Selling Paintings Highlights - Auguste Rodin - Monument to Balzac – Venderequadri Skip to content
Venderequadri Highlights-Auguste Rodin - Monumento a Balzac

Selling Paintings Highlights - Auguste Rodin - Monument to Balzac

Rodin, who had been commissioned to create a commemorative work for the greatest French novelist, devoted himself for seven years to studying the writer's biography and works, had models pose that resembled him and made clothes to his measurements. In essence, however, Rodin did not intend to celebrate the physical appearance of "Honoré de Balzac" so much as the idea and spirit of the man, his creative energy: "I think of his industriousness, his difficult existence, his perennial battles and his immense courage. This is what I would like to express." Many of the studies for this work are nudes, but Rodin dressed the figure inspired by the dressing gown often worn by the writer who loved to work at night. The result is a monolithic, free-standing, phallic figure that rises upwards, dominated by the rough relief and the cavities that define the face and head. The monument to Balzac is a visual metaphor for the author's energy and genius, but when the cast in The plaster model was first exhibited in Paris in 1898 and was harshly criticized; accused of resembling a sack of coal, a snowman, or a seal, the literary society that had commissioned the work called it "a crude sketch." Rodin kept the plaster model in his home on the outskirts of Paris, and it was only cast in bronze years after his death.
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