Philly Daily, where my Crime Beat column appears each week, reports on an exhibit at the Rodin Museum in Philadelphia.
You can read the piece via the link below or the text below:
Rodin's Hands Exhibition at Rodin Museum - Philly Daily
“Rodin is the sculptor of hands—furious, clenched, rearing, damned hands,” said the French critic and poet Gustave Kahn.
The Rodin Museum in Philadelphia, with Rodin’s famous The Thinker in front of the museum on the Benjamin Parkway, is offering the Rodin’s Hands Exhibition, which will run until January 4, 2026.
“Auguste Rodin almost obsessively explored the expressive power
of hands, using them to convey an infinite variety of emotions and experiences.
This exhibition highlights fifteen bronzes and plasters, many of them rare or
unique to the Philadelphia collection,” the Rodin Museum stated. “Discover how
the reuse, reorientation, and repurposing of hands offer insight into the
French sculptor’s creative process.”
According to the museum, the key works are the enlarged hands or those distended by age or disease were vital components of figural sculptures such as The Burghers of Calais or The Helmet-Maker’s Wife. It is thought that he conceived The Clenched Hand and The Left Hand as studies for The Burghers of Calais but rejected them as being too animated. Later works, comprised of hands cut at the wrist or forearm, offer symbolist essays on humanity and creation.
“A piece unique to the Rodin Museum is the bronze sculpture of
clasping hands titled Two Hands. 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,” the museum
stated. “The Cathedral 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
called The Arch of Alliance) after the rib vaulting found in
Gothic churches.
The museum notes that 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.
A work by Barbara Hepworth, who shared Rodin’s interest in hands, will also be included in the exhibition.
Admission to the Rodin Museum is pay what you wish, and the garden is free year-round.
The Rodin Museum is located
at 21 Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Philadelphia, PA 19130. You can call
215-763-8100 for further information.
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