Musée Rodin Essays

  • The Kiss Vs Gnaw Analysis

    896 Words  | 4 Pages

    is sculpture by Auguste Rodin, made entirely of white marble. It was created in 1886-1898 and is located in Musée Rodin, Paris. Originally, the subjects of this sculpture were based on fictional characters from Dante’s Divine Comedy, Francesca and Paolo. The lovers that were slain by Francesca’s husband, Paolo’s brother, after he witnessed them kissing. The sculpture was, at first, made to become a part of another piece by Rodin, The Gates of Hell, but upon completion Rodin decided that the happiness

  • Meaning Of The Three Shades By Auguste Rodin

    585 Words  | 3 Pages

    the most fascinating was “The Three shades” sculpture. This sculpture is part of a much bigger sculputure entittled “Gates of Hell”. Created in 1886 by Auguste Rodin, was one piece of “The Gates of Hell” which was in fact very special because it stands at the top of the sculpture. To make the this fascinating sculpture, it took Auguste Rodin 20 to 37 years of his lifetime. To construct the entire was quite in fact a headache for him because by the time he needed to construct the other half, World War

  • Nostalgia In Midnight In Paris

    1709 Words  | 7 Pages

    Most of us sometimes evoke nostalgic feelings from our past. When people are exhausted to their present, they often imagine going back to not only the distant past but also the recent time. For instance, college seniors who have about one year for graduating would miss the time when they just entered a university. Also, some office workers would look back on the past longing for their old school days. Likewise, many people often pine for the past, the time they think that they would feel happier

  • Auguste Rodin's Accomplishments

    1803 Words  | 8 Pages

    parents in very humble circumstances in 1840, Auguste Rodin was such a unique soul who is always within his own solitary. Perhaps when his fame arrived, eventually made him even more solitary. He is always in between all the gathered misunderstandings of his art viewers. He was sent to pursue his simplest studies in a little boarding school at Beauvais, of which his uncle was the principal at his early age. Just like many successors, Auguste Rodin

  • Auguste Rodin: Gates Of Hell By Dante Alighieri

    416 Words  | 2 Pages

    Karmyn Goodson Art 100 Mr. Nyaberi November 21, 2014 Auguste Rodin: “Gates of Hell” The motivation that Auguste Rodin used to create the sculpture “Gates of Hell,” came from the first part of Dante Alighieri’s poem The Divine Comedy. The name of this poem was called Inferno, which means ”hell” in Italian. Rodin imagined the scenes described by Dante as a world with limitless space and a lack of gravitational pull. This expressive thought allowed for endless and essential experimentation by the artist

  • Jean Lois Millet Research Paper

    652 Words  | 3 Pages

    Brooke Camardelle Art History 1441 April 15,2015 Jean-François Millet The Gleaners, 1857, oil on canvas Jean-François Millet was born on October 4, 1814 in Normandy to Jean-Louis-Nicolas and Aimée-Henriette-Adélaïde Henry Millet. The Family were farmers in the farming village of Gruchy. He learned about Latin and modern others with the help from two village priests. He was sent to Cherbourg to study with a portrait painter by the name of Paul Dumouchel in 1833, at the age of 19

  • Importance Of Perspective In Renaissance Art

    968 Words  | 4 Pages

    Perspective is considered one of the most important aspects of Renaissance art. Artists such as Masaccio, Leonardo Da Vinci and Raphael made the use of this device in many of their work. Thanks to Filippo Brunelleschi, who ‘invented’ and developed this technique called one point linear perspective. The intention of perspective in Renaissance art is to depict reality, reality being the ‘truth’. By simulating the three dimensional space on a flat surface, we in fact incorporate this element of realism

  • Paris Abroad Research Paper

    512 Words  | 3 Pages

    Abundance Paris is home to some of the world 's most famous works of art, housed in equally famous museums. Of course there 's the Mona Lisa and Venus de Milo at the Louvre. But you 'll find smaller crowds and equally stunning pieces at the Musée Rodin, Musée d 'Orsay, and the Centre Pompidou, Europe 's largest modern art museum. If your trip falls on the first Sunday of the month, you can save some money, as many of the city 's museums open their doors free of charge. If you 've never been to Paris