Claudel art sale breaks records
paris — An “exceptional” trove of sculptures by the tragic French artist Camille Claudel has broken records at auction in Paris, going for 3.5 million euros ($4.1 million) — three times their estimate.
Prices for work by Claudel, who died in a mental hospital after a tortured love affair with fellow sculptor Auguste Rodin which has inspired several films and plays, have rocketed in recent years. The star of the auction on Monday, a bronze called “The Abandonment”, went for nearly 1.2 million euros, twice its estimate.
The statue is one of a series inspired by the Indian myth “Shakuntala” about an overlooked wife from the Hindu epic “Mahabharata” from which Claudel drew parallels with her own tumultuous relationship with Rodin, who was both her lover, boss and artistic rival.
It was snapped up by an “international collector”, auction house Artcurial said.
Interest in the “unprecedented” sale of bronze, plaster and clay works still owned by the artist’s family was intense, it added.
French museums also stepped in to try to stop 12 works that were sold at the auction to stop them falling into private hands or going abroad. The Musee d’Orsay, which holds the country’s largest collection of Impressionist and 19th century art, now has a year to raise the 467,800 euros for a study of “Shakuntala”. —