Online Collections at UoB - Objects
ID number: BIRBI-62.2 Institution: The Barber Institute of Fine Arts Artist / Maker: Besnard, Albert (1849-1934) Title / Object name: Auguste Rodin Object type: Print
Culture: French Date made: 1900 Materials: Etching Measurements: Plate: 270 x 200; paper: 325 x 260 mm; mount: 555 x 405 mm Provenance: Purchased from Colnaghi's, April 1962, for £14
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This portrait of the renowned sculptor captures the intimacy of the friendship between the two artists. A skilled draughtsman with a keen eye for detail, Besnard is known for revealing a sitter’s personality in his portraits. Presented here against a blank background and in simple crisp line, Rodin is shown with furrowed brow, suggesting his absorption in art. In spite of his public success and recognition – with international exhibitions, honorary degrees and prestigious public commissions – Rodin was a naturally shy man.
With his furrowed brow and focused gaze, the great sculptor Rodin is shown as intense and stoic. Besnard and Rodin enjoyed a long friendship which latterly became fractious when Besnard alleged that Rodin was becoming self-centred. By focusing on the subject from the shoulders up, Besnard depicts his sitter in a manner similar to a marble bust. The portrait is reminiscent of Rodin’s celebrated Bust of Victor-Henri Rochefort which presides over the Barber’s gallery stairs. Besnard was known for his skill at capturing personalities through his draughtsmanship, and Rodin was indeed described by contemporaries as a reserved and serious.
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