The Thinker by Rodin: Great Art Explained

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In Paris at the Rodin museum is "Le Penseur", a six foot tall, bronze statue of a naked man.   It is an original sculpture by August Rodin. In San Francisco we can find "The Thinker". It too, is an original sculpture by August Rodin. In Buenos Aires, Rodin's "original" is called "El Pensador".   And in Copenhagen they also have an original thinker. In Stockholm we find another - "original". One of at least 28 full-size statues of the  Thinker worldwide. All considered Rodin "originals". Even though the sculptor didn't make them.   Half of these Thinkers were not even made during Rodin's lifetime, or under his supervision. Rodin was as much an entrepreneur, as he was a sculptor. In fact he never   produced a work in plaster, bronze or even marble  with his own hands. His works were made by a large   team of highly trained plaster casters, carvers, and founders who turned his ideas into finished works of art. Like many contemporary artists today,  Rodin had an industrial approach to producing art.   An approach to this day, that still poses  questions of "authenticity" and "originality". Rodin shows us that a great artist should be judged by  what's in his head, and not what's in his hands. The thinker captured in a moment of concentrated  introspection, has come to represent a multitude of   ideas about the nature of man and his place in  the world. For some it is a symbol of knowledge,   others philosophy, even existence itself. As the critic Gabrielle Mouret said:   "It is simply a man for all time". Yet Rodin had no intention of producing such a complex   universal symbol when he first conceived the idea.  And The Thinker itself might never have existed   if Rodin had been accepted by the  establishment in the first place. Rejection played a great part in Rodin's career trajectory. Born to a working-class family in 1840,   he was turned down by the Académie des Beaux-Arts in  Paris three times. It would steer Rodin towards   a training in commercial studios, and an aesthetic  far removed from the rigid rules of the mainstream.   The problem was, he may have escaped the  neoclassical training that still dominated the academy. But he missed out on the early  success that graduates were ordinarily assured.   Rodin instead, served a long apprenticeship as a  jobbing craftsman in dozens of studios.   Learning numerous skills that would serve his own practice.  Later in his free time he was finding his own way. Attending life classes in the evening, and  working on his own projects But at 36 years-old, Rodin, struggling with his career was going through a period of intense re-evaluation.   His extensive training up until that  point, gave him unparalleled technical   virtuosity, but the work he produced was  conventional and essentially decorative.  in 1876, Rodin would risk everything and embark on  a trip to Italy to study the works of Michelangelo.  A trip that has been described as "one of the seminal events in modern art".   Rodin traveled to Italy in order to uncover the  secrets of the man he called "the great magician".   It is likely that he probably would have remained  just another talented craftsman, if he hadn't taken the trip. "Michelangelo" he later said "liberated  me from academic sculpture". The trip would teach   Rodin many things, but it was the discovery of the  potential for expressionism in the naked body    that would transform Rodin's work. How the body could  be both universally expressive and deeply personal.   For the rest of Rodin's career, he would use the  human form as the ideal vehicle for conveying   inner emotion and complex symbolic thought. Like his hero, he would make stone "breathe".   On his return to Paris, Rodin was still working  for other studios. A piece attributed to him for   the Carrier-Belleuse studio, was inspired by  Michelangelo's twisted bodies. We see these   twisted poses again and again with Rodin, and the  nude as a heroic figure is classic Michelangelo.   He found the unfinished works of the italian master  equally powerful, and would purposely leave his own   works unfinished, leaving the seam lines left by  plaster moulds or finger marks as a challenge to   what constituted a finished work. Something he was  criticized for at the time. But these "imperfections"   are what give Rodin's work a restlessness and  a tension, not found in the classical approach at the time. At the age of 37 he would show his  first important sculpture at the Paris salon.  What was unusual, was the work wasn't an illustration of  a classical story, wasn't a classical hero, wasn't   anything really. Shockingly, for the first time, it was just a male figure - it was "art for art's sake".   Inspired by both Michelangelo AND classical Greek  sculpture (which had itself inspired Michelangelo),   it was way ahead of its time, and was fiercely  rejected by the critics, due to its extreme naturalism. Because it was exactly life size, Rodin was accused of "cheating", by using a life cast of his sitter. He was found innocent, but he would  never make an exact life-size sculpture again.   From then on, he would either make his  figures smaller or larger than life.   The subsequent scandal made Rodin a household name,  and would lead to his first major commission.   THIS was where all of Rodin's  new ideas would come to fruition.   For most people there is only one Thinker, and it  is big and bronze. But the first Thinker was small,  made of clay by Rodin's own hand, and it wasn't  called "The Thinker". In 1880 Rodin was commissioned   to make the monumental entrance doors to the  Decorative Arts museum in Paris. The museum never opened and the gates were never finished. Even though Rodin continued to work on the project   for the rest of his life. The commission however, would give birth to two of his greatest sculptures,   and push the boundaries of sculpture ,in new  and radical ways. The theme of the gates was   Dante's Inferno, and seated on the tympanum was  the figure that twenty years later would become   "The Thinker", but in 1880, he was still known as "The Poet",  and represented the writer Dante Alighieri.   Dante is surrounded by 180 of his creations, from his epic  poem. He is leaning forward to observe the circles   of Hell, while meditating on his work. Rodin's placing of a centralised figure, presiding over   the gates, reminds us of Michelangelo's Christ at  the centre of "The Last Judgment'.   Rodin would take inspiration from Michelangelo's twisted  and tortured bodies for "The Gates of Hell", but would add a sensual and erotic  element not seen before in Western art.  Dante as a muscular, naked male may seem absurd  when we think of classic images of him.   But Rodin himself said "Thin. ascetic Dante in his straight  robe, separated from all the rest would have been   without meaning. I conceived another Thinker, a naked man seated on a rock, the fertile thought slowly elaborates itself within his  brain. He is no longer "a dreamer". He is "a creator".   In 1884, still twenty years before Rodin  started producing his large-scale thinkers,   he produced the very first small-scale  bronze cast of the figure, for a private collector.   There are unexpected details. The most  obvious being, that he is wearing a "Florentine cap",   found in no other examples of the work. When this  cast was made, it seems likely that Rodin believed   the Florentine cap was necessary to suggest,  that this naked athlete was an image of Dante.   But this detail disappeared in future castings,  as the work gradually took on a more universal sense, and ultimately "The Poet" became "The Thinker".  Rodin was always experimenting, and it is why each Thinker is unique. Photography was important to him,  and he used photographs of his work to try out new   ideas, sketching directly onto the image. Here we  see him early on, trying out a cap on The Thinker.   These small bronze castings were an immediate  and considerable success, but apart from the 1884 casting, make no more references to Dante. The figure was highly influenced by Michelangelo.   The taught muscular nude, the sense of movement the  dynamic pose gives, which at first seemed natural,   but in fact is anything but. The man's right arm on  his left knee is twisted in an extremely unnatural  way. Possibly inspired by this sculpture by Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux. It was around 1903 that "The Poet" got his new name. It was given the name, not by the artist, but by foundry workers, who thought it looked similar to a statue of Lorenzo de Medici, by Michelangelo, also known as "Il Penseroso"... "The Thinker". Despite this 1905 film of Rodin, he never carved with a hammer and chisel,   but rather, primarily modelled in clay, for  others to carve in marble or cast into bronze. It was standard practice in the 19th  century to have a team recreate your works.  There was a huge demand for public statuary,  and many artists had large studios turning out   editions of their greatest hits. Rodin modelled  directly from life, with no preparatory sketches.   Yet drawing was integral to Rodin's practice, and  he had an encyclopedic knowledge of the human body. But he rarely used them as studies or projects  for a sculpture or monument. More as a way of   informing his practice. As Rodin himself said: "It's very simple - my drawings are the key to my work".   When making a clay figure, he worked very quickly.  Stopping occasionally, but rapidly executing ideas   as they came into his head. He would ask the models  to move around as he worked, and not to "pose",   but to act natural. It was in these clay figures  where we see the physical mark of the artist.   Traces of his fingerprints are often visible  on the surface of his original plaster casts.   Clay deteriorates very quickly unless it  is kept wet. In order to preserve his work   a plaster version would be cast. Rodin would  select one of the plaster casts for exhibition,   and buyers would then order a bronze cast or  stone carving, which would then be made by his team.   The small clay figure Rodin made in 1880 for  "The Gates of Hell" was enlarged by a consortium   of third-party moulders and casters, for the  first time in 1903 - under the artist's direction.   In the same year, the first Thinker  was cast in bronze using the "lost wax method".   This method produced hollow bronzes, with  thin walls, which allowed larger statues to be produced, improve the qualities of the cast, and  reduce the amount of expensive metal required.   There is no record of the clay figures Rodin made,  as it would be destroyed in the casting process.  His assistants would take the original plaster  model, and make a mold, which is the exact negative   of the original model. Then molten wax is poured  into the mould, and swished around until an even   coating (usually about three millimetres thick) covers the inner surface of the mold. Then the hollow interior is filled with core material,  which could resist the heat of the molten bronze.   The mold is then heated up and the wax melts,  leaving a hollow gap between the molds where the wax once was. Giving the process its name -  "lost wax". Then the bronze is heated to 2000   degrees Fahrenheit till molten. And it is then  poured in to fill the cavities left by the wax.   Once the metal has cooled and solidified, the  plaster mold is broken and the metal models are removed. The process is more complicated than that, but this gives a general idea of the casting process, and shows us how Rodin could  produce dozens of originals from one plaster mold.   We can trace these "mass production methods" back  to his early training in commercial studios. Rodin would make a fortune, while blurring the boundaries  as to "what made a work of art an original". The first large-scale Thinker was shown at  the Paris salon of 1904. It was a huge success   and was bought for the city of Paris by public  subscription, and placed in front of the Pantheon.   The inaugural speech declared: "This is the  angel of liberty, this is the giant of light".   It was eventually moved to the Rodin  museum, where it sits today.  A museum set up while Rodin was still alive, that  still own the rights to cast Rodin "originals".   It is important to remember that, in his  lifetime, Rodin had very little to do with his work   once it left the sculpture stand. He left it to his assistants.   Today, that is the job of the Rodin museum. In the 1860s, when Rodin began making sculptures, art was deeply rooted in the past. By the time he died in 1917, it had been transformed into something modern. Today his pioneering work is seen as a critical  link between traditional and contemporary art.   His story is an old-fashioned "rags to riches" story. Born into poverty, he was pretty poor   up until his forties. Rejected by the art  establishment, he followed his own path.   He managed to save enough money to travel to Italy,  where he fell under the spell of Michelangelo. It transformed him. And Rodin went from a lackluster  career, to becoming a hugely successful artist.   It gave him untold wealth and fame, and allowed him to live the life, most artists could only dream of. By the time of his death from influenza in 1917,   Rodin would be known as the "new Michelangelo".  For a working class, largely self-educated man   this would be a title, he would have  been more than honored to receive.
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Channel: Great Art Explained
Views: 315,640
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Keywords: art explained, art, history of art, art history, paintings explained, painting, art techniques, arte, onlineart, creative, artnews, fine art, genius, paris, science, history, artist, france, impressionists, rodin, French artists, smart history, nerd writer, khan academy, cataracts, blind, great art, sculpture, the thinker, le penseur, lost wax method, bronze casting, bronze statue, rodin museum, Musee du rodin, philosophy
Id: Z4AEXRtDEEY
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Length: 15min 48sec (948 seconds)
Published: Tue Dec 29 2020
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