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Rodin in the United States

Confronting the Modern

October 21, 2022–January 15, 2023 at the High Museum of Art

Rodin in the United States

Auguste Rodin (French, 1840–1917)

The Thinker

Original model 1881–82, enlarged 1903. Bronze, cast by Alexis Rudier 1928, 79 × 37 3/4 × 59 in. (200.7 × 95.9 × 149.9 cm). The Baltimore Museum of Art. The Jacob Epstein Collection, 1930.25.1

Auguste Rodin (French, 1840–1917) followed an unusual path to becoming one of the most innovative, influential, celebrated, and controversial sculptors of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Rejected at the prestigious École des Beaux-Arts, he studied instead at the Petite École, where copying traditional styles was promoted. For twenty years, he worked for jewelers, decorative artists, and masons. He honed his skill as a modeler of clay in other sculptors’ studios, taking evening art classes, and eventually setting up his own studio where he worked from live models.

Beyond literary, historical, and religious subjects, Rodin was interested in expressing human emotion. He often broke from convention by representing people around him instead of models celebrated for their classical beauty. Some of Rodin’s sculptures looked unfinished to his contemporaries or bore the traces of his process. Rodin also exhibited fragments, going against academic standards that privileged pieces showing the whole body posed in a traditional manner. Further, some works had no narrative framework or expressed sexuality with an unapologetic frankness that was considered scandalous.

This exhibition explores how American collectors embraced Rodin’s art over time, assembling collections of his sculptures and drawings and often giving them to public institutions. Rodin’s reputation is firmly established in the United States today, but the path to his acceptance was a complicated, winding one, and the stories of the collectors and museums who embraced his work reveal a desire to look beyond the conventional to confront— and embrace—the modern.

For more information about Rodin in the United States: Confronting the Modern at the High Museum of Art, click here.

For more information about Rodin in the United States: Confronting the Modern when it was on view at the Clark, click here.

Rodin in the United States: Confronting the Modern is organized by the Clark Art Institute and guest curated by independent scholar Antoinette Le Normand-Romain. 

This exhibition is supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities.