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Rodin and dance: The Essence of Movement

Rodin and Dance: The Essence of Movement is the first serious study of Rodins late sculptural series known as the Dance Movements. Exploring the artists fascination with dance and bodies in extreme acrobatic poses, the exhibition and accompanying catalogue give an account of Rodins passion for new forms of dance from south-asian dances to the music hall and the avant garde which began appearing on the French stage around 1900.

Rodin made hundreds of drawings and watercolours of dancers. From about 1911 he also gave sculptural expression to this fascination with dancers bodies and movements in creating the Dance Movements, a series of small clay figure studies (each approx. 30 cm in height) that stretch and twist in unsettling ways. These leaping, turning figures in terracotta and plaster were not exhibited during Rodins lifetime or known beyond his close circle, and were only cast in bronze posthumously. Presented alongside the associated drawings and photographs of some of the dancers, they show a new side to Rodins art, in which he pushed the boundaries of sculpture, expressing themes of flight and gravity.

This exhibition catalogue aims to become the authoritative reference for Rodins Dance Movements, comprising essays from leading scholars in the field of sculpture. It will include an introductory essay on the history of the bronze casting of the Dance Movements and the critical fortune of the series, an essay on the dancers Rodin admired, and an extensive technical essay. The Catalogue will comprise detailed entries on the works in the exhibition and new technical information on the drawings.

Contributors include Alexandra Gerstein, Curator of Sculpture and Decorative Arts, The Courtauld Gallery; Antoinette Le Normand-Romain, Director, Institut National dHistoire de lArt, Paris; Juliet Bellow, Associate Professor of Art History, American University in Washington, DC and currently Resident Fellow, the Center for Ballet and the Arts, New York University; François Blanchetière, Curator of Sculpture at the Musée Rodin with sculpture conservators Agnès Cascio and Juliette Lévy; Sophie Biass-Fabiani, Curator of Works on Paper at the Musée Rodin; Kate Edmondson, Conservator of Works on Paper at The Courtauld Gallery; and Aline Magnien, Director of the Laboratoire de Recherche des Monuments Historiques.

Pris ved 1Stk 425,00 DKK

Emne Skulptur
Kunstner Auguste Rodin
Forfatter Alexandra Gerstein
Sprog Engelsk
Illustrationer Rigt illustreret
Format / Sideantal 21,5 x 26 cm. / 192 s.
Udgivelsesår 2016
Indbinding Hæftet
Forlag The Courtauld Gallery
Antikvarisk
Antal
Køb
ISBN 9781907372995
Lev. 3-5 dage

Rodin and Dance: The Essence of Movement is the first serious study of Rodins late sculptural series known as the Dance Movements. Exploring the artists fascination with dance and bodies in extreme acrobatic poses, the exhibition and accompanying catalogue give an account of Rodins passion for new forms of dance from south-asian dances to the music hall and the avant garde which began appearing on the French stage around 1900.

Rodin made hundreds of drawings and watercolours of dancers. From about 1911 he also gave sculptural expression to this fascination with dancers bodies and movements in creating the Dance Movements, a series of small clay figure studies (each approx. 30 cm in height) that stretch and twist in unsettling ways. These leaping, turning figures in terracotta and plaster were not exhibited during Rodins lifetime or known beyond his close circle, and were only cast in bronze posthumously. Presented alongside the associated drawings and photographs of some of the dancers, they show a new side to Rodins art, in which he pushed the boundaries of sculpture, expressing themes of flight and gravity.

This exhibition catalogue aims to become the authoritative reference for Rodins Dance Movements, comprising essays from leading scholars in the field of sculpture. It will include an introductory essay on the history of the bronze casting of the Dance Movements and the critical fortune of the series, an essay on the dancers Rodin admired, and an extensive technical essay. The Catalogue will comprise detailed entries on the works in the exhibition and new technical information on the drawings.

Contributors include Alexandra Gerstein, Curator of Sculpture and Decorative Arts, The Courtauld Gallery; Antoinette Le Normand-Romain, Director, Institut National dHistoire de lArt, Paris; Juliet Bellow, Associate Professor of Art History, American University in Washington, DC and currently Resident Fellow, the Center for Ballet and the Arts, New York University; François Blanchetière, Curator of Sculpture at the Musée Rodin with sculpture conservators Agnès Cascio and Juliette Lévy; Sophie Biass-Fabiani, Curator of Works on Paper at the Musée Rodin; Kate Edmondson, Conservator of Works on Paper at The Courtauld Gallery; and Aline Magnien, Director of the Laboratoire de Recherche des Monuments Historiques.