Detail View: Archivision Base to Module 9: Relief panels edited from The Gates of Hell

Preferred Title: 
Relief panels edited from The Gates of Hell
Image View: 
Detail of left side panel
Creator: 
Auguste Rodin (French sculptor, 1840-1917)
Location: 
repository: Musée Rodin (Paris, Île-de-France, France)
Location Note: 
Hôtel Biron; 79 rue de Varenne
GPS: 
+48.8555281+2.315902
Date: 
ca. 1882-1885 (creation)
Cultural Context: 
French
Style Period: 
Nineteenth century
Work Type 1: 
relief (sculpture)
Work Type 2: 
maquette (sculpture)
Classification: 
sculpture
Material: 
plaster
Technique: 
modeling (forming)
Measurements: 
12.5 in (height) x 43.5 in (length) x 6 in (depth, each)
Description: 
While working on The Gates of Hell, Rodin experimented with the design of these two bas-reliefs and considered placing them at the bottom of each door. With their grieving heads, the panels represent the despair that results from a victory of passion over reason. The two pieces (modeled in plaster) were in place on The Gates during the 1890s, but Rodin removed them along with most of the other figures when he stripped the plaster version of the doors for exhibition in 1900. When the artist subsequently replaced many of the figures on The Gates, he did not include these relief panels. The plaster originals are in the Musée Rodin. Bronze copies were cast in 1925 by the foundry Alexis Rudier, Paris, and a pair are in the Rodin Museum of Philadelphia (accession numbers, F1929-7-83a and F1929-7-83b). (Source: Rodin Museum, Philadelphia [website]; http://www.rodinmuseum.org/)
Collection: 
Archivision Addition Module Nine
Identifier: 
7A1-RA-GHS2-A05
Rights: 
© Scott Gilchrist, Archivision, Inc.