Calgary Herald

‘THIS IS WHAT PASSION LOOKS LIKE’

Rodin Museum fetes sculptor on 100th anniversar­y of his death with installati­on

- KRISTEN DE GROOT

Auguste Rodin’s sensuous piece The Kiss will, fittingly, form the core of an installati­on at Philadelph­ia’s Rodin Museum centred on the theme of passion to mark the 100th anniversar­y of the French sculptor’s death.

The Kiss, in marble, portrays a couple forever locked in an amorous embrace. The new installati­on’s marble, bronze and plaster casts feature pairings including men and women, mothers and children, a woman clutching a dead lover — and others that are playful, animalisti­c and one considered too shocking for even Rodin to exhibit during his lifetime. He died in November 1917.

“He explores the idea of a couple ... through desire, attraction, repulsion and shame,” said curator Jennifer Thompson. “This is what passion looks like at the hands of Rodin.”

The installati­on is part of a yearlong series of celebratio­ns looking at the groundbrea­king artist’s life, being held at a host of art museums large and small around the world, with the Musée Rodin in Paris at the centre. The public programs and exhibition­s — unified under #Rodin100 — are bringing together new informatio­n about the man considered the father of modern sculpture.

Among the Philadelph­ia installati­on’s 16 works is the plaster Young Mother in the Grotto, an ode to maternal love featuring a young woman and chubby baby, and The Minotaur, which depicts the mythologic­al creature with a human face said to be a self-portrait, groping and leering at a woman who seems torn between desire and revulsion.

The Damned is a plaster cast that even Rodin thought was too racy to exhibit, with its two women in a lusty embrace, buttocks aloft.

Philadelph­ia’s version of The Kiss is a copy commission­ed in 1926 by theatre magnate Jules Mastbaum. The museum, which opened in 1929, was a gift to the city from Mastbaum, who was introduced to Rodin’s work during a 1923 trip to Paris.

Mastbaum hired two Frenchborn architects living in Philadelph­ia, Paul Cret and Jacques Greber, to create the limestone museum, modelled on a 17thcentur­y château Rodin preserved at his home in Meudon. Its holdings include more than 140 bronze, marble and plaster sculptures, plus drawings, prints, letters and books.

He and his architects wanted a great marble sculpture as the museum’s centrepiec­e. They got permission from the Musée Rodin in Paris to recreate The Kiss, and sculptor Henri Greber — Jacques Greber’s father — was selected and given a full-sized plaster model to work from. It’s one of four copies of sculpture considered by some as his masterpiec­e.

“In all of these works, he’s sharing with us a catalogue of passion,” Thompson said.

It will be on view until 2019.

 ?? PHOTOS: DAVID MAIALETTI / THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People gather around a copy of Rodin’s The Kiss in the Rodin Museum in Philadelph­ia.
PHOTOS: DAVID MAIALETTI / THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS People gather around a copy of Rodin’s The Kiss in the Rodin Museum in Philadelph­ia.
 ??  ?? A copy of Rodin’s The Kiss in the Rodin Museum in Philadelph­ia was created with permission from the Musée Rodin in Paris by sculptor Henri Greber.
A copy of Rodin’s The Kiss in the Rodin Museum in Philadelph­ia was created with permission from the Musée Rodin in Paris by sculptor Henri Greber.
 ??  ?? Jennifer Thompson, curator of European painting and sculpture at the Philadelph­ia Museum of Art, discusses Auguste Rodin’s famous sculpture The Kiss.
Jennifer Thompson, curator of European painting and sculpture at the Philadelph­ia Museum of Art, discusses Auguste Rodin’s famous sculpture The Kiss.

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