Detail View: Archivision Base to Module 9: Burghers of Calais

Preferred Title: 
Burghers of Calais
Alternate Title: 
Les Bourgeois de Calais
Image View: 
Overall view of the group
Creator: 
Auguste Rodin (French sculptor, 1840-1917)
Location: 
repository: Stanford University (Palo Alto, California, United States)
Location Note: 
Memorial Court at entrance to Main Quad and Stanford Memorial Church
GPS: 
+37.427993-122.169963
Date: 
1884-1895 (creation)
Cultural Context: 
French
Style Period: 
Nineteenth century; Romantic
Work Type 1: 
sculpture (visual work)
Classification: 
sculpture
Material: 
bronze
Technique: 
casting (process)
Measurements: 
2 m (height)
Subjects: 
historical; human figure; military or war; Hundred Years War
Description: 
In late 1884 Rodin secured the civic commission for a monument to the Burghers of Calais who in 1347 had offered their lives to the English in return for ending their siege. Although commissioned to depict only the leading burgher, Eustache de St Pierre, Rodin decided to show all six, realizing each individually, first nude and then draped, in progressively larger stages, until the final scale of 2 m in height. Grouped one behind another in a ring, these gaunt figures express indecision as much as self-sacrifice. After delays caused by disapproval of the composition and financial problems within the city government, the final work was unveiled in Calais, in front of the Hôtel de Ville, in June 1895. Before 1917 three more casts were made, one of which was purchased in 1911 by the National Art Collections Fund for the Victoria Tower Gardens, London (Rodin envisaged the monument high on a pedestal, silhouetted against the Houses of Parliament). There are seven additional casts and many bronzes of the individual
Collection: 
Archivision Addition Module Five
Identifier: 
6A1-RA-BC-A2
Rights: 
© Scott Gilchrist, Archivision, Inc.