and Rodin is already placed in that region.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_8" id="Footnote_1_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_8"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Rodin has never forgotten Falguière's loyalty at the time
-of <i>The Age of Brass</i> affair.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_9" id="Footnote_2_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_9"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> A recent example in Paris is the double statue of the
-chemists who invented quinine. When will people understand that a
-discovery of this kind, however honourable, is nevertheless quite
-incapable of being associated with any plastic idea? The same thing is
-true of the statues of Chappe and Lavoisier, flanked by instruments of
-telegraphy and chemistry. These are ridiculous signboards, melancholy
-compliments translated by a tradesman's art that renders our streets
-hideous.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3_10" id="Footnote_3_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_10"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> <i>Revue des Revues</i> (of Paris), June 15th, 1898.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4_11" id="Footnote_4_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_11"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> I find myself underlining-: it is not Rodin whose voice
-makes this emphasis. But I am attempting to mark out in this way the
-formulas which spring up in his conversation, and which, collected
-together, will give the public an idea of his instinctive synthesis,
-deduced from life.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_5_12" id="Footnote_5_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_12"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> The word <i>exalté</i> has in this use no precise equivalent
-in English. "Enthusiast," as the eighteenth century knew the
-word&mdash;that is, with the infusion of a touch of lunacy&mdash;conies perhaps
-nearest.&mdash;TRANS.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_6_13" id="Footnote_6_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_13"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> An observation noted by Mlle. Judith Cladel in her curious
-volume, <i>Rodin, drawn from life.</i> (Éditions de La Plume, 1903.)</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_7_14" id="Footnote_7_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_14"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> Loïe Fuller has obtained, by means of stuffs not wetted,
-the effects that the 'École' loves, because her plastic dance is
-logically derived from nature.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h5><a name="IV" id="IV">IV</a></h5>
-
-
-<p class="block">WORKS SINCE THE "BALZAC"&mdash;SMALL WORKS IN MARBLE&mdash;PLAN OF THE MONUMENT
-TO LABOUR&mdash;DRAWINGS AND ETCHINGS</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>"I shun father and mother and wife and brother, when my genius calls
-me. I would write on the lintels of the door-post, <i>Whim.</i> I hope it
-is somewhat better than whim at last, but we cannot spend the day in
-explanation.... Whoso would be a man must be a nonconformist ... must
-not be hindered by the name of goodness, but must inquire if it be
-goodness. Nothing is at last sacred but the integrity of our own mind.
-Absolve you to yourself, and you shall have the suffrage of the world."</p>
-
-<p>I quoted these high-minded words of Emerson's to Rodin at the time of
-the <i>Balzac</i> incident. "They are," I said to him, "the very epigraph
-of your whole life." Nor have they ceased to epitomise the man and
-the artist. From the time of the <i>Balzac</i> Rodin's work has proceeded
-very regularly and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span> on the same principles. The <i>Victor Hugo</i> is being
-finished in marble, in its two versions, in the studio of the Rue de
-l'Université. The group in which Hugo, his extended arm commanding
-silence of the waves, sits surrounded by Muses is almost ready; the
-other, in which Hugo, dreamily listening to the counsels of Iris,
-stands on the edge of a rock washed by waves, amid which Nereids are
-entwined, is not quite so far advanced. <i>The Gate of Hell</i> is ready
-to receive its finally chosen and ordered figures. In the Salon of
-1902 Rodin exhibited the three <i>Shades</i> from its summit, inspired by
-the celebrated <i>Lasciate ogni speransa.</i> In 1900 Rodin only showed
-two or three old productions at the Universal Exhibition, because his
-work was collected in a special pavilion at the Rond-point de l'Alma,
-the concession of which pavilion was made uncomfortable for him by
-his colleagues, so much so that the artist was obliged to remove on
-the very day of closing, with less delay and consideration allowed to
-him than to the most unimportant industrial exhibitor. This special
-exhibition was, nevertheless, a great international success for Rodin,
-and the amazing development of his fame may be said to date from it.
-Before 1900 Rodin stood in the position<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span> of an exceptional artist,
-celebrated but envied, isolated and challenged, whose relations with
-the Government were strained, whom a minority upheld, but on whom the
-official world looked coldly. Since that time his eminence is so firmly
-established that he now holds the rank that Puvis de Chavannes held
-in the estimation of all artists. His triumphant journey to Prague
-(1901-2), London's enthusiastic reception, and Rodin's recent election
-to be President of the Society over which Whistler presided, have
-finally given him the acknowledgment so long looked for. In 1903 his
-marble bust of Hugo aroused enthusiasm, and at the Salon of 1904 the
-colossal bronze <i>Thinker</i> had a most flattering reception, and disarmed
-the last of his former detractors.</p>
-
-<p>A woman's bust accompanied <i>The Thinker</i> to the Salon. Rodin, who does
-portraits now and again, had previously made an admirable one of Mme.
-Fenaille, wife of the art-patron who had been of such great service
-to him; and he is attempting a curious variation of it. He has just
-finished a bust of a helmeted Minerva, as impressive as a Donatello,
-and this, too, is a portrait.</p>
-
-<p>Various works have been produced by Rodin since the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span> <i>Balzac,</i> in
-addition to the <i>Monument of President Sarmiento,</i> which shows an
-admirable bas-relief of a radiant Apollo. These works are nearly all
-in marble, and small. It is almost impossible to describe and classify
-them; a much larger book would be required, and my main purpose here
-has been to give a general idea of Rodin's art and an explanation
-of principles. I have spoken about some of his poems of the flesh,
-especially that <i>Eternal Idol</i>, which will be the glory of thought
-in modern sculpture. Rodin's recent works in marble have the same
-inspiration. Some demand special notice: <i>The Hand of God,</i> a gigantic
-hand, between the fingers of which, and amid a handful of clay, two
-beings are tenderly embracing; <i>Icarus,</i> falling from the sky to be
-crushed on the earth amid his whirling wings; several groups of lovers,
-entwined, and breathing immeasurable tenderness, the most celebrated
-of which is <i>Spring</i> or <i>Love and Psyche.</i> Another <i>Psyche,</i> alone,
-is discovering Love asleep, with extraordinary restrained emotion;
-and there are several attempts at <i>Poets and Muses,</i> embracing or
-consoling one another, as well as a splendid sketch of the <i>Magdalen
-wiping Christ's Body with her Hair.</i> Rodin has thus sometimes touched
-religious<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span> subjects, but with an undogmatic symbolism, philosophic
-and wide. We may also enumerate another version in marble of the
-<i>Nereids</i> of the Hugo monument, a winged <i>Inspiration</i> coming to
-breathe upon the sleeping poet, and holding back the tips of her
-wings with one hand lest she should make a sound in closing them; a
-faun drawing towards him a nymph, who struggles in silent, fierce
-resistance; two high-reliefs of <i>Summer</i> and <i>Autumn</i> in stone; tall
-women with children, intended for the town of Evian, where Baron
-Vitta is accumulating treasures of modern art; <i>Pygmalion</i> beholding
-his statue come to life, who, as soon as she feels herself live,
-turns from him with a surprising movement of coquetry and aversion.
-Such works as these cannot be described in words. In them Rodin has
-excelled to an unparalleled degree in rendering the profoundest
-psychological complexities, refined intentions, and the hesitations
-of feeling. I will further note a sketch of <i>Sappho</i>, seated at
-rest, with her arms leaning upon two little naked women, which is a
-work inspired equally by the Greeks and by the eighteenth century;
-it bears witness to the artist's wish of avoiding the massive, and
-making as many holes as possible within the general block, so as to
-give lightness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span> and to allow a circulation of light, as the Greeks
-did in works that were meant to stand against a background of sea or
-of sky. Many studies of men and women crouching, or squatting, in
-curious attitudes, recall the art of the Japanese bronzes, which Rodin
-immensely admires. We must further note some groups of <i>Women Damned,</i>
-in which Rodin's art attains the highest point of voluptuous tension,
-audacious suggestiveness, and tragic eagerness of the flesh aspiring
-to impossible delight. This whole world of figures is ruled by the
-same lyrical and poetic imagination, the same symbolism incarnated
-in impeccable forms. Everywhere we find the same nervous art,
-agitating, sad, and ardent in its voluptuous character, expressing the
-insatiability of human souls; the aspiration of a troubled time towards
-an ideality which would deliver it from the solicitations of pessimism;
-the hope of escape by the way of desire; and love sought for in the
-over-excitement of neurosis. Rodin, gloomy psychologist of passion,
-understands the disease of the age, and at the same time pities it; a
-true thinker, he extracts its mournful beauty without ceasing to retain
-faith, admiration, and affection for the human creature. Bending over
-life and over his work, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span> is himself his own <i>Thinker</i>, attentive and
-reverent before an unknown and terrible divinity. Never did any other
-sculptor attempt to vivify his art with such intellectual superiority
-and by such meditations, and Rodin is at once the most realistic and
-most metaphysical of poets in stone and bronze.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<a id="rodin034a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_034a.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">ISIS</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>Two or three works of more important dimensions stand out from his
-recent productions; besides a nude female torso (in bronze) of
-startling truthfulness, and two plaster studies that astonished at
-the Salons, and besides <i>The Christian Martyr</i>, so masterly in its
-modelling, Rodin has continued to work at his <i>Ugolino,</i> taken out of
-<i>The Gate of Hell</i>, and has put the finishing touch to two plans. One
-of these is the <i>Monument to Labour</i>, a grand conception, which one may
-dream of seeing carried out and rising up in some square of busy Paris,
-but which want of money will prevent from ever being realised. It is a
-column upon a vast rectangular base, with a crypt in it. Two colossal
-figures of <i>Night</i> and <i>Day</i> would stand at the entrance. In the crypt
-would be shown, in bas-relief, different subterranean works&mdash;mining,
-etc. Around the column would run a covered spiral staircase, and upon
-the column itself would be figured in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span> bas-reliefs all the various
-manifestations of labour, so that as one ascended the stairs all the
-divers phases of human genius could be successively studied. On the
-top would hover the <i>Benedictions</i>, two&mdash;winged spirits, descended
-from heaven, which are already executed in marble on a small scale,
-and are among Rodin's finest conceptions. This colossal project was
-conceived as long ago as 1897. The rough model is in the studio at
-Meudon-Val-Fleury.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="rodin035a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_035a.jpg" width="550" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">NUDE STUDY</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>The monument to Puvis de Chavannes was entrusted to his friend Rodin,
-and is already finished. Rodin conceived it in an original and charming
-way. Instead of making the customary statue, he considered the purely
-Greek quality of Puvis' genius and chose to pay homage to him in a form
-reproduced from the antique. The bust of the great painter is placed
-on a plain table, as the ancients placed those of their dead upon
-little domestic altars. A fine tree loaded with fruit bends over and
-shades the head. Leaning on the table behind the bust is a beautiful
-naked youth, who sits dreaming in a well-chosen supple attitude. The
-whole design is intimate, gentle, and pure. Placed on the ground in a
-garden this votive monument would show how much delicacy and caressing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>
-lightness sometimes lies in Rodin's sombre and pathetic thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>Another important group is that of <i>Orpheus and Eurydice.</i> Orpheus has
-fallen on one knee and is lifting his great lyre towards the gods whom
-he has just implored. Above him, almost on his back, suspended in a
-way that would appear to contradict the laws of equilibrium and the
-material conditions of sculpture, soars Eurydice, compassionate and
-almost vaporous, truly an immaterial shade, with a smile of despair.
-I regret that the unfinished condition of this model does not allow
-me to publish a photograph of it, for nothing would give a clearer
-impression of Rodin's originality in the matter of contour and in the
-mutual relation of figures. The extreme freedom of his attitudes and
-his caprices of balance are, indeed, the newest features that he has
-brought into his art and are not to be found in anyone else in any
-country or time. In these is his true signature, and by them his work
-might be recognised among a hundred statues of all periods. As to the
-expressive beauty of the faces and bodies, that is supreme. No one has
-better comprehended than Rodin all that can be rendered by the naked
-human body and all the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span> intellectual significations that it can hide.
-The nude is to Rodin a whole language.</p>
-
-<p>In his latest spiritualised works there is something Correggio-like
-in the vibration of light upon the softened forms and amplified
-surfaces. They suggest the <i>Antiope,</i> at once soft and muscular, and
-Rodin often speaks of "morbidezza" as a quality which he no longer
-distrusts, whereas he formerly banished it from his ascetic, sinewy,
-and dry figures. He gives his women the pulpy flesh of fruits. The
-lines of landscape seem to him to correspond to the planes of the body;
-he lately said to me that since he has lived at Meudon, opposite the
-flowing Seine, the wooded hills and the fields, he has found useful
-resemblances between the modelling of the body and that of a horizon. I
-have even once suggested to him the title of "The Hill" for the body of
-a young man reclining, the outline of which did in truth resemble the
-undulations of a hill, and he retained the name and the analogy, for he
-delights in everything that binds the human being to the earth, and,
-like a true metaphysician, conceives of nothing isolated or distinct in
-nature.</p>
-
-<p>I come now to Rodin's drawings, drawings which were not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span> made to be
-shown, but which, having nevertheless become known, have surprised
-and puzzled people. Rodin's drawings, like some other drawings by
-sculptors, are not themselves works of art; they are thoughts noted
-down, and are not comprehensible unless they are seen with the statues
-of which they indicate the first idea, or some variation.</p>
-
-<p>Rodin has published some of his sketches; and has produced some
-dry-points (in particular the <i>Ronde</i>,<a name="FNanchor_1_15" id="FNanchor_1_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_15" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> <i>Antonin Proust</i>, the three
-portraits of Henry Becque, full face and two profiles upon the same
-sheet, and two heads of Hugo), some drawings for books by M. Mirbeau
-and M. Bergerat, and a complete set of illustrations of the <i>Fleurs
-du Mal,</i> in the form of marginal drawings for a unique copy belonging
-to M. Gallimard. Many drawings in black or colour have been published
-(by the clever lithographer Clot), and M. Fenaille has superintended
-an admirable <i>edition de luxe</i> of 142 drawings by Rodin.<a name="FNanchor_2_16" id="FNanchor_2_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_16" class="fnanchor">[2]</a>
-Notwithstanding this partial publicity, these works must be considered
-as <i>standing apart;</i> and to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span> consider them by themselves would actually
-be to injure Rodin with the public at large, since they form an
-integral part of his statues. For this reason I have not chosen to
-reproduce any of them here, studies so purely professional not seeming
-to fall within the scope of a work intended to give a general idea of
-an artist's work.</p>
-
-<p>Having said so much, I wish to dwell upon the great beauty of these
-drawings&mdash;a special and terrible beauty. Many deal with Dante. Rodin
-did some painting under Lecoq de Boisbaudron, landscapes, a portrait
-of his father, and sketches after Rubens; but there has never been
-any danger of painting intruding upon his vocation, and his sketches
-rapidly became nothing but notes for sculpture. The objective reality
-of his Dantesque figures is vague, if their subjective reality is
-intense. Rodin, anxious to note down his impressions, and not to
-<i>illustrate</i>, made his sketches into a sort of passionate writing, only
-devoting himself to the scheme and to the contrasts of black and white,
-and neglecting every detail. In these violent washes, these pencillings
-and pen-scribbles, the spectator who is not forewarned sees nothing,
-but the lover of art, who knows beforehand what to seek,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span> follows the
-creative thought. Nothing can be less like what is generally known as
-"a drawing." After the regular drawings, the "painter's drawings" of
-his first period, which have but a restricted interest, and which are
-no longer known, those of his second manner are confusions of light and
-shadow, and show fantastically. I will quote at this point a passage
-from an essay by M. Clément Jasmin, a discerning critic, whose noisy
-rivals do not give him his due place, and who has described these works
-excellently.</p>
-
-<p>"These sketches are altogether the work of a sculptor, even in their
-colour, which seems to have sunk into plaster or clay, and especially
-in the firmness of their modelling, which is imparted by shaded touches
-of body-colour, on grey paper, or rendered by spaces left white. These
-blanks, these white spaces, are the extreme point of the modelling,
-the 'high light' of some projection, which lower down is wrapped in
-half-tints that carry the eye to the shadows of the inflections or
-the hollows. There is a constant relation between the contour and
-the interior modelling. A thrill is communicated by the fantastic
-lighting of some sketches. Rodin adds further strength to this dramatic
-distribution of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span> lights and shadows by one or two tones that accentuate
-the impression or fix a plan. Often his ink will become blue or yellow,
-(water-colours, sepia, or coloured inks being employed), in order to
-settle a value or intensify a feeling. Such is the case in the Fenaille
-publication, with the gloomy red in the face of the Ugolino, of the
-Dantesque Mahomet, whose entrails are hanging out, and of some other
-figures dashed in, in black, on a violet background. One plainly feels
-the material in which the work, of which the sketch is the first idea,
-will be executed. It is always a sculptor who is at work, even when he
-exchanges the chisel for the pen or the brush."</p>
-
-<p>Painters would scorn these drawings. They commonly believe that
-sculptors cannot express upon a plane surface the mass and movement of
-a body. In reality a painter's sketch and a sculptor's sketch differ
-in intention and execution. Rodin's are translations of movements,
-in no way decorative and not attempting to express either modelling
-or detail, but, if we may say so, the abstract geometry, the thought
-that commands the movement. The use of coloured inks, which are solely
-meant to modify certain values that black or white would not express to
-Rodin's mind, has given rise to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span> mistakes. These colours are not there
-to express real tints, as is the case in ordinary drawings thus touched
-up; inaccurate things have been said about these colourings, and about
-the fantastic and almost Japanese appearance of some of the plates.
-Rodin is certainly not thinking of prints in colour. He makes these
-notes instinctively, and displays not so much a deliberate thought as a
-natural faculty of transcription.</p>
-
-<p>In his early drawings Rodin <i>refers to</i>&mdash;for I must insist upon the
-point that the drawings do not <i>represent</i> things&mdash;many of Dante's
-persons and many fanciful animals, and later, to his statues. Now he
-does not draw at all from literary impressions, but solely from the
-living model. He uses ordinary cheap paper, a pencil or a pen; he
-makes his model take some transitory, absolutely free position, often
-in the rest between two sittings, and rapidly draws contour without
-taking his eyes from the model and without looking at his sketch.
-Sometimes the stroke will fall upon emptiness, the sheet of paper will
-be too small, a head or a limb will fail to find its place. Naturally
-this instantaneous sketch will be deformed in the most unexpected
-way; the proportions are false, but the scheme of the contour and the
-modelling of each<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span> piece are true. Often the hurrying pencil will miss
-the curve of a breast or a leg. Then the artist will return to that
-point with hasty, intermingled, impatient strokes that play around the
-true line. His only concern is to fix the first view, the absolutely
-living impression. Afterwards, in tracing his sketch, he rectifies,
-but his chief aim is to amplify the impression of the life, taken
-spontaneously, according to his principle of enlarging the form, in
-order to place it better in the atmosphere (about in the proportion of
-5/4 instead of 4/4). Then he connects the contours and further enlarges
-the modelling, filling the outline with a wash of burnt-sienna, which
-gives the general value, or sometimes with blue or red water-colour.
-Rodin likes this practice in catching movements, and he has in his
-studio hundreds of drawings of this kind that differ from his early
-ones. Those aimed at the imaginative transcription of tragic and
-literary elements under strange illuminations, and were almost like the
-drawings of Odilon Redon; the later ones are merely graphic notes of
-movements, and are incapable of having any direct aim or meaning.</p>
-
-<p>I must add a few words upon a delicate point of which I should not
-have spoken if others had not spoken mistakenly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span> upon the subject.
-Rodin's drawings, especially those of the present time, have shocked
-some people who have seen them by their licentious character. Why
-should we assume embarrassment in explaining this? In all Rodin's work
-there is a profound and violent sense of the voluptuous, and the stern
-painter of the vices and damnations of hell does not need to think of
-prudery. The elevation and dramatic character of his conceptions clothe
-the most daring attitudes with the severe chastity of the beautiful.
-In his sketches, made for himself alone, and in the privacy of his
-studio, Rodin no more fears erotic positions than did Hokusai. Beneath
-the original animality he perceives nature; and feminine sexuality,
-its movements, and impulses interest him, because therein woman is
-psychologically revealed. Everything, in physical desire, that exalts,
-maddens, contorts, and fevers the human body is, for the sculptor, the
-object of an intensely interested study that he does not communicate
-to the general public; nor is he the only one among the great artists
-of form whom the erotic has interested from this point of view. Only
-mediocre minds and minds capable of low intentions see anything low in
-the movements of life. Rodin's studies from the model, naked<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span> and free,
-without spectators, in the serious presence of work, never sully his
-grand and melancholy inspiration; and his daring art is assuredly that
-which most leads away the beholder from erotic ideas, because it notes
-in every human being the melancholy of the insatiable, and makes the
-pleasure of the senses a suffering of the flesh and the spirit. By this
-point he touches the profound morality of art, and his consciousness is
-free from any equivocation. The recent drawings in which he catches the
-animal attitudes of the model are thus no more questionable, from the
-delicate point of view of which I am speaking, than anatomical plates,
-or the sad immodesties of a post-mortem examination. He adds to them
-the power of expressing passion with which he is endowed, but since he
-only shows these drawings to friends and artists in whom nudity does
-not arouse silly thoughts, this concerns no one else. A comparison
-cannot even be ventured between these drawings and the masterly
-etchings of Rops, which are deliberate illustrations of licentious
-subjects, relieved only by beauty of execution, and which should only
-be shown with express reservations. Rodin admires certain bronzes in
-the secret museum at Naples, and certain Japanese prints, because<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span> in
-these, too, art has done its work by expressing a secret and essential
-spring of the nervous and psychological life of humanity; a fierce
-and serious subject which only fools consider laughable or indecent,
-because their minds approach it with indecorum and ridicule. But I
-do not know that Rodin ever even yielded to the fancy of modelling
-one of these subjects for himself, as Rubens and many others did not
-forbid themselves to do. It is time, therefore, to have done with this
-question in regard to the great French sculptor. I do not know for whom
-he intends these recent drawings, a whole framed collection of which
-occupies one of the storerooms of his country house. Perhaps he will
-have them destroyed; in any case, they are but studies of movements and
-masses, and in no way direct representations of life.</p>
-
-<p>Rodin's drawings are "rough drafts" to be compared with those of
-a writer. Some are very impressive, and all constitute precious
-evidence of his psychological preoccupations and of his desire for
-simplification. But they remain on the margin of his work, and neither
-the public nor the critics have those rights over them that belong to
-biographers and friends. That is a point to be plainly specified, and
-I desire to repeat that that is the reason this book contains none of
-them.</p>
-
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_15" id="Footnote_1_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_15"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> This word may mean either a certain sort of dance, or the
-"round" of a patrol.&mdash;TRANS.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_16" id="Footnote_2_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_16"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> Album of 142 sketches, reproduced in heliogravure by M.
-Manzi and published by Goupil, 1897. These sketches in wash or colour
-have been selected according to the advice of M. Fenaille, their owner,
-who lent them, from the most imaginative of Rodin's drawings in his
-second manner.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h5><a name="V" id="V">V.</a></h5>
-
-
-<p class="block">RODIN'S PRIVATE LIFE&mdash;HIS PERSON, STUDIO, AND HOME&mdash;HIS INFLUENCE;
-SCULPTORS INSPIRED BY HIS IDEAS&mdash;RODIN'S PLACE IN THE FRENCH
-SCHOOL&mdash;HIS PRESENT POSITION IN RESPECT TO ACADEMIC SCULPTURE</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>Auguste Rodin is in person a man of middle height, with an enormous
-head upon a massive torso. At first sight one sees nothing of him but
-this leonine bust, the head with its strong nose, flowing grey beard,
-and small, keen, light-coloured eyes, slightly veiled by short sight
-and by a gentle irony. The impression of power is accentuated by the
-rolling gait, the rocky aspect of the troubled brow under the rough
-brush of hair, the bony thickness of the aquiline nose and the ample
-curls of beard. But the first impression is partly contradicted by
-the reticent line of the mouth, the quick look, penetrating, simple,
-and arch, (one of the most composite glances I have ever seen), and
-especially by the voice, which is hollow, not easily modulated, with
-deep inflections and sudden returns to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span> a dental pronunciation, and
-of which the meaning and intention are further modified by certain
-very expressive tossings of the head. He appears simple, precise,
-reserved, courteous, and cordial, without liveliness. Little by little
-his shyness gives place to a calm and remarkable tone of authority.
-He is neither emphatic nor awkward, and would seem rather dispirited
-than inspired. An immense energy breathes in his sober and measured
-gestures. The slowness and apparent embarrassment of his speech and
-the pauses in his conversation give especial significance to what he
-says; moreover, Rodin has acquired of late years a genuine case as a
-talker and even as a writer, which previously he did not possess. I was
-intimately acquainted with Stéphane Mallarmé, who, measured by Rodin,
-was incomparably eloquent, and I often associate these two men in my
-thoughts. The voices were alike, and Rodin, too, with his improvised
-phrases, has the same veiled circumspect way of speech, hitting
-suddenly upon words that illuminate the idea.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<a id="rodin036a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_036a.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">AUGUSTE RODIN</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>Rodin, in speaking of any work of his, has a way of explaining it that
-is very elliptical, but very clear, and which has caused some brilliant
-chatterers to say, because he did not <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>offer a prolix commentary, that
-he did not know what he had done. In reality he utters the essential,
-and his gesture, which seems to model his thought in space, completes
-his words. He looks lovingly on his creations, and sometimes seems to
-meditate in astonishment at the idea of having created them; he speaks
-of them as though they existed apart from himself.</p>
-
-<p>Gradually, beneath Rodin's essential simplicity, one discovers features
-that were at first hidden; he is ironical, sensuous, nervous, proud.
-He contains as possibilities all the passions that he expresses with
-so vibrating a magnificence, and one begins to perceive the secret
-links between this calm, almost cheerful man and the art that he
-reveals. At certain moments his clear and rather vague eyes become
-full of phosphorescent points, the face grows sardonic and almost
-faunlike; at others it saddens and discloses a sickness for infinity.
-This man is the comrade of his dumb white creatures; he loves them,
-follows their abstract life, has moral obligations towards them.
-Fundamentally the one thing with which Rodin is really concerned is
-the life of permanent forms. Of late celebrity, age, and experience
-have disposed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span> him to become an adviser, a master, and he has begun
-to talk æsthetics. But his ideas and opinions are restricted. He
-perceives human beings only very summarily, his cordiality is a way
-of fulfilling his social duties hastily. He has, if I may venture the
-expression, very fine moral antennae, and they serve to recognise the
-persons whom he will like. Very capable of friendship, Rodin reduces
-friendship to tacit agreements upon the essential subjects of thought,
-and it is only if one meets him upon one of these points that one
-takes a place in his remembrance or his liking. He does not put his
-faith in individuals, but in general ideas. He loves nothing but his
-work, and endures everything else with civil boredom. He has a horror
-of debates and disturbances. I have never heard him speak ill of bad
-artists; he neglects, but does not criticise. He has a silent humour
-which leads him to make busts of official and mediocre sculptors, with
-an amusing good grace. Uncompromising in everything that touches his
-art, Rodin has throughout his whole career endured severe struggles
-and grave injustices, and, too proud to dispute, has never shown his
-secret revolts. At the time when the <i>Balzac</i> was refused all Rodin's
-friends said to him: "Resist,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span> force your work upon them; you ought,
-for the work's sake, and a court would surely decide for you, for your
-agreement is definitely in your favour." He listened and thanked them,
-always good-tempered, and then withdrew his statue without saying
-anything.</p>
-
-<p>It is not weakness, for Rodin has had an excessively hard life and
-is strong and patient; it is dignity of the inner life and profound
-indifference for the life about him. Rodin is a high dignitary of
-the Legion of Honour, a president of the judges of sculpture of an
-important society of artists (the Société Nationale), he is honoured
-all over Europe, has been received in England as a genius, and has
-succeeded Whistler as the head of a chosen band of artists; but he
-remains the man that he was when he was unknown and poor in his
-solitude at Brussels.</p>
-
-<p>He likes few things, but likes those thoroughly. He reads little, but
-what he reads strikes home to him as to no one else; Baudelaire and
-Rousseau, in whom he delights, are instances. He is passionately fond
-of music, especially of Gluck, but seldom speaks of it. He simplifies
-everything, sees only the main lines in morality as in art, lives by
-two or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span> three principles, and has an aversion for everything that is
-not essential.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 650px;">
-<a id="rodin037a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_037a.jpg" width="650" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">A CORNER OF RODIN'S STUDIO AT MEUDON</p></div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>When one knows Rodin well one ceases to be able to separate him from
-his work. He can no longer think otherwise than symbolically by slow
-deposits of accumulated sensation which work on in the deep strata of
-his consciousness and suddenly blossom and take a name. His statues are
-states of the soul. He is himself a representative being, surprised at
-his own immanence, and his intelligence is outdone by his instinct.
-That is how it comes about that he does not always know how to name
-the beings that he has discovered, as we discover, by means of pain,
-corners of our consciousness that we had not suspected. In the same way
-that Rodin seems to break away the fragments of a block from around
-an already existing statue hidden in it, he is himself a sort of rock
-concealing shapes within it and embracing in its secret recesses
-immense crystallised arborescences. With a simple enough personal
-psychology he expresses infinite shades and inflexions of emotion. His
-thought is like the monad of Leibnitz; it seems, when one sees the man,
-to have no window to the outer world.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Rodin's opinions upon social life are vague. He contents himself with
-repeating that work lovingly done is the secret of all order and all
-happiness. To love life and natural forms, and to attempt nothing
-disobedient to Nature or her aims, that is his whole morality.</p>
-
-<p>He sees very few people and visits nobody. He would baffle visitors
-accustomed to elegant, literary, well-informed, brilliant artists. His
-studio in the Rue de l'Université, at the end of an old yard encumbered
-by blocks of marble and shaded by aged chestnut trees, is like the
-work-place of a poor beginner. Neither a carpet nor an ornament is
-to be seen; the stone floor, the bare walls, a few rush chairs, some
-modelling stands, some cloths, a shabby deal table loaded with papers,
-sketches piled up on shelves, blouses hanging on nails, a cast-iron
-stove&mdash;these and nothing more are found by the many foreign admirers
-who come to see Rodin, and whom he receives with invariable amiability
-amid his assistants at work upon the Hugo monument or upon some smaller
-piece of marble.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<a id="rodin038a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_038a.jpg" width="600" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">A CORNER OF RODIN'S STUDIO AT MEUDON</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>Setting aside his journeys to London and Prague and his travels in
-Germany and Italy, Rodin leads an extremely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span> retired life in Paris, and
-is rarely to be met. He invariably lunches at his own house at Meudon,
-then goes to the Rue de L'Université to work, and goes home again to
-dinner. Formerly, before he had his house at Meudon, he used to lunch
-at a <i>café</i> in the Place de L'Alma, where he was to be seen for twenty
-years, and to which people used to go to see him, rather as people
-go to see Ibsen in Christiania. The house, of a sixteenth-century
-style, that Rodin has inhabited at Meudon since 1900, is situated amid
-vineyards, and stands alone at the end of a sort of cliff, overlooking
-all Paris, the Seine, and the Bois de Boulogne, and facing the wooded
-heights of Saint Cloud and Bellevue. The site is open and fine; Rodin
-enjoys immense expanses of sky, sunsets, storms, and moonlight nights
-that delight him. The house is spacious, light, furnished with extreme
-simplicity, and adorned by a few pictures, the works of friends (in
-particular his portraits by Sargent and Legros). Rodin has added to
-it the pavilion in iron and glass, in which he exhibited all his
-work, at the Rond-point de l'Alma, in the exhibition of 1900. This
-pavilion, rebuilt and full of brilliant sunlight, contains all the
-artist's statuary. There are also several small studios, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span> which
-Rodin has his marble rough-hewn, keeps the casts of his statues or
-accumulates the collections of bronzes, marbles, antique or Gothic,
-and fragments which he is never tired of finding out and buying. In
-this place, which, after a life of difficulties and worries, Rodin has
-been able to purchase, he leads a life that fully suits his tastes,
-among beautiful trees and flowers, with a majestic landscape before
-him. It is touching to see the man, here, amid the enormous mass of
-his work, a whole world of statues, with which he lives and which sums
-up all his labours and all his existence. A photograph which I am able
-to add to the illustrations of this volume will give a partial idea
-of that surprising and imposing cohort of figures in clay, marble,
-and bronze&mdash;that impassioned or tragic throng. Rodin receives very
-few visitors at Meudon&mdash;hardly any but old friends, and he spends his
-mornings in his garden or in his light and cheerful studio drawing or
-superintending his workmen. It is chiefly at Meudon that he prepares
-his rough drafts, the main lines of his compositions; and in order to
-see an effect he will often hastily put together with clay some of
-the plaster limbs that he keeps in a number of glass cases&mdash;quite an
-anatomical museum in fact, filling a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span> whole storey, and containing
-hundreds of pieces and of attitudes piled together.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="rodin039a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_039a.jpg" width="550" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">STUDY (IN BRONZE) FOR THE "BALZAC"</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>Rodin appears to stand alone in his own time; first, by his genius;
-and secondly, by the special character of his artistic conception.
-This solitude, however, is only apparent. Rodin's ideas, as opposed
-to the teaching of the "École," form a body of logical principles
-which are slowly attracting the adhesion of young artists. The long
-struggle of impressionism against academism has now entered upon its
-last phase: the return to the French tradition, to national affiliation
-in opposition to the Roman neo-classicism. That idea, which is the
-programme of all independent and interesting critical intelligence in
-our country, finds in Rodin its perfect demonstration, and the only
-one afforded by contemporary sculpture. Until now Rodin has preached
-only by example, and we know how slow the critics and the public are in
-extracting from a work the ideas that it contains. But the extraction
-is now begun, and Rodin himself speaks with undisputed authority. Since
-the exhibition of 1900 his moral position stands ten times higher.
-Youth greets him as a chieftain and his detractors are silent. While
-the synthetic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span> and symbolic mind of Rodin arouses the enthusiasm and
-inspires the thoughts of writers, the theory of the amplification of
-the modelling is making its way in the studios of sculptors. "Rodin has
-opened a large window in the pale house of contemporary sculpture,"
-declares Pierre Roche, the sculptor; "out of the timid and much
-impaired craft that was before his day he has shown that a bold art
-full of hope can be made." This opinion of one of the most delicate
-artists of our generation is precisely that of many independent
-sculptors. Among these we must quote Emile Bourdelle, Rodin's pupil
-and friend, an impassioned, vibrating, and generous artist, whose
-works are among those first looked for in each Salon. Others are the
-two brothers Gaston and Lucien Schnegg, the latter of whom exhibited
-in the Salon of 1904 so beautiful a head of Aphrodite, almost worthy
-in the mysterious and vaporous beauty of its planes, of the ancients,
-and of Rodin; Jules Desbois, of the first rank in technical skill and
-of a violently original temperament; Alexandre Charpentier, a former
-collaborator of Rodin's, whose success in applied art has not turned
-him aside from his expressive and vigorous work in statuary; Mlle.
-Camille<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span> Claudel, Rodin's pupil, who is the first woman sculptor of
-existing-art in France, and whose name has appeared upon admirable
-works; and finally, Pierre Roche, although his supple and decorative
-fancy denies itself the expression of the tragic. The Swiss sculptor
-Niederhausern-Rodo, George Minne, the sculptor of Ghent, who has a
-powerful creative genius, not understood, and the Italian sculptor
-Rosso, are also partisans of Rodin's art, and so is the Englishman
-Bartlett. In another direction it is very interesting to note the
-curious reciprocal influence of Auguste Rodin and Eugène Carrière,
-who are united by friendship and by the same aesthetic creed. Eugène
-Carrière, the most profound painter of the inner life existing in the
-French school of to-day, has great analogies with Rodin, both as a man
-and as an artist. He, too, reduces his art to essentials, to the main
-lines and the deliberate amplification of surfaces. Thus his figures,
-bathed in shadow, are akin to Rodin's statues, while the latter, bathed
-with dewy light, seem to be pictures by Carrière. The painter becomes
-massive and powerful, the sculptor becomes vaporous. Rodin seeks the
-bland, half-shadows of Correggio, and Carrière desires that his figures
-should have the powerful<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span> relief of bronze. The painter sacrifices
-colour to the sole study of values, and by his black-and-white comes
-back to sculpture. Very curious is this point of junction between
-two great artists. Rodin is beginning to explain himself with the
-pen; and Eugène Carrière has, for some years past, been writing&mdash;too
-rarely&mdash;passages upon art of which the style is admirable and the
-concentration of thought astonishing, passages which recall Mallarmé
-and Baudelaire, and leave far behind the commonplaces of journalistic
-criticism. Rodin and Carrière have their school, their circle of chosen
-admirers, and their double influence may soon be the most decisive, if
-not the most brilliant and the noisiest, in French art of to-day.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<a id="rodin040a"></a>
-<img src="images/rodin_040a.jpg" width="600" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">NUDE FIGURE (PHOTOGRAPHED IN THE OPEN AIR AT TWILIGHT IN THE GARDEN AT
-MEUDON)</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p>The prevailing note of opinion about Rodin among his friends and his
-detractors is that he is like no one else, and that no statue can, in a
-manner, be looked at beside his, so individual is the conception from
-which they spring. By the mere fact that they exist, they compel us to
-choose between them and the others. Their silhouettes, their planes,
-the quality of their shadows, and their lights, make them technically
-works apart. If such a man understands sculpture<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span> thus, either he is
-right, against everybody, or he is totally mistaken; we cannot like him
-and also approve of ordinary statuary. His psychological and tragic
-genius conquers the admiration even of those who oppose his material
-execution. Rodin does not set himself up as a chief, nor recognise
-followers; yet he is a chief by his very work.</p>
-
-<p>He is the greatest living French artist, and one of the most complex
-and powerful movers of thought in modern art. He does not found a
-school, but he influences the soul of a generation. He remains alone,
-not susceptible of imitation; but if he did not exist sculpture would
-be deprived of its greatest regenerator.<a name="FNanchor_1_17" id="FNanchor_1_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_17" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> By inscribing passions
-in symbols, he touches the sensibilities of all, and is a master
-to poets as much as to sculptors, because his subjects are moral,
-affecting, never commanded by an anecdote, bathed in the universally
-lyric. Attempts have been made to blame him because of the admiration
-of writers; it has been said, with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span> an inflexion of scorn (especially
-in the circles of his fellow-artists), "he is a <i>littéraire</i>." An
-injustice easily committed at a time when the intellect of painters
-and sculptors seems to blush at itself, and when they make it a sort
-of false merit to show that their eye and hand are separate from their
-brain. Rodin's splendid technical power annuls the reproach and retains
-the praise. Resting firmly upon nature, his symbols may rise high.
-Rodin delights poets because he makes the infinite emanate from the
-most finite of arts.</p>
-
-<p>Everything has been patiently meditated by him. He dares, but is never
-overbold; his balance and his taste are those of a classic, despite
-the uncomprehending astonishment of the academic sculptors, hypnotised
-by the sophistry of <i>finish</i> and <i>elegance</i>, and confusing the <i>exact</i>
-with the <i>true.</i> There is a synthesized form, that corresponds to
-reality synthesized in symbols, a <i>second truth;</i> and that proportion
-is observed by very few artists. Most of them, contenting themselves
-with an immediate, momentary, anecdotic truth, translate it by
-picturesque observation, or by minutely detailed copying. This attempt
-of a sterile cleverness to transcribe the instantaneous is the very
-contrary of art, the first character<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span> of which is to display the laws
-of vital permanence underlying fugitive aspects. Herein lies the reason
-why sculptors become uneasy over Rodin, while writers, more familiar
-with general ideas, become enthusiastic. The impressionist crisis&mdash;the
-study, that is to say, of instantaneous lights and actions&mdash;hardly got
-over, he brings in this <i>second truth,</i> the transcription of general
-and permanent feelings into a form that speaks as much to the mind as
-to the senses. Such a man dominates impressionism as much as he does
-academism.</p>
-
-<p>A whole order of curious and fundamental relations between nervous
-sensibility and thought has arisen out of his work. Rodin's personality
-is specially representative in the line of French sculptors. He goes
-back, as I have said, to the Egyptians and the Greeks in the matter
-of technical ideas. In his tragic feeling he proceeds directly from
-the Gothic artists. It is from them that he descends, and especially
-from the sculptors of the French Renascence, in particular Germain
-Pilon; and he blends his Greek remembrances, passed through an Italian
-influence, with a conception altogether national, vigorous, and
-decorative. Rodin's actual part is to take up<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span> sculpture exactly at
-the moment of the French evolution.<a name="FNanchor_2_18" id="FNanchor_2_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_18" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> Since that time we have had
-some great masters; native genius has been triumphantly upheld, in
-opposition to the false school that came from the Alps, by Coysevox,
-Houdon, Puget, Pajou, Pigalle, Clodion, Falconet, Couston, Rude,
-Carpeaux, and Barye, a line of splendid inventors of shapes, all of
-whom, in contradistinction to the official school, have represented
-the inmost qualities of their race. All these men Rodin emulates by
-the importance of his work; perhaps the future may regard him as
-the magnificent outcome of their efforts carried on through three
-centuries. In this succession of artists, Puget, Rude, and Barye are
-those with whom his technical relations are closest.<a name="FNanchor_3_19" id="FNanchor_3_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_19" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> But he has been
-less decorative than Puget and less hampered by the themes imposed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
-upon him; he has gone further than the great Rude in the expression of
-inward emotion, and he surpasses even Barye in power of modelling and
-boldness of silhouette. He has created a world which is fully his own,
-a feeling and a pathos not to be found elsewhere, which are the very
-soul of his time.</p>
-
-<p>Rodin, then, can be set only beside Puget and Rude. Like Puget, he is
-overflowing with vitality and with passionate frenzy; he worships power
-and heroic beings; but his are sad, and nearer to Gothic asceticism
-and to the nervous derangement of Baudelaire than to the resplendent
-pomp of the seventeenth century, into which Puget transposed his
-heroes of Rome and of Corneille. Like Rude, he is attracted by deep
-things, by soul tragedies; but he is more abstract than the creator
-of the <i>Napoleon Awakening to Immortality</i>, the <i>Joan of Arc,</i> or
-the <i>Marseillaise.</i> Rodin is more general, more synthetic; he turns
-his mind to permanent symbols, outside of ages and races. Taking up,
-as if in challenge, the mythological subjects that the "École" had
-most spoiled, he has shown how a great mind can renew all things and
-impress upon them the magic of its vision. He is the most symbolic
-of our men of genius; and if the modelling of the Greeks,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span> Gothic
-austerity, the strength of Puget and of Rude, have helped Rodin to
-make up his personality, the fusion of these elements and the addition
-of a personal imagination and an extraordinary contemplative faculty
-have enabled him, like Wagner, who descended from Bach, Beethoven, and
-Liszt, to create, after and apart from all of them, work that resumes
-them and forgets them, to become in its turn an initiator. The point
-in which Rodin is inimitable is the expression of the voluptuous with
-all its latent woes; and this point strongly recalls to memory <i>Tristan
-and Isolde</i>, which is such a paroxysm as might touch the most perilous
-region of exceptional art; but Rodin is kept within the bounds of the
-normal, and protected from the audacities of his strange and troubled
-imagination, by his imperturbable technical certainty and by his
-admiration for some few masters. As was the case with Baudelaire and
-with Poe, his purity and grandeur of form save him; like Dante, this
-lover of gloomy beauty hangs over the verge of passion's hell without
-falling into it.</p>
-
-<p>Rodin's art is healthy because it feeds upon natural truth and general
-logic. He is the supreme painter of man bowed by intense, melancholic,
-feverish, constricting thought; but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span> also, with a candid tenderness
-unknown to Wagner, he is the caressing creator of women in love, the
-poet of youth, embracing and radiant. Only a genius can have the
-diversity of mind that produces <i>The Burghers of Calais</i>, ascetic
-and mediæval, the spasmodic <i>Hell</i>, the almost abstract <i>Balzac</i>,
-the bronze busts worthy of Donatello, and the images of women carved
-in the radiant and golden marble of Attica by a sensuous and subtle
-enthusiast who has rediscovered the soul of Hellenic beauty. This union
-of technical skill, evolved according to the secrets of the antique
-with a power of expressing all human sentiments from gentleness to
-lewdness, from the mystic to the pathetic, from nervous disorganisation
-to carnal frankness, this union of contraries and this universality are
-not to be found in any of our forerunners. Not Puget, nor Rude, nor
-any of our masters has had such intellectual ubiquity, such strength
-of condensation; in these points it is allowable, even in our own day,
-to acknowledge Rodin as supreme in the rich French school, and thus to
-anticipate the judgment of the future, in whose eyes he will loom yet
-larger.</p>
-
-<p>In any case it was high time he should appear; he has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span> been as useful
-as was Manet by his intervention in French art. In spite of Dalou,
-sculpture had fallen very low after the death of Carpeaux and Barye;
-the deplorable school of the Second Empire had brought it into
-degeneracy, and we could reckon no one in sculpture to correspond
-to the great impressionists. Such men as Dujalbert, Chapu, Mercié,
-Frémiet, Saint Marceaux, and Falguière, are but sham great sculptors,
-nothing of whose work will last; the "École" group, from Paul Dubois
-to Barrias, Aube and Guillaume, is a mere example of pretentious
-insignificance. The few vigorous temperaments, or workers of genuine
-technical merit, like Denys Puech, Jean Dampt, Gardet, Camille
-Lefèvre, Devillez, and Jean Bassier, did not know how to put together
-their efforts in such a way as to found a real school. They produced
-without attaining a cohesion of thought capable of guiding a fresh
-generation. Bartholomé, thoughtful, pure, dreamy, and proud, stands
-apart. Mme. Besnard and M. Théodore Rivière are charming, but without
-influence. I have spoken of the group that has spontaneously placed
-itself around Rodin. Amid this interesting, unequal, and scattered
-sculpture he appeared with the authority of a master and a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span> prophet;
-his work set the question upon its true basis again, showing whence we
-came, what was to be avoided, and whither we were to go; and all this
-with such clearness of evidence that the appearance of Rodin becomes,
-in like degree with that of Goujon and that of Puget, a capital date
-in the history of the French school, I declared in the Preface my
-intention to avoid any extravagant eulogy of Rodin, and have uttered
-my dislike of the idolatry by which some people think it necessary
-publicly to emphasise their admiration, with its snobbish accretions.
-But I should fall into the opposite fault if I did not declare the
-truth and the importance of what such an artist brings to his art, and
-did not mark his exact place in the line of his country's sculpture.
-Henley has called Rodin the Michael Angelo of the modern world. That
-opinion of a foreign critic, a critic justly esteemed one of the most
-upright in contemporary literature, France may justly make her own,
-far from extravagant and puerile praises, and in the face of the work
-accomplished. I shall be but too happy if I have contributed to make
-clearer to the public certain secret reasons, certain inner frameworks,
-of that logical and beautiful work.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_17" id="Footnote_1_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_17"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> A vehement but indiscriminating critic, M. Octave Mirbeau,
-has seen good to write, by way of affirming that Rodin's art moved him
-strongly: "A style takes rise from him." I have neither the space nor
-the wish to recriminate; but it would be dangerous to let such artistic
-heresies pass without protest. Rodin is an admirable example, but to
-say that a style arises from him is to say that he may become the
-creator of a perishable formula, and to understand nothing about his
-art.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_18" id="Footnote_2_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_18"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> Some surprise may be felt at my having failed to insist
-upon the name of Michael Angelo. Everybody has hit upon the obvious
-comparison. It is the exceeding obviousness that leads me to distrust
-it. Rodin is much nearer to Puget than to Michael Angelo, who is
-muscular strength carried to heroic proportions. Rodin, like Puget, and
-more than Puget, is nervous strength. Rodin appears much more akin to
-Michael Angelo than he really is. Careful study causes us more and more
-to leave behind that preliminary likeness which has sufficed so many
-critics.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3_19" id="Footnote_3_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_19"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> We might perhaps say the same in regard to the great
-Carpeaux, too, who carried the art of movement and expression to so
-high a degree, and who did the same liberal work against the "École"
-as Rodin was to do at a later time. But their visions, aims, and minds
-differ profoundly.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h5><a name="VI" id="VI">VI</a></h5>
-
-
-<p class="block">APPENDIX&mdash;CHRONOLOGICAL LIST OF RODIN'S PRINCIPAL WORKS&mdash;LIST OF THE
-PRINCIPAL BOOKS OR ARTICLES WRITTEN ABOUT HIM&mdash;QUOTATIONS REFERRING TO
-HIM&mdash;AN OPINION OF EUGÈNE CARRIÈRE'S; AN OPINION OF HENLEY'S&mdash;VARIOUS
-NOTES</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>Chronological catalogue of Rodin's works is almost impossible to draw
-up. I do not think Rodin himself could do it. It must be remembered
-that before 1877 he made a quantity of studies which he destroyed,
-and such a producer as he is willing to neglect things of which
-others would keep count. In his poor and wandering days Rodin must
-have abandoned many things. How would it be possible to recount the
-figures that were retouched or even executed at Carrier-Belleuse's,
-the earliest independent works, the characters executed by him at
-Brussels, the statues that were planned and left unfinished for lack
-of money, those that were broken or that failed&mdash;all the immense store
-of work accomplished in the course of twenty years by a man who worked
-every day? How would it be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span> possible even to enumerate the sketches
-and varied renderings of different subjects piled up in the studio at
-Meudon, in the Clos Payen, in the Rue des Fourneaux, and at Vaugirard?
-It is a whole world. I will confine myself, therefore, to a statement
-of known and exhibited works: and these, indeed, are what is essential.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<h5><a id="LIST_OF_THE_PRINCIPAL_EXHIBITED_WORKS"></a>LIST OF THE PRINCIPAL EXHIBITED WORKS</h5>
-
-
-<p>1864. <i>The Man with a Broken Nose.</i></p>
-
-<p>1865-70. Works in the studio of Carrier-Belleuse.</p>
-
-<p>1872-77. Friezes upon the Bourse and various works at Brussels.</p>
-
-<p>1877. <i>The Primitive Man (The Age of Brass).</i> Decorative work on the
-Trocadéro.</p>
-
-<p>1878-80. <i>Saint Jerome. Saint John the Baptist.</i> Works in the
-manufactory of Sèvres. Competition for the National Defence Monument.</p>
-
-<p>1881. <i>Adam</i> (destroyed). <i>Eve.</i></p>
-
-<p>1882. <i>Ugolino</i> (a sketch taken up again later). Busts of <i>Alphonse
-Legros</i> and <i>IV. E. Henley.</i> Studies for <i>The Gate of Hell.</i></p>
-
-<p>1883. <i>Bellona. General Lynch</i> (equestrian statue). <i>The Genius of
-War.</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>1884. Monument of <i>President Vicunha. Bust of a Young Woman.</i></p>
-
-<p>1885. <i>The Man and the Serpent.</i> Busts of <i>Dalou, Hugo,</i> and <i>Antonin
-Proust.</i></p>
-
-<p>1886. First sketch of the Hugo monument. Drawings dealing with <i>The
-Gate of Hell.</i> Bust of <i>Henry Becque. The Kiss</i> (a small group).</p>
-
-<p>1887. <i>Perseus and the Gorgon. Head of St. John beheaded.</i></p>
-
-<p>1888. <i>The Danaid. Alan Walking.</i> Nude study for one of the <i>Burghers
-of Calais.</i> Several little groups.</p>
-
-<p>1889. Studies for the <i>Gate of Hell</i> and the monument to <i>Claude
-Lorraine. Torso of a Woman.</i> Group of <i>The Dream. The Dream of Life.
-Women Damned</i> (in marble). <i>Hecuba.</i> Bust of <i>Roger Marx. Destitution.
-Thought</i> (in marble).</p>
-
-<p>1890. <i>Bust of a Young Woman</i> (in silver). <i>Torso of Saint John.
-Brother and Sister.</i></p>
-
-<p>1891. <i>The Caryatid. The Young Mother. A Nymph.</i></p>
-
-<p>1892. Busts of <i>Puvis de Chavannes</i> and <i>Henri Rochefort. Grief.
-Claude Lorraine. The Burghers of Calais.</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>1893. <i>The Death of Adonis.</i> Medallion of <i>César Franck. Galatea.</i>
-Bust of <i>Séverine. The Crest and the Wave. Resurrection. The Child
-Achilles</i> (group in clay).</p>
-
-<p>1894. <i>Eternal Spring. Hope</i> (a reclining figure in back view.)
-<i>Orpheus and Eurydice</i> (first version). <i>Christ and Magdalen.</i></p>
-
-<p>1895. Inauguration of <i>The Burghers of Calais. Illusion, the Daughter
-of Icarus.</i> Medallion of <i>Octave Mirbeau.</i> Nude studies for the
-<i>Balzac. Man Crouching.</i></p>
-
-<p>1896. <i>The Inner Voice. The Muse of Anger</i> (for the Hugo monument).
-<i>The Conqueror. Minerva. The Poet and the Life of Contemplation. Women
-Bathing.</i> Studies for the <i>Balzac.</i></p>
-
-<p>1897. <i>Victor Hugo. Balzac.</i> Monument of <i>President</i> <i>Sarmiento.</i></p>
-
-<p>1898. Statue of <i>Balzac.</i> Bust of a <i>Young American.</i> Bust of <i>Madame
-F.</i> Statue of <i>Sarmiento,</i> with a high relief of Apollo in marble.
-Monument of <i>Labour. The Benedictions</i> (marble). <i>Twilight. Clouds.</i>
-<i>The Parcæ and the Young Girl.</i></p>
-
-<p>1899. Works for the Hugo monument.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>1900. Marble groups. Exhibition at the Rond-point de l'Alma.</p>
-
-<p>1901. <i>Shades</i> (for <i>The Gate of Hell).</i></p>
-
-<p>1902. Groups in marble. <i>The Hand of God.</i> Busts.</p>
-
-<p>1903. Bust of <i>Hugo. The Poet and the Muse.</i> Various sketches.
-<i>Ugolino</i> (fresh version). <i>The Prodigal Son.</i></p>
-
-<p>1904. <i>The Thinker</i>, and various works in marble in process of
-execution.<a name="FNanchor_1_20" id="FNanchor_1_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_20" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p>
-
-<p>The work of Rodin may thus be estimated at about ten works on a grand
-scale, forty groups or statues, some thirty important busts, and
-perhaps two hundred figures or portraits, without counting sketches,
-from 1877 to 1904.</p>
-
-<p>I come now to the mention of some significant writings that deal with
-his aesthetic theory or with his work; and, as may be supposed, I leave
-out of question a quantity of valueless articles, for Rodin has been
-directly or indirectly the pretext for a great mass of writings, and
-is the modern French artist who has been most talked of, justly or
-unjustly. The works quoted are such as may be consulted with advantage.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_20" id="Footnote_1_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_20"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> To these may be added, in 1905, a bust of the Rt. Hon.
-<i>George Wyndham</i>, and <i>The Hand of God.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span></p></div>
-
-<h5><a id="ARTICLES_OR_BOOKS_RELATING_TO_RODIN"></a>ARTICLES OR BOOKS RELATING TO RODIN</h5>
-
-<p>"Balzac and Rodin," by Roger Marx (<i>Le Voltaire,</i> March, 1892).</p>
-
-<p>"Claude Lorraine," by Roger Marx (<i>Le Voltaire,</i> June, 1892).
-(Excellent studies in the criticism of sculpture.)</p>
-
-<p>"Auguste Rodin," by Roger Marx (<i>Pan,</i> and <i>The Image,</i> September,
-1897).</p>
-
-<p>Drawings by Rodin, 129 plates, containing 142 heliogravures (Goupil and
-Co., 1897), from the suggestions and loans of M. Fenaille.</p>
-
-<p>"Rodin's Studio," by Edouard Rod (<i>Gazette des Beaux Arts,</i> May, 1898).</p>
-
-<p>"Rodin," by Gabriel Mourey (<i>Revue illustrée,</i> October, 1899)</p>
-
-<p><i>Exhibition of 1900: Rodin's Works,</i> with four prefaces by Eugène
-Carrière, Jean Paul Laurens, Claude Monet, and Albert Besnard.</p>
-
-<p>"Rodin and Legros," by Arsène Alexandre (<i>Figaro,</i> June, 1900).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"The Gate of Hell," by Anatole France (<i>Figaro,</i> June 1st, 1900).</p>
-
-<p><i>La Revue des Beaux Arts et des Lettres,</i> January 1st, 1900.</p>
-
-<p><i>La Plume,</i> 1900. Special number.</p>
-
-<p><i>Les Maîtres Artistes,</i> special number, October 15th, 1903.
-(Illustrated collections, containing a certain number of critical
-studies by various authors.)</p>
-
-<p><i>Rodin,</i> by Léon Riotor: a pamphlet, reproducing in French, German,
-English, Italian, Spanish, and Russian, a study that appeared in the
-<i>Revue populaire des Beaux Arts,</i> April 8th, 1899.</p>
-
-<p><i>Rodin, the Sculptor,</i> a volume of criticism, illustrated; by Léon
-Maillard (Floury); 1899.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Sculptor Rodin, drawn from life.</i> A volume by Mlle. Judith Cladel
-(<i>La Plume</i> office, 1903).</p>
-
-<p><i>Rodin,</i> a study by L. Brieger-Wasser (Vogel. Strassburg; 1903).</p>
-
-<p><i>Rodin,</i> by George Treu (<i>Jahrbuch der bildenden Kunst.</i> Berlin,
-Marstersteig, 1903).</p>
-
-<p><i>Rodin,</i> by R. M. Rilke (Berlin, Bard, 1903).</p>
-
-<p>"Rodin." Articles upon, by W. E. Henley, 1890; D. S. MacColl, 1902;
-Henri Duhem, 1890; Karel B. Made (Prague); Vittorio Pica (Rome).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Of these various writings devoted to Rodin, those of Roger Marx should
-be particularly noted, on account of their technical understanding;
-Léon Maillard's volume is a sincere, well-informed, well-illustrated
-book, produced by a man who comprehends. The book by Mlle. Judith
-Cladel, daughter of the distinguished novelist, is an originally
-conceived volume, the only one that relates certain conversations, and
-attempts, with charming acuteness, to present Rodin in his private
-character. It is a work that deserves to be much better known and
-appreciated, and of which Rodin's first panegyrists, jealous of being
-the only "inventors" of the artist, have been very careful not to
-speak. The article by the graceful painter, Henri Duhem, is likewise
-excellent; and I consider Mr. MacColl's very remarkable, on account of
-its elevation and precision of judgment. The others have such value
-as belongs to admiring articles written hurriedly in newspapers: they
-express sympathetic feelings, or comment in a poetical way upon the
-subjects, but their critical value is négligeable, and there is nothing
-to be quoted from them for the information of my readers. The <i>Balzac</i>
-gave rise to a shoal of newspaper articles. Georges, Rodenbach, and
-France, on that occasion,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span> said the acute and witty thing's about
-Rodin that they say about all manifestations of thought, and M.
-Mirbeau made Rodin the theme of some of those polemical variations,
-conjoining hyperbolical praise with abuse of his adversaries, which
-he is accustomed to offer as art-criticisms, and which have gained
-him a reputation of a certain kind. There is nothing to note in these
-pamphlets mixed with eulogistic effusions, the whole of which do not
-contain the substance of twenty lines by Henley or of Eugène Carrière's
-admirable Preface, which I am desirous of reproducing here because it
-is a masterpiece of synthetic divination.<a name="FNanchor_1_21" id="FNanchor_1_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_21" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_21" id="Footnote_1_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_21"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Preface to the Catalogue of the Rodin exhibition in the
-Pavillon de l'Alma, 1900. (The work mentioned above; other prefaces by
-Claude Monet, A. Besnard, and J. P. Laurens.)</p></div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<h5><a id="THE_ART_OF_RODIN"></a>"THE ART OF RODIN</h5>
-
-<p>"Rodin's art comes from the earth and returns to it, like those giant
-blocks&mdash;rocks or dolmens&mdash;which mark deserts, and in the heroic
-grandeur of which man recognises himself.</p>
-
-<p>"The transmission of thought by art, like the transmission of life, is
-the work of passion and of love.</p>
-
-<p>"Passion, whose obedient servant Rodin is, makes him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span> discover the laws
-that serve to express it; she it is that gives him the sense of volumes
-and proportions, the choice of the expressive prominence.</p>
-
-<p>"Thus the earth projects external apparent forms, images, and statues
-that fill us with a sense of its internal life.</p>
-
-<p>"These terrestrial forms were the real guides of Rodin. They have set
-him free from scholastic traditions, in them he found his being and the
-creative instinct of men whom humanity celebrates.</p>
-
-<p>"Trees and plants revealed to him their likeness to those fair women,
-with sleek limbs rising, like delicate columns, to the moving torso and
-swelling breast, above which the head hangs heavily in the company of a
-strong and supple neck, even as a fine fruit full of savour weighs down
-its branch.</p>
-
-<p>"The massive brow overshadows the eyes, and the cheek brings the lip
-softly to the lover's entreaty.</p>
-
-<p>"Forms seek and meet in voluptuous desires of violence and of
-resignation, rebellious and obedient to laws from which nothing
-escapes; everywhere conscious logic triumphs.</p>
-
-<p>"The generalising spirit of Rodin has imposed solitude upon him. It
-has not been his lot to work upon the cathedral<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span> that is not, but his
-desire of humanity links him to the eternal forms of nature."</p>
-
-<p>After such a passage, in which every word is significant and eloquent,
-and is a great artist's reflection, everything seems pale. I will not,
-however, confine myself to a mere dry mention of the essay by Vittorio
-Pica, the great Italian critic, who generously arranged for Rodin's
-participation in the Venetian Exhibition (Gallery of Modern Art, 1897),
-and I should have liked to quote Anatole France's fine article, and
-some assertions of Mr. MacColl's, who very logically recalls to our
-memory the sculptor Auguste Préault, who is too much forgotten, and
-who was, indeed, a sort of imperfect precursor of Rodin. I must at
-least transcribe a few lines from W. E. Henley, who was, from the very
-beginning, a clear-sighted admirer of Rodin, and who spoke of him with
-eloquence and passion:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"M. Dalou ... has declared that when the century goes out it will
-remember the aforesaid doors" (i.e. <i>The Gate of Hell</i>) "as its heroic
-achievement in sculpture. And if that be true&mdash;as I believe it to be
-true&mdash;then where, between<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span> himself and Michael Angelo, is there so
-lofty a head as Rodin's?... His busts alone were enough to place him
-in the future, the style of them is so complete, the treatment so
-large and so distinguished, the effect so personal, yet so absolute in
-art.... Here, if you will, are a thousand hints of the possibilities of
-human passion: from Paolo and Francesca melting into each other:</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 15%;">
-"'La bocca mi bacio tutta tremante'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>as no man and woman have done in sculpture since sculpture began....
-Here is sculpture in its essence.... You may read into it as much
-literature as you please, or as you can; but the interpolation is
-not Rodin's, but your own.... It is not literature in relief, nor
-literature in the round; it is sculpture pure and simple.... Passion is
-with him wholly a matter of form and surface and line, and exists not
-apart from these.... He is our Michael Angelo; and if he had not been
-that, he might have been our Donatello. And with Phidias and Lysippus
-all these some-and-twenty centuries afar, what more is left to say of
-the man of genius whose art is theirs?"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>We see that Henley's admiration returns to the comparison of Michael
-Angelo and Rodin. I persist in thinking that the resemblance rather
-lies in moral identity, in conception than in technicalities. The
-muscular enlargement of the Italian hero is not Rodin's amplification
-nor his expressiveness, <i>which is altogether nervous.</i> It is none the
-less true that these two men are the only ones who have imagined and
-realised a sculpturesque conception of so vast a reach. Not even Puget
-and Rude, who came between them, ventured such wholes as <i>The Tomb of
-the Medici</i> or <i>The Gate of Hell.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-<h5>MUSEUMS</h5>
-
-<p>Rodin has in the Luxembourg Museum (Paris) the following works:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><i>The Age of Brass,</i> originally placed in the Luxembourg Gardens near
-the School of Mines.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Danaid</i> (marble).</p>
-
-<p><i>Thought</i> (marble).</p>
-
-<p><i>St. John the Baptist Preaching</i> (bronze).</p>
-
-<p><i>The Fair Helmet-maker</i> (bronze).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Bust of <i>Jean Paul Laurens</i> (bronze).</p>
-
-<p><i>The Kiss</i> (marble).</p>
-
-<p>Bust of <i>Mme. V.</i> (marble).</p>
-
-<p>At the Petit Palais (Ville de Paris), one work.</p>
-
-<p>At Beziers, Cognac, Dijon, Douai, Lille, and Lyons, several works.</p>
-
-<p>At Brussels, one work.</p>
-
-<p>At Copenhagen, several works.</p>
-
-<p>At New York, Boston, Chicago, and Philadelphia, works. At Helsingfors,
-one work.</p>
-
-<p>At Rotterdam, one work.</p>
-
-<p>At Geneva (Rath Museum), three works.</p>
-
-<p>At Venice, Christiania, St. Petersburg, Stockholm, Düsseldorf, Munich,
-Weimar, Vienna, Prague (town hall), one work in each town.</p>
-
-<p>At Hamburg, three works.</p>
-
-<p>At Hagen, three works.</p>
-
-<p>At Berlin (new gallery of Charlottenburg), five works.</p>
-
-<p>At Crefeld, two works.</p>
-
-<p>At Buda-Pest, five works.</p>
-
-<p>In London (Victoria and Albert Museum), two works; (British Museum),
-one work.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>At Glasgow, one work.</p>
-
-<p>Museum of Marseilles, <i>The Inner Voice</i> (clay).</p>
-
-<p>The new works in these various museums are originals or casts.</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-<h5>PRIVATE COLLECTIONS</h5>
-
-<p>M. Vever (<i>Eve,</i> in marble).</p>
-
-<p>M. Pontremoli (the <i>National Defence.</i>)</p>
-
-<p>M. Antony Roux (<i>The Kiss</i>).</p>
-
-<p>M. Roger Marx (bust, <i>The Young Mother</i>).</p>
-
-<p>M. Blanc (<i>The Eternal Idol.</i>)</p>
-
-<p>M. Desmarais (the <i>Idyll.</i>)</p>
-
-<p>Mme. Durand (<i>Thought</i>, in marble, given to the Luxembourg).</p>
-
-<p>M. Peytel (various groups).</p>
-
-<p>Mme. Russell (<i>Minerva.</i>)</p>
-
-<p>M. Fenaille (<i>The Spring, Bust of Mme. F., The Poet and the Life of
-Contemplation,</i> a twisted column with figures, surmounted by a mask).</p>
-
-<p>Baron Vitta (high-reliefs in stone).</p>
-
-<p>The Marquise de Carcano (<i>Head of St. John beheaded,</i> marble).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This, of course, is a very cursory list, and includes only collections
-in Paris.</p>
-
-<p>I must add separately to the works published about Rodin those for
-which I am responsible: (1) a study, called "The Art of M. Rodin,"
-<i>Revue des Revues,</i> 15th June, 1898; this has been approved by the
-artist, and very frequently reproduced. (2) A lecture delivered on
-the 31st of July, 1900, at the Rodin exhibition, and published by
-<i>La Plume</i>, with four unpublished drawings. (3) An essay upon the
-surroundings, personality, and influence of Rodin, which appeared in
-the <i>Revue Universelle</i> in 1901, and has likewise been reprinted,
-particularly in the <i>Maîtres Artistes</i> (special number, 15th October,
-1903).</p>
-
-<p>The high price of the work published by Messrs. Goupil (<i>A Hundred
-and Fort-two Drawings by Rodin</i>) prevents that fine volume from being
-accessible to the public. The amateur photographer Druet has taken
-photographs of all Rodin's work, which are rather misty, but which
-render admirably the caressing touch of light on the main planes, and
-which in a measure reproduce the artistic atmosphere of the statues.
-Messrs. Haweis and Coles have likewise taken some beautiful and curious
-proofs. More classic, but also more definite, are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span> the fine photographs
-which the art publisher Buloz has recently taken, and which have been
-employed to illustrate this volume.</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-<h5>PORTRAITS</h5>
-
-<p>There is a remarkable portrait of Rodin by Mr. John Sargent (dating
-from about twenty years ago). Another, by M. Alphonse Legros (a
-profile), is more of a fancy head, and wears a sort of tiara. A more
-recent portrait has been produced by Mr. Alexander. There is a very
-forcible bust by Mile. Camille Claudel, as well as a bust by J.
-Desbois, a lithograph by Eugène Carrière, and some amusing studio
-sketches by Mile. Cladel. An interesting lithograph of "Rodin in his
-Studio," by W. Rothenstein, appeared in the <i>Artist-Engraver,</i> April,
-1904.</p>
-
-<p>A curious photograph, taken by M. Steichen; a poster for the Rodin
-exhibition, containing a portrait, and drawn by Carrière; and some
-excellent photographs taken at Prague (of which the one here reproduced
-is astonishingly faithful) complete this list of likenesses.</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p> <span class="caption"><a id="INDEX"></a>INDEX</span>
-<br /><br />
-<i>Achilles, The Education of,</i> <a href='#Page_33'>33</a><br />
-<i>Adam</i> (destroyed), <a href='#Page_14'>14</a><br />
-<i>Adonis, The Death of,</i> <a href='#Page_33'>33</a><br />
-<i>Age of Brass, The,</i> <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a><br />
-Antiope (of Correggio), The, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a><br />
-Antique, The, influence of, on Rodin, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Rodin's analysis of, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>-<a href='#Page_80'>80</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">its right use, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>-<a href='#Page_77'>77</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">its truth and beauty, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a></span><br />
-Aphrodite (by Lucien Schnegg), <a href='#Page_111'>111</a><br />
-<i>Apollo,</i> the two reliefs, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a><br />
-Aube, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-<i>Autumn</i> (stone), <a href='#Page_86'>86</a><br />
-<i>Avarice and Lewdness,</i> <a href='#Page_26'>26</a><br />
-<br />
-<i>Balzac, Statue of,</i> <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>-<a href='#Page_51'>51</a>, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href='#Page_75'>75</a>, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a></span><br />
-Barrias, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>; his monument to Hugo, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a><br />
-Bartholomé, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-Bartlett, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a><br />
-Barye, <a href='#Page_2'>2</a>, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-Bassier, Jean, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-<i>Bastien-Lepage, Statue of,</i> <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a><br />
-Baudelaire, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a><br />
-Beauvais, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a><br />
-<i>Becque, Henry, Bust of,</i> <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">dry-point portraits of, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></span><br />
-<i>Bellona,</i> <a href='#Page_17'>17</a><br />
-<i>Benedictions, The,</i> <a href='#Page_89'>89</a><br />
-Bergerat, M., Rodin's drawings for his book, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a><br />
-Besnard, Mme., <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-Boisbaudron, Lecoq de, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a><br />
-Boucher, the sculptor, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a><br />
-Bourdelle, Emile, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a><br />
-<i>Broken Nose, The Man with the,</i> <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a><br />
-<i>Brother and Sister,</i> <a href='#Page_31'>31</a><br />
-Brussels, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a><br />
-<i>Burghers of Calais, The,</i> <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>-<a href='#Page_39'>39</a>, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a></span><br />
-Burgundian sculptors, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a><br />
-Busts, Rodin's portrait, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a><br />
-Carcano, Marchioness of, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>Carpeaux, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-Carrier-Belleuse, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a><br />
-Carrière, Eugène, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his opinion of Rodin's art, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>-<a href='#Page_133'>133</a></span><br />
-<i>Caryatid, The,</i> <a href='#Page_31'>31</a><br />
-Celtic genius, The, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a><br />
-Chaplin, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a><br />
-Chappe, A statue of, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a> n.<br />
-Chapu, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-Charpentier, Alexandre, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a><br />
-Chartres, The cathedral of, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a><br />
-<i>Christ and the Magdalen,</i> <a href='#Page_33'>33</a><br />
-<i>Christian Martyr, The,</i> <a href='#Page_88'>88</a><br />
-Cladel, Mlle., <a href='#Page_70'>70</a> n., <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a><br />
-Classicism, Rodin's, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a><br />
-Clodion, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a><br />
-Clot, lithographer, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a><br />
-<i>Conqueror, A, holding a Statue of Victory,</i> <a href='#Page_40'>40</a><br />
-Corneille, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a><br />
-Correggio, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a><br />
-Costume in sculpture, The question of, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>-<a href='#Page_50'>50</a><br />
-Couston, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a><br />
-Coysevox, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a><br />
-<i>Crouching Man, The,</i> <a href='#Page_33'>33</a><br />
-Dalou, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>; Rodin's bust of, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a><br />
-Dampt, Jean, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-<i>Danaid, The,</i> <a href='#Page_28'>28</a><br />
-Dante, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a>, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a><br />
-David of Angers, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a><br />
-Devillez, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-<i>Day, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a></i><br />
-Delacroix, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a><br />
-Delaplanche, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a><br />
-Desbois, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a><br />
-Donatello, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a><br />
-Drawings and sketches, Rodin's, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>-<a href='#Page_100'>100</a><br />
-<i>Dream-Group,</i> <a href='#Page_29'>29</a><br />
-Dry-points, Rodin's, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a><br />
-Dubois, Paul, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-Duhem, Henri, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a><br />
-Dujalbert, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-Dutch painting, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a><br />
-<br />
-Egyptian sculpture, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a><br />
-Eiffel Tower, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a><br />
-Emerson quoted, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a><br />
-Erotic subjects, Rodin's treatment of, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>-<a href='#Page_100'>100</a><br />
-Etchings, Rodin's, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a><br />
-<i>Eternal Idol, The</i>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a><br />
-<i>Eve,</i> <a href='#Page_14'>14</a><br />
-Exhibited works, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a><br />
-Exhibition with Claude Monet, the, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a><br />
-<br />
-Fagel, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a><br />
-Falconet, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a> ??<br />
-Falguière, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his "Balzac," <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Rodin's bust of, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a></span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span><i>Faun and Nymph,86<br />
-Fauns and Bacchantes,</i> <a href='#Page_30'>30</a><br />
-<i>Fenaille, Bust of Mme.,</i> <a href='#Page_84'>84</a><br />
-Fenaille, M., <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>; his edition of<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Rodin's drawings, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a></span><br />
-<i>Fiennes, Jean de,</i> <a href='#Page_35'>35</a><br />
-Finish, False notions of, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a><br />
-Flemish primitives, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a><br />
-Fleurs du Mal, Baudelaire's, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Rodin's illustrations to, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></span><br />
-Florence Baptistery Gates, as model of <i>The Gate of Hell,</i> <a href='#Page_22'>22</a><br />
-France, Anatole, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a><br />
-<i>Franck, Medallion of Cæsar,</i> <a href='#Page_33'>33</a><br />
-Frémiet, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-Fuller, Loïe, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a> n.<br />
-<br />
-<i>Galatea,</i> <a href='#Page_33'>33</a><br />
-Gallé, Emile, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a><br />
-Gallimard, M., <a href='#Page_92'>92</a><br />
-Gardet, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-<i>Gate of Hell, The,</i> <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>-<a href='#Page_27'>27</a>, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a><br />
-<i>Genius of War, The,</i> <a href='#Page_17'>17</a><br />
-Gluck, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a><br />
-Gothic sculptures, Rodin's study of, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a><br />
-Goujon, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a><br />
-Greek sculpture, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a><br />
-Guillaume, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-<br />
-<i>Hand of God, The,</i> <a href='#Page_85'>85</a><br />
-<i>Hecuba,</i> <a href='#Page_29'>29</a><br />
-<i>Helmet-maker, The Fair,</i> <a href='#Page_29'>29</a><br />
-Henley, W. E., <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his opinion of Rodin's art, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>-<a href='#Page_134'>134</a></span><br />
-Hokusai, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a><br />
-Houdon, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a><br />
-<i>Hugo, Victor, Bust of,</i> <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">dry-point portraits of, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">the <i>Monument to,</i> <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a></span><br />
-<br />
-<i>Icarus,</i> <a href='#Page_85'>85</a><br />
-<i>Illusion, the Daughter of Icarus,</i> <a href='#Page_33'>33</a><br />
-<i>Inferno,</i> Dante's, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a><br />
-Inspiration, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a><br />
-<i>Iris,</i> <a href='#Page_19'>19</a><br />
-Italy, Rodin's travels in, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a><br />
-<br />
-Japanese bronzes and prints, Rodin's admiration of, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a><br />
-Jasmin, Clément, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a><br />
-Joan of Arc, Rude's, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a><br />
-<br />
-<i>Kiss, The,</i> <a href='#Page_23'>23</a> n., <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a><br />
-<br />
-<i>Labour, Monument to,</i> <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a><br />
-Lamartine, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a><br />
-<i>Laurens, Jean Paul, Bust of,</i> <a href='#Page_31'>31</a><br />
-Lavoisier, A statue of, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a> n.<br />
-Lefèvre, Camille, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-Legros, Alphonse, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>; bust of, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a><br />
-<i>Lorraine, Claude, The Monument to,</i> <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a><br />
-Louvre, the, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span><i>Love and Psyche,</i> <a href='#Page_85'>85</a><br />
-<i>Lovers, Groups of,</i> <a href='#Page_85'>85</a><br />
-Luxembourg, The, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a> n., <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a><br />
-<i>Lynch, Statue of,</i> <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a><br />
-<br />
-MacColl, D. S., <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a><br />
-<i>Magdalen, The,</i> <a href='#Page_85'>85</a><br />
-<i>Mahomet</i> (drawing), <a href='#Page_95'>95</a><br />
-Mallarmé, Stéphane, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a><br />
-Manet, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-<i>Man Walking,</i> <a href='#Page_28'>28</a><br />
-<i>Man with the Broken Nose, The</i> (clay head), <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">(marble), <a href='#Page_7'>7</a></span><br />
-Marseillaise, Rude's, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a><br />
-Marx, Roger, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">bust of, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a></span><br />
-<i>Meditation,</i> <a href='#Page_19'>19</a><br />
-Meudon, Rodin's house and studio at, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a><br />
-Michael Angelo, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a> n., <a href='#Page_122'>122</a><br />
-<i>Minerva</i> (helmeted bust), <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">(marble and silver), <a href='#Page_40'>40</a></span><br />
-Minne, George, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a><br />
-Mirbeau, Octave, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a> n.;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">bust of, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">medallion of, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Rodin's drawings for his books, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></span><br />
-Monet, Claude, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a><br />
-<i>Monument to the Defenders of the Nation,</i> <a href='#Page_14'>14</a><br />
-Morbidezza, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a><br />
-<i>Mother, The Young,</i> <a href='#Page_31'>31</a><br />
-<i>Muse of Anger,</i> <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a><br />
-<br />
-<i>Muse of the Inner Voice,</i> <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a><br />
-Museums, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a><br />
-<br />
-Nancy, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a><br />
-Naples Museum, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a><br />
-Napoleon Awakening to Immortality,<br />
-Rude's, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a><br />
-Neo-Greek School, Errors and defects of, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a>, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a><br />
-<i>Nereids, The,</i> <a href='#Page_86'>86</a><br />
-Niederhausern-Rodo, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a><br />
-<i>Night,</i> <a href='#Page_88'>88</a><br />
-Nude, The, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a><br />
-<i>Nymph, A,</i> <a href='#Page_31'>31</a><br />
-<br />
-<i>Orpheus and Eurydice,</i> <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a><br />
-<br />
-Paintings, Rodin's, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a><br />
-Pajou, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a><br />
-Pantheon, The, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a><br />
-<i>Perseus and the Gorgon,</i> <a href='#Page_28'>28</a><br />
-Pica, Vittorio, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a><br />
-Pigalle, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a><br />
-Pilon, Germain, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a><br />
-Poe, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a><br />
-<i>Poet and the Life of Contemplation, The,</i> <a href='#Page_40'>40</a><br />
-<i>Poets and Muses,</i> <a href='#Page_85'>85</a><br />
-Préault, Auguste, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a><br />
-Private Collections, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a><br />
-<i>Proust, Antonin, Bust of,</i> <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">dry-point of, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></span><br />
-<i>Psyche,</i> <a href='#Page_85'>85</a><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>Puech, Denys, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-Puget, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a><br />
-Puvis de Chavannes, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>; bust of, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">monument to, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a></span><br />
-<i>Pygmalion,</i> <a href='#Page_86'>86</a><br />
-<br />
-Raphael, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a><br />
-Redon, Odilon, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a><br />
-Rembrandt, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a><br />
-Renascence, Rodin's admiration for the, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>-5<br />
-<i>Rimini, Paolo and Francesca da,</i> <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a><br />
-Rivière, Théodore, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-<i>Rochefort, Bust of,</i> <a href='#Page_31'>31</a><br />
-Roche, Pierre, in, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a><br />
-Rodin, Auguste, birth, parentage, and schooling, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">early art-training, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>, <a href='#Page_2'>2</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">under Barye, <a href='#Page_2'>2</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">works for ornament-maker, <a href='#Page_2'>2</a>, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in Carrier-Belleuse's studio, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">early works in sculpture, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">goes to Brussels, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>; work there, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">friendship with Legros, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">takes painting lessons from Lecoq de Boisbaudron, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">accepted at Salon, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">accused of casting from life, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his first sale, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">cleared of accusations, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">sudden emergence from obscurity, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">slow development, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">attitude to academic art, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his originality and power noticed, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">studios granted him by Government, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">works at Sèvres, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his stay in Brussels a formative time, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">deeply impressed by Dante and Baudelaire, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a> (and see under these names);</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">monument to Hugo described, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">impatience of officialism, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Gate of Hell</i> described, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>-<a href='#Page_27'>27</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">exhibition with Claude Monet in 1889, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">monument to Claude Lorraine described, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Burghers of Calais</i> described, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>-<a href='#Page_39'>39</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">friendship with M. Fenaille, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">the <i>Balzac</i> and the controversy it excited, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>-<a href='#Page_52'>52</a>, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">visits to Italy, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a>; articles</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in the <i>Musée</i> quoted at length, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>-<a href='#Page_80'>80</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">at the Paris Exhibition of 1900, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">visit to Prague, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>; welcomed in London, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">elected President of the International Society, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">honours, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">personal appearance, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">portraits of him, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">private life and home, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>-<a href='#Page_109'>109</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">house and studios, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>-<a href='#Page_110'>110</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">tastes, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">travels, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">as a talker, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">social opinions, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">influence, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">friends and pupils, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">characteristics of his art, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">artistic descent and affinities, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>-<a href='#Page_119'>119</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">place in the French school, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>-122;</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span><span style="margin-left: 1em;">lost works, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a> n.;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">paintings, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">dry-points, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">drawings and treatment of voluptuous subjects, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>-<a href='#Page_100'>100</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">photographs of his works, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">essentially a poet, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>,69; as thinker, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">classicism, his, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his symbolism, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his composition, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his conception of his art analysed, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>-<a href='#Page_81'>81</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">fondness for small groups, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his treatment of costume, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his treatment of flesh, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his principles of portraiture, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his endeavour to give atmosphere, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his works treated to be viewed from all sides, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>-6;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his modelling, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his study and power of representing movement, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">dynamic character of his art, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his synthetic power, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his veracity, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his favourite type of woman, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">influence and value of the antique, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>-<a href='#Page_80'>80</a></span><br />
-<i>Ronde, The</i> (dry-point), <a href='#Page_92'>92</a><br />
-Rops. <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a><br />
-Rosso, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a><br />
-Rousseau, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a><br />
-Rubens, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a>, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a><br />
-Rude, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a><br />
-<br />
-<i>St. John Baptist</i>, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a><br />
-<i>St. John Baptist</i> (torso), <a href='#Page_31'>31</a><br />
-<i>St. John, Head of the Beheaded</i> (marble), <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a><br />
-Saint Marceaux, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a><br />
-<i>St. Pierre, Eustacede</i>, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a><br />
-Salon, the, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a><br />
-<i>Sappho,</i> <a href='#Page_86'>86</a><br />
-Sargent, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a><br />
-<i>Sarmiento, Monument to President,</i> <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>.<br />
-Schnegg, Gaston and Lucien, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a><br />
-<i>Séverine, Bust of Madame,</i> <a href='#Page_33'>33</a><br />
-Sèvres, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a><br />
-<i>Shades, The,</i> <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a><br />
-Société des Gens de Lettres, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a><br />
-<i>Spring, Eternal,</i> <a href='#Page_33'>33</a><br />
-<i>Spring,</i> <a href='#Page_85'>85</a><br />
-<i>Summer,</i> <a href='#Page_86'>86</a><br />
-<br />
-Tanagra figures, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a><br />
-<i>Thinker, The,</i> <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a><br />
-Thomas, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a><br />
-<i>Thought,</i> <a href='#Page_29'>29</a><br />
-<i>Torso</i> (nude female bronze), <a href='#Page_88'>88</a><br />
-Turquet, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a><br />
-<br />
-<i>Ugolino,</i> <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>; (drawing), <a href='#Page_95'>95</a><br />
-<br />
-Values in painting and sculpture, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>Van der Meer, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a><br />
-Van Rasbourg, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a><br />
-<i>Venus and Adonis,</i> <a href='#Page_33'>33</a><br />
-<i>Vicunha, Monument to the President,</i> <a href='#Page_17'>17</a><br />
-Villon, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a><br />
-<br />
-Wagner, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a><br />
-Watteau, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a><br />
-<i>Wave, The,</i> <a href='#Page_33'>33</a><br />
-Whistler, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a><br />
-<i>Wissant, Jacques and Pierre de,</i> <a href='#Page_36'>36</a><br />
-<i>Woman, Bust of,</i> <a href='#Page_84'>84</a><br />
-<i>Woman, Bust of a Young,</i> <a href='#Page_17'>17</a><br />
-<i>Woman, Bust of a Young</i> (silver) <a href='#Page_31'>31</a><br />
-<i>Women and Children,</i> <a href='#Page_86'>86</a><br />
-<i>Women Bathing,</i> <a href='#Page_41'>41</a><br />
-<i>Women Damned,</i> <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a><br />
-</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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