Art Chowder November | December, Issue 18 | Page 39

R embrandt and Rodin have some things in common, even though they worked in different art forms. Both were men of original genius whose masterpieces transcend the fashions of their times. They were non-classicists and they shunned idealization in favor of an essential human dignity deeper than surface appearance. They were not academicians but were each workshop-trained to become master of their traditional crafts. They knew the elemental, physical stuff of their creations intimately. Rembrandt’s manipulation of paint has a life of its own, independent of the subject it describes, as does the clay or plaster modeling of Rodin. In some cases Rodin left seam lines from the molds visible in the final work, with a kind of rugged honesty leaving in full view evidence of the process by which his creations were made. 5 Rodin’s ability to embody greatness on a grand scale by reducing his composition to essentials may be no better exemplified than in his Monument to Balzac (created between 1891 and 1897) and in The Burghers of Calais. Although Honoré de Balzac (1799-1850) died when Rodin was only ten years old, there was an apparent affinity between them. Another non-idealist, Balzac is considered a father of literary realism, and both men admired the works of the medieval Florentine poet Dante Alighieri. Rodin’s first grand commission, The Gates of Hell 6 , was inspired by the entrance to Dante’s Inferno. Balzac’s magnum opus was his Human Comedy, a kind of secular follow-up to Dante’s Divine Comedy, comprising a series of 91 finished novels and short stories, written over a period of many years. In it Balzac offers astute observations of French society from 1815 to 1848. Whereas Dante’s exploration of the human condition was medieval in outlook, framed in eternal terms of ultimate judgment and salvation, Balzac focused on the foibles and mixed virtues of his contemporaries. Recognized in his own time as a man of outstanding genius and indefatigable energy (whose legacy inspired many others, ranging from Dickens to Dostoevsky to Jack Kerouac), Rodin’s masterwork portrays him as a visionary genius enshrouded in the monk’s habit he would wear while writing. Albert Besnard (French, 1849-1934) Portrait of Auguste Rodin, 1900 Etching on paper Jundt Art Museum, Gonzaga University, University purchase with a grant from the Sahlin Foundation 1994.51 12 3/4 x 10 1/4” This portrait of the great sculptor by a close friend is included in a concurrent exhibition in the Jundt Museum’s Arcade Gallery, entitled From the Collection: European Prints From the Age of Auguste Rodin. Large Right Clenched Hand, modeled ca. 1885 Musée Rodin cast, number unknown in 1965 November |December 39 Bronze; Georges 2018 Rudier Foundry Lent by Iris Cantor