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November 2013
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A few of my favorites:

The Kiss

Eternal Spring

Cathedral


I agree, Lorenzo. I have been to the one in Philadelphia and also his original museum in Paris. They are both incredible!
When I saw the one in Paris, I was there with my school's Study Abroad program with a rather large group of students. Seeing that museum wasn't on the syllabus but we got a 'day off' to explore. Almost the whole class want to go to Versailles, only three of us saw the Rodin museum. I think it is sad that even students of Humanities either didn't know enough about Rodin, or didn't care. Well, their loss!
Beautiful. I'm always amazed at what people can do.

http://museum.stanford.edu/view/rodin...






Don't let the fact that you can see these at the Rodin museum too confuse you. :)
These were generally bronzes by the Coubertin Foundry, posthumous casts authorized by Musée Rodin. Of course since bronze is cast, there is no such thing as "originals" in the same sense that a marble or an oil on canvas is.

The Collection.
http://www.rodinmuseum.org/collection...
Susan wrote: "Lorenzo wrote: "There's a Rodin Museum in Philadelphia that is fabulous. I recommend it to anyone visiting that city."
The Collection.
http://www.rodinmuseum.org/collection......"
WOW! I didn't expect some of these. Some of them are dark. I love these.
The Collection.
http://www.rodinmuseum.org/collection......"
WOW! I didn't expect some of these. Some of them are dark. I love these.
Susan very true. I like that about him. He's not a one note artist.


http://museum.stanford.edu/view/rodin...
Don't let the fact that..."
Patrice wrote: "Ed wrote: "In California we have the Cantor museum which is attached to Stanford University. They have many Rodins there.
http://museum.stanford.edu/view/rodin...
Don't let the fact that..."
There must be a few of "The Thinkers" around. I saw it at the Philadelphia Museum of Art some years ago and in the great and surprising sculpture garden at the Cantor museum last summer.

There's one at the LA County Museum, too. Since bronzes are cast from a mold, it's possible to have quite of few of them exactly the same.



Yep. So strange as it seems, there can be more than one original of a bronze.



There are little holes in the mold to allow the melted wax to run out. When the wax is melted to the level of the hole, a bit of bronze dribbles out. That dribble of bronze is called a "bavetta," which, BTW, is my last name.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auguste_...