Balzac - RODIN, Auguste - WGA
Balzac by RODIN, Auguste
Balzac by RODIN, Auguste

Balzac

by RODIN, Auguste, Bronze

This statue is the monument in memory of the French novelist Honor� Balzac (1799-1850). The work was commissioned in 1891 by the Soci�t� des Gens de Lettres, a full size plaster model was displayed in 1898 at a Salon in Champ de Mars. After coming under criticism, the model was rejected by the soci�t� and Rodin moved it to his home in Meudon. In 1939 (22 years after the sculptor’s death) the model was cast in bronze for the first time and placed on the Boulevard du Montparnasse in Paris.

In the 1880s, Rodin had begun removing parts of the bodies of his statues to give more meaning to the rest; in portraying Balzac, he concealed the entire body. The figure has no arms, even; only the head emerges from the top of his menhir symbolizing creation. This is the starting point of twentieth-century sculpture. Indeed, it was because it was so far ahead of his time that the monument was rejected by the Societies.

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