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Overview

Auguste Rodin (1840-1917) had been widely known for decades when the young Bohemian-Austrian poet Rainer Maria Rilke traveled to Paris to interview him for an essay to be published in a German art book series. Intensely sensitive to art, and in particular to the irreducible power of objects, Rilke responded to Rodin’s work in prose of great lyricism and clarity. His essay, a sustained and deeply personal meditation on Rodin’s sculpture, was published in 1903. Loosely structured around a chronology of Rodin’s life, it serves as an engaging introduction to both the sculpture of Rodin and the maturing sensibility of its author.

Rilke stayed on to work as Rodin’s secretary, in one of the most intriguing apprenticeships in the annals of twentieth-century culture; the second volume of his breakthrough collection New Poems (1908) would be dedicated to the sculptor who so deeply influenced it. The Rodin essay, meanwhile, was met with great acclaim in Germany, selling tens of thousands of copies during the poet’s lifetime. It is published here in the original English translation of 1919 by an American poet and artist, Jessie Lemont, and her husband, Hans Trausil, both of whom knew Rilke and Rodin well.

An introduction by the scholar Alexandria Parigoris situates the essay in the context of both men’s work and assesses its enduring value today.
 

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781606065617
Publisher: Getty Publications
Publication date: 05/22/2018
Series: Lives of the Artists
Edition description: 1
Pages: 96
Product dimensions: 4.50(w) x 5.75(h) x 0.30(d)

About the Author

Rainer Maria Rilke (1875-1926), widely considered one of the greatest poets of the twentieth century, is best known for the lyric sequences the Duino Elegies and the Sonnets to Orpheus. Alexandra Parigoris teaches history at the University of Leeds, where she is Henry Moore Fellow.
 

Read an Excerpt

We can pretend to know precisely. At three o’clock on the Monday afternoon of September 1, 1902, bearing the appropriate petitions of entry, although he had arranged his visit in advance, the twenty-six-year-old poet Rainer Maria Rilke appeared on the stoop of Auguste Rodin’s Paris studio, and was given an uncustomary gentle and cour- teous reception. Of course Rilke had written Rodin a month before to warn of his impending arrival. It was a letter baited with the sort of fulsome praise you believe only when it is said of yourself, and it must have been an additional pleasure for Rodin to be admired by a stranger so young, as well as someone with a commission to write of the sculptor and the sculptor’s work as hand- somely as, in his correspondence, he already had.

Table of Contents

Part I
Ève
Paolo et Francesca
L'Homme au nez Casse / Man with the Broken Nose
L'Homme des Premiers Ages / Age of Bronze
Saint Jean-Baptiste
La Voix Intérieure / The Inner Voice
L'Èternel Printemps / Eternal Springtime
L'Èternelle Idole / The Eternal Idol
Le Penseur / The Thinker
La Pensée / Thought
Dessin / Study
Dessin / Study
Madame Vicuña
Bust of J. P. Laurens
Monument a Victor Hugo (ébauche) / Monument to Victor Hugo (figure study)
Bourgeois de Calais / The Burghers of Calais
Bourgeois de Calais / The Burghers of Calais
L'Enfant Prodigue / The Prodigal Son
La Tour de Travail / Tower of Labor
Ètude de nu pour le Balzac / Nude Study of Balzac
Part II
Balzac
Main / Hand
Clemenceau
Dessin / Study
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