Showing posts with label Rodin Museum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rodin Museum. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 4, 2022

Rodin’s Hands, February 4, 2022–December 2023, At The Rodin Museum In Philadelphia

“Rodin is the sculptor of hands—furious, clenched, rearing, damned hands,” wrote the French critic and poet Gustave Kahn, describing Auguste Rodin’s talent for concentrating emotion and storytelling into this body part. The exhibition invites visitors to consider how the artist’s modelling gives hands a tension and vitality that may be more expressive or dramatic than a figure’s face. Rodin almost obsessively explored the expressive power of hands, using them to convey an infinite variety of emotions and experiences.

The exhibition highlights fifteen bronzes and plasters—many of them rare or unique to the Philadelphia collection—to discuss Rodin’s process. Drawing on a vast stock of sculpted hands in his studio, the artist reused, reoriented, and repurposed hands in his sculptures to create unexpected juxtapositions and infuse works with new meaning. It was not lost on Rodin or his contemporaries that sculptors are first and foremost modelers reliant on their hands.

Enlarged hands or those distended by age or disease were vital components of figural sculptures such as The Burghers of Calais, The Three Shades, or The Helmet-Maker’s Wife. Later in Rodin’s career, works like The Cathedral or The Hand of God are comprised of hands, cut at the wrist or forearm, that offer symbolist essays on humanity and creation.

Exhibition highlights include The Cathedral, a sculpture modelled in 1908 that depicts two over-life-size right hands whose fingertips are about to touch. The sculptor published a book on the Gothic cathedrals of France in 1914 and renamed this piece, formerly known as The Arch of Alliance, after the rib vaulting found in Gothic churches.

Rodin almost obsessively explored the expressive power of hands, using them to convey an infinite variety of emotions and experiences. It is thought that he conceived The Clenched Hand and The Left Hand as studies for The Burghers of Calais but rejected the hands as being too animated. Recently, Stanford University scientists have proposed that the model for The Clenched Hand suffered from Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease, a nerve disorder that causes muscle contractions. Rodin’s desire to study nature and represent it truthfully inspired him to study medical specimens at the Dupuytren Museum in Paris.

A piece unique to the Rodin Museum is the bronze sculpture of clasping hands titled Two Lovers. The plaster model for it at the Musée Rodin in Paris is inscribed: “Hands of Rodin and Rose Beuret,” suggesting that the hands are those of the sculptor and his mistress and partner.

In Rodin’s vision of creation, The Hand of God emerges not from heaven but from earth and cradles a rock from which male and female figures emerge. The divine hand with its open, curving palm and outstretched index finger is identical to a right hand that appears twice in The Burghers of Calais: once on the figure of Pierre de Wissant, who raises it to his face in a gesture of acceptance and offering, and again for his brother Jacques de Wissant, from whom the hand hangs in a gesture indicative of hesitation and doubt.

Curator

Jennifer Thompson, the Gloria and Jack Drosdick Curator of European Painting and Sculpture and Curator of the John G. Johnson Collection

For more details, please visit: https://philamuseum.org/visit

Thursday, August 1, 2019

August 2019 At The Philadelphia Museum Of Art

Philadelphia Museum of Art, August
 
Curator Jennifer Thompson in The Impressionist’s Eye.
 
The Impressionist’s Eye
Through Aug 18
Learn what caught the eye of the
Impressionists from curator Jennifer Thompson. 
Watch Video
 
 

Yoshitoshi:
Spirit and
Spectacle

 
Mist, Ichikawa Sandaji as Hoshikage Tsuchiemon, 1876, by Tsukioka Yoshitoshi
 
The Heian Poet Yasumasa Playing the Flute by Moonlight, Subduing the Bandit Yasusuke with His Music, 1883, by Tsukioka Yoshitoshi
 
Through Aug 18
Discover the brilliant colors and spirited lines of Yoshitoshi, the last great master of the traditional Japanese woodblock print.
Learn More
 
 
New in the Galleries
 
The Getaway, 1939, by Horace Pippin
Horace Pippin: From
War to Peace

On View
 
Untitled, 1953, by Herbert Ferber
Herbert Ferber: Form into Space
Through Jan 5
 
Rodin Museum
 
Galleries at the Rodin Museum
Rethinking the Modern Monument
On View
 
A person sketching the sculpture "The Kiss"
Second Saturday Sketch
Aug 10, 10:00 a.m.
 
 
Rodin Museum
Rodin Museum Garden Bar
Through Sept 29
 
Art Splash illustration by Lauren Cat West
 
Art Splash
Through Sept 2
Perelman Building
Calling all kid creatives! This summer at Art Splash, transform treasures, tinker with textures, mix up materials, and share your story.
Learn More
 
 
Museum Happenings
 
 
Art Class, 1939, by Caroline Durieux
 
Drink & Draw with Thom Lessner
Aug 7, 6:00 - 8:00 p.m.
Sip and sketch with Philly artist Thom Lessner, and reinterpret titles of artworks in our collection in your own style. Free after Pay What You Wish admission; bar drinks available for purchase.
 
 
Visitors on a tour of the galleries
 
Collection Tours
Go on a tour of the collection with folks in the know. Tours are offered daily and are free with admission. See our website calendar for upcoming tours.
 
 
 
 
 
Exhibitions
 
Become a Member
 
What's On
 
 
Please Note
The museum will be open on Labor Day, Sept 2.
 
For more information on the exhibitions and programs listed here, including generous donors, please visit our website.
The Impressionist's Eye has been made possible by presenting sponsor Bank of America. 
 
Bank of America
 
Art Splash presented by PNC Arts Alive
 
Mist, Ichikawa Sandaji as Hoshikage Tsuchiemon (detail), 1876, by Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (Purchased with funds contributed by the E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Foundation, 1989-47-20). The Heian Poet Yasumasa Playing the Flute by Moonlight, Subduing the Bandit Yasusuke with His Music (detail), 1883, by Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (Purchased with funds contributed by the E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Foundation, 1989-47-332a--c). The Getaway (detail), 1939, by Horace Pippin (Bequest of Daniel W. Dietrich II, 2016-3-3). Untitled (detail), 1953, by Herbert Ferber ( Gift of Edith Ferber, courtesy of Waqas Wajahat, New York, 2019-46-3 . Installation shot of the Rodin Museum. Art Splash illustration by Lauren Cat West. Art Class (detail), 1939, by Caroline Durieux (Purchased with the Thomas Skelton Harrison Fund, 1943-2-117). 
 

Saturday, November 18, 2017

Celebrate Rodin 100, The Father Of Modern Sculpture, At The Rodin Museum In Philadelphia #Rodin100

Philadelphia Museum of Art
Worldwide Celebration
Auguste Rodin


2017 is the one hundredth anniversary of Auguste Rodin’s death. To mark the occasion, the Rodin Museum is taking part in a worldwide celebration of the artist’s work and legacy.
Follow along with us all day on social media to join in on the celebration and learn more about this extraordinary artist. 
In the Galleries
The Kiss
On View
Discover what passion looks like in the hands of a master sculptor. This installation explores the artist’s intimate and powerful depictions of romantic love and the variety of approaches, meanings, and allusions that Rodin brought to his figures.

Around Town
Kiefer Rodin 
The Barnes Foundation invites you to be among the first to see contemporary artist Anselm Kiefer’s experimental responses to sculptures and drawings by Auguste Rodin. 
2600 Benjamin Franklin Parkway
Philadelphia, PA 19130
philamuseum.org
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For more information on the exhibitions and programs listed here, including generous donors, please visit philamuseum.org.
The Thinker, modeled 1880–81 and enlarged 1902–4 by Auguste Rodin, cast 1919 by Alexis Rudier (Bequest of Jules E. Mastbaum, F1929-7-123). Copy of Rodin's "The Kiss" (detail), carved in marble 1929 by Henri Gréber, after Auguste Rodin (Bequest of Jules E. Mastbaum, F1929-7-62). Eternal Springtime, modeled 1884 by Auguste Rodin; cast between 1898-1918 by Ferdinand Barbedienne (Bequest of Jules E. Mastbaum, 1929). Auguste Rodin: Les Cathédrales de France (August Rodin: The Cathedrals of France) (detail), 2016, by Anselm Kiefer © Anselm Kiefer (Photo: Georges Poncet).

Friday, September 22, 2017

October News And Events At The Philadelphia Museum Of Art

Philadelphia Museum of Art
Collectively Imagining Our Future
Philadelphia Assembled
Through December 10
The first exhibition of its kind at the Museum, Philadelphia Assembledjoins art and civic engagement. Upcoming exhibition events include storytelling, art-making, live performance, and curated menus—all created by the artists, activists, and organizers who are collectively building the exhibition.
Admission to the Perelman Building throughout the run of the exhibition is Pay What You Wish.
Closing Soon
Cy Twombly’s Iliad
Through October 8
Get a fresh look at Cy Twombly’s ambitious retelling of Homer’s Iliad.Experience the celebrated painting cycle alongside related drawings and sculptures before the paintings go back to their permanent gallery later this year.
New in the Galleries
At the Center: Masters of American Craft
Contemporary Craft
Alluring works by three key figures in the field of American contemporary craft: fiber artist Yvonne Pacanovsky Bobrowicz, sculptor Jack Larimore, and jeweler Sharon Church.
The Kiss
Rodin Museum
Discover what passion looks like in the hands of a master sculptor. 2017 is the one hundredth anniversary of Auguste Rodin’s death. To mark the occasion, the Museum will take part in worldwide celebrations of the artist’s work and legacy with special exhibitions and programs.
Italian Renaissance Painters. Dutch Masters. French Impressionists.
Old Masters Now: Celebrating the Johnson Collection
November 3–February 19
In 1917, the most famous lawyer of his day left his astonishing trove of European art to the city of Philadelphia. One hundred years later, we’re taking a new look at one of this country’s most remarkable collections. Encounter treasures by the likes of Botticelli, Bosch, Titian, Rembrandt, and Monet—and see how art historians keep making new discoveries about the collection.
A New Twist on Your Friday Night
Word Up!
September 29, 5:00–8:45 p.m.
Celebrate the art of words and language. Featuring in-gallery storytelling, a literary set of music by DJ Halfbreed, a workshop with street artist and poet Blur, and a headlining performance by Philadelphia's Poet Laureate Yolanda Wisher and her band the Afroeaters. Final Fridays are free with Museum admission.
Object Lessons
Changing Fashion
Starts September 28
See how artists throughout history depict every day activewear, elegant eveningwear, and fabulous costumes. $125 ($100 members).
Pay What You Wish Family Festival
Enchanted Forest
October 1, 
10:00 a.m.–3:00 p.m.
The Pennsylvania Ballet II brings Snow White to the Museum. Catch a performance, make your own magical masterpiece, and discover spellbinding treasures in our galleries.
Hosted by the Young Friends
Fall into Art
November 4, 
9:00 p.m.–midnight
Party with a purpose in the Museum’s Great Stair Hall. Enjoy after-hours access to art, plus dancing to the sounds of DJ Royale, an open bar, and surprises around every corner. Public tickets start at $65. Proceeds benefit the Museum.
See a full calendar of What's On this season.
2600 Benjamin Franklin Parkway
Philadelphia, PA 19130
philamuseum.org