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tion he sees both the development of the masses and their
capacity to signify. If the sculptor’s attitude to the relief
is that of an omniscient narrator commenting upon the
cause-and-effect relationship of forms in both historical
and plastic space, the viewer’s corresponding attitude is
spelled out by the nature of the relief itself: he assumes
a parallel omniscience in his reading of the work in all
its lucidity.
Indeed, the nineteenth-century theorists who; wrote
about sculpture demanded that all form, whether free
standing in space or not, must achieve the clarity that
seems to be the very essence of relief. “All details of form
must unite in a more comprehensive form,” Adolf von
Hildebrand writes. “All separate judgments of depth must
enter into a unitary, all-inclusive judgment of depth. So
that ultimately the entire richness of a figure’s form
stands before us as a backward continuation of one
simple plane.” And he adds, “Whenever this is not the
case, the unitary pictorial effect of the figure is lost. A
tendency is then felt to clarify what we cannot perceive
from our present point of view, by a change of position.
Thus we are driven all around the figure without ever
being able to grasp it once in its entirety.”4
This, then, is the sense in which the mechanical bird,
October’s golden automaton, is tied to Rude’s sculpture
of La Marseillaise. The automaton is part of a proof
about the order of the world. Man’s capacity to create the
bird is taken to herald his capacity to understand, by
analogy, the endeavors of the w orld’s Creator. His own
art of contrivance is seen as giving him a conceptual
foothold on the logic of a universal design. Just as the
clockwork bird carries with it the aspiration to under
stand, by imitation, the inner workings of nature, Rude’s
relief aspires to comprehend and project the movement
of historical time and man’s place within it. The narrative
art of relief is Rude’s medium, which makes this work
paradigmatic for all of nineteenth-century sculpture . . .
except for Rodin.
Yet, one might ask, why not for Rodin as well? In a
sense R odin’s career is entirely defined by his efforts on
a single project, the Gates of Hell, which he began in
1880 and worked on until the time of his death— a
project for which almost all of his sculpture was orig14
6. R odin : Gates of Hell
(architectural model), ca. 1880.
Terra cotta, 39V2” x 25.
Musee Rodin, Paris. (Photo,
Geoffrey Clements)
inally fashioned. Like La Marseillaise, the Gates of Hell
(fig. 5) is a relief, the sculptural decoration for a monu
mental set of doors that were to serve as the entrance for
a projected museum.6 And, again like La Marseillaise,
the work is tied to a narrative scheme, having been com
missioned as a cycle of illustrations of Dante’s Divine
Comedy.
In the beginning Rodin pursued a conception of the
Gates that accorded with the conventions of narrative
relief. His early architectural sketches for the project
divide the face of the doors into eight separate panels,
each of which would carry narrative reliefs arranged
sequentially. The obvious models for this format were the
great Renaissance doorways, particularly Ghiberti’s Gates
of Paradise, the portal for the Baptistry of the Cathedral
of Florence. But by the time Rodin had finished the
third architectural model in terra cotta (fig. 6), it was
clear that his impluse was to dam up the flow of sequential
time. In that model the divisions between the separate
panels are nearly all erased, while at the same time a
large, static icon has been implanted in the midst of the
dramatic space. Composed of a horizontal bar and a
vertical stem, topped by the looming vertical mass of
The Thinker, this cruciform image has the effect of cen
tralizing and flattening the space of the doors, subjecting
all of the figures to its abstract presence,
In its final version the Gates of Hell resists all attempts
to be read as a coherent narrative. Of the myriad sets of
figures, only two relate directly to the parent story of
The Divine Comedy. They are the groupings of Ugolino
and His Sons and Paolo and Francesca (fig. 7), both of
which struggle for space on the lower half of the left
door. And even the separateness and legibility of these
two “scenes” are jeopardized by the fact that the figure
of the dying son of Ugolino is a twin of the figure of
Paolo.8 This act of repetition occurs on the other door,
where at the lower right edge and halfway up the side,
one sees the same male body (fig. 8), in extreme disten
tion, reaching upward. In one of his appearances, the
actor supports an outstretched female figure, His back is
arched with the effort of his gesture, and the strain across
the surface of his torso is completed in the backward
thrust of his head and neck. This figure, when cast and
15
7. l e f t Rodin: Gates of Hell
(detail of lower left panel).
Philadelphia Museum of Art.
(Photo, A. J. Wyatt, staff
photographer)
8. f a r r ig h t Rodin: Gates of
Hell (detail of right panel).
(Photo: Farrell Grehan)
9. n e a r r ig h t Rodin: The
Prodigal Son, before 1889.
Bronze, 55\% x 41 \% x 27\%.
Musee Rodin, Paris. (Photo,
Bruno Jarret)
10. a b o v e l e f t Rodin: Fugit
Amor, before 1887. Marble,
17\%” x 15 x 6\%. Musee
Rodin, Paris. (Photo, Adelys)
exhibited singly away from the doors, is called The
Prodigal Son (fig. 9). When coupled with the female
and reoriented in space in relation to her body, the male
figure becomes part of a group called Fugit Amor (fig.
10) . On the surface of the right door, the Fugit Amor
couple appears twice, unchanged except for the angle at
which it relates to the ground plane of the work. The
double appearance is extremely conspicuous, and the very
persistence of that doubling cannot be read as accidental.
Rather, it seems to spell the breakdown of the principle
of spatio-temporal uniqueness that is a prerequisite of
logical narration, for doubling tends to destroy the very
possibility of a logical narrative sequence.
At the top of the Gates Rodin again has recourse to
this strategy of repetition. There, The Three Shades (fig.
11) are a threefold representation of the same body—
three identical casts radiating away from the point at
which their extended left arms converge. In this way
The Three Shades act to parody the tradition of grouping
triple figures that was central to neoclassical sculpture.
17
Wanting to transcend the partial information that any
single aspect of a figure can convey, the neoclassical
sculptor devises strategies to present the human body
through multiple views. His interest in multiple vantage
points comes from a conviction that he must find an ideal
viewpoint, one that will contain the totality of information
necessary for a conceptual grasp of the object. To say,
for example, that one “knows” what a cube is, cannot
simply mean that one has seen such an object, since any
single view of a cube is necessarily partial and incom
plete. The absolute parallelism of the six sides and twelve
edges that is essential to the meaning of the cube’s geom
etry can never be revealed by a single look. One’s knowl
edge of the cube must be knowledge of an object that tran
scends the particularities of a single perspective in which
only three sides, at most, can be seen. It must be a knowl
edge that, in some sense, enables one to see the object
from everywhere at once, to understand the object even
while “seeing” it.
In classicism the transcendence of the single point of
view was often explicitly dealt with by using figures in
pairs and in threes, so that the front view of one figure
11. l e f t Rodin: The Three
Shades, 1880. Bronze, 74\% *
71 x 30. Mitsee Rodin, Paris.
12. a b o v e Antonio Canova
(1757-1882): The Three
Graces, 1813. Marble.
Hermitage, Leningrad. (Photo,
Alinari)
18
13. l e f t Bertel Thonvaldsen
(1768-1844): The Three Graces,
1821. Marble. Palazzo Brera,
Milan. (Photo, Broggi)
14. RIGHT Jean-Baptiste
Carpeaux (1827-75): The
Dance, 1873. Terra cotta, 90 x
56. Opera, Paris. (Photo,
Arch. Phot. Paris)
would be available simultaneously with the back view of
its mate. Without destroying the uniqueness of the indi
vidual form, there arises, then, a perception of a generic
ideal or type in which each separate figure is seen to
participate; and from this— displayed in sequence, in a
series of rotations— the meaning of the lone body is
established. During the early nineteenth-century, in both
Canova’s and Thorwaldsen’s neoclassical sculptures of
The Three Graces (figs. 12 and 13), one finds the main
tenance of this tradition along with the meaning that
underlies it. The viewer sees not a single figure in rota
tion but, rather, three female nudes who present the body
in three different angles. As in relief, this presentation
arranges the bodies along a single, frontal plane, so that
it is legible at a glance.
Tlie persistence of this strategy as a desideratum for
sculpture occurs decades later in Carpeaux’s ensemble
for the fagade of the Paris Opera. There, in The Dance
(fig. 14) of 1868-69, the two nymphs that flank the
central male figure perform for the viewer in much the
same way as Canova’s Graces had done. Mirroring each
other’s posture, the two figures rotate in counterpoint,
simultaneously exposing the front and back of the body
to view. With the symmetry of their movement comes a
19
Wanting to transcend the partial information that any
single aspect of a figure can convey, the neoclassical
sculptor devises strategies to present the human body
through multiple views. His interest in multiple vantage
points comes from a conviction that he must find an ideal
viewpoint, one that will contain the totality of information
necessary for a conceptual grasp of the object. To say,
for example, that one “knows” what a cube is, cannot
simply mean that one has seen such an object, since any
single view of a cube is necessarily partial and incom
plete. The absolute parallelism of the six sides and twelve
edges that is essential to the meaning of the cube’s geom
etry can never be revealed by a single look. One’s knowl
edge of the cube must be knowledge of an object that tran
scends the particularities of a single perspective in which
only three sides, at most, can be seen. It must be a knowl
edge that, in some sense, enables one to see the object
from everywhere at once, to understand the object even
while “seeing” it.
In classicism the transcendence of the single point of
view was often explicitly dealt with by using figures in
pairs and in threes, so that the front view of one figure
11. l e f t Rodin: The Three
Shades, 1880. Bronze, 7414 x
71 x 30. Musee Rodin, Paris.
12. a b o v e Antonio Canova
(1757-1882): The Three
Graces, 1813. Marble.
Hermitage, Leningrad. (Photo,
Alinari)
18
13. l e f t Bertel Thonvaldsen
(1768-1844): The Three Graces,
1821. Marble. Palazzo Brera,
Milan. (Photo, Broggi)
14. r ig h t }ean-Baptiste
Carpeaux (1827-75): The
Dance, 1873. Terra cotta, 90 x
56. Opera, Paris. (Photo,
Arch. Phot. Paris)
would be available simultaneously with the back view of
its mate. Without destroying the uniqueness of the indi
vidual form, there arises, then, a perception of a generic
ideal or type in which each separate figure is seen to
participate; and from this— displayed in sequence, in a
series of rotations— the meaning of the lone body is
established. During the early nineteenth-century, in both
Canova’s and Thorwaldsen’s neoclassical sculptures of
The Three Graces (figs. 12 and 13), one finds the main
tenance of this tradition along with the meaning that
underlies it. The viewer sees not a single figure in rota
tion but, rather, three female nudes who present the body
in three different angles. As in relief, this presentation
arranges the bodies along a single, frontal plane, so that
it is legible at a glance.
The persistence of this strategy as a desideratum for
sculpture occurs decades later in Carpeaux’s ensemble
for the facade of the Paris Opera. There, in The Dance
(fig. 14) of 1868-69, the two nymphs that flank the
central male figure perform for the viewer in much the
same way as Canova’s Graces had done. Mirroring each
other’s posture, the two figures rotate in counterpoint,
simultaneously exposing the front and back of the body
to view. With the symmetry of their movement comes a
19
satisfaction about the wholeness of one’s perception of
the form, and about the way it fuses with the notion of
balance that suffuses the entire composition. Even though
The Dance breaks with the surface qualities of neoclassical
style, it carries on the underlying premises, and satisfies
in every way H ildebrand’s dictum about the need for all
sculpture to conform to the principles of relief.
It is R odin’s lack of conformation to these principles
that makes The Three Shades disturbing. By simply
repeating the same figure three times, Rodin strips away
from the group the idea of composition— the idea of
rhythmic arrangement of forms, the poise and counter
poise of which are intended to reveal the latent meaning 15. n e a r r ig h t Thomas Eakins
(1844-1916): Spinning, ca.
of the body. The act of simply lining up identical markers 1882-83. Bronze, 19 x 15.
of the human form, one after the other, carries with it Philadelphia Museum, of Art.
(Photo, A. J. Wyatt, staff
none of the traditional meaning of composition. In place photographer)
of the intended angle/reverse-angle of Canova or Car- 16. FAR r ig h t Adolf von
peaux, Rodin imposes an unyielding, mute, bluntness on Hildebrand (1847-1921):
Archery Lesson, 1888. Stone,
his Shades. This he does in the artless, almost primitive, 50 x 44 Wallraf-Richartz
placement of the three heads at the same level, or in the Museum, Cologne.
strange repetition of the identical but separate pedestals
on which each member of the group stands. The artful
arrangements of Canova and Carpeaux had made the
external views of their figures seem transparent to a
sense of internal meaning. But R odin’s apparent artless
ness endows his figures with a sense of opacity. The
Shades do not form with each other a relationship that
seems capable of signification, of creating a sign that is
transparent to its meaning. Instead, the repetition of the
Shades works to create a sign that is totally self-referential.
In seeming to refer the viewer to nothing more than
his own triple production of the same object, Rodin
replaces the narrative ensemble with one that tells of
nothing but the repetitive process of its own creation. The
Shades, which stand as both an introduction and a climax
to the space of the doors, are as hostile to a narrative
impulse as the “scenes” that occur on the face of the
doors themselves.
The corollary to R odin’s purposeful confusion of narra
tive is his handling of the actual ground of the relief.
For the ground plane of the Gates is simply not conceived
of as the illusionistic matrix out of which the figures
emerge. Relief, as we have seen, suspends the full volume
20
of a figure halfway between its literal projection above
the ground and its virtual existence within the “space” of
the ground. The convention of relief requires that one not
take literally the fact that a figure is only partially
released from its solid surrounds. Rather, the ground of
relief operates like a picture plane, and is interpreted as
an open space in which the backward extension of a face
or a body occurs.
Throughout the nineteenth century, sculptors contin
ually tried to provide the viewer with information about
those unseen (and of course unseeable) sides of whole
objects imbedded within the relief ground. Given the
unassailable frontality of relief, information about the
concealed side of the figure had to come simultaneously
with the viewer’s perception of its front. One strategy
for doing this we have already seen: the acting-out of
the body’s rotation through several figures, as in Canova’s
Three Graces. This information was also supplied, and
increasingly so throughout the nineteenth century, by
the intentional use of actual shadows cast onto the
relief ground by the raised figurative elements. In
21
Thomas Eakins’ bronzes of contemporary genre scenes
(fig. 15) or Hildebrand’s antiquarian plaques (fig. 16),
there is a unifying formal impulse. Whether one looks
at the work of an ardent realist of of a determined
classicist, one sees that forms are marshaled so that the
shadows they cast will direct the viewer’s attention to the
buried and unseen sides of the figures.
In a sculpture by Medardo Rosso, which is contem
porary with Rodin’s early work on the Gates, the use of
cast shadow operates as it does in Rude or Eakins or
Hildebrand. For Rosso’s Mother and Child Sleeping
(fig. 17) contains not two but three figurative elements.
The first is the gently swollen circle of the infant’s head.
The second is the voluptuous fabric of the side of the
female face in which the concave and convex forms of
forehead, cheek, and mouth are gathered into the simple
contour of the profile. The third, which lies between
them, is the field of shadow cast by the mother onto the
22
17i l e f t Medardo Rosso (18581928): Mother and Child
Sleeping, 1883. Bronze, 13Vs.
Private collection.
18. r ig h t Rodin: “Je suis
belle,” 1882. Bronze, 29Vz x
15\% x ll\% .M usee Rodin,
Paris. (Photo, Adelys)
face of the child. What is striking about this shadow is
that it does not function, as one would expect, by inject
ing a quantity of open space into the clenched forms
of the sculpture, nor by serving as a fulcrum of darkness
on which two light-drenched volumes are balanced. In
stead, the shadow produces visual testimony about the
other side of the woman’s head.
The exposed surfaces of the faces, which carry the
continual reminder of the sculptor’s touch as he modeled
them, become, because of the shadow, the most intense
and poignant area of touch: the contact between the
hidden cheek of the mother and the buried forehead of
the child. It is as though Rosso felt it was not enough
simply to excavate figures from the ground of the relief;
he also supplies data about the realms of interaction so
immersed within the material of the sculpture that neither
the probe of his fingers nor our gaze could reach them.
It is surely part of Rosso’s meaning that beyond the bril
liance of his modeling, which permits light to open and
penetrate his surfaces, lies an unseeable area of the form
about which he is compelled to report.7
In Rodin’s Gates, on the other hand, cast shadow seems
to emphasize the isolation and detachment of full-round
figures from the relief ground and to enforce one’s sense
of the ground as a solid object in its own right, a kind
of object that will not permit the illusion that one sees
through it to a space beyond.
In addition, the shadow underlines the sense that the
figures are intentionally fragmented and necessarily in
complete, rather than only perceptually incomplete, as in
Rosso. For the first time, in the Gates, a relief ground
acts to segment the figures it carries, to present them as
literally truncated, to disallow them the fiction of a virtual
space in which they can appear to expand. The Gates
are, then, simultaneously purged of both the space and
time that would support the unfolding of narrative. Space
in the work is congealed and arrested; temporal rela
tionships are driven toward a dense unclarity.
There is still another level on which Rodin worked this
almost perverse vein of opacity: this is the way he related,
or failed to relate, the outward appearance of the body
to its inner structure. The outward gestures made by
Rodin’s figures do not seem to arise from what one
23
knows of the skeletal substructure that should support
the body’s movement. One has only to compare, for
example, Rodin’s group called “Je s ...
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