A
Tribute To Auguste Rodin
French Sculptor Born 1840 Died 1917.
"It
is true that Rodin's art makes overt
reference to its own artificiality.
When we say that his kind of realism
was not seamless, we mean it: his
sculptures often exposed the joint
lines of the piece molds in which
they were cast, as well as the "unfinished" marks
of modeling and editing. Fragmentation
and repetition functioned in the
same way, as instances of the sculptor's
processes made evident in his product.
Rodin typically made "spare
parts" - feet, hands, knees,
and so on - and put together his
figures from these. And once he made
a figure, he would often remake it,
by recasting multiple versions and
variants. By showing these processes
in the partial figures and modular
recurrences of his exhibited work,
he undercut his own virtuosity as
a conjurer of stories in flesh and
bone, and introduced an evident self-consciousness
about the artificiality of art's
means.
"It is also true that a lot of Rodin's literary and historical themes are
inherited, and often evoke a kind of Romantic sentiment that many modern sensibilities
find cloying. They are much less original, or prophetic, than his radical formal
devices. Common practice says we can take what we like from a predecessor, and
ignore things that we do not, that's the way a lot of fruitful change happens.
But in this case, if we simply disregard the stories Rodin's works tell, in order
to celebrate his "purely formal" contributions, we are cheating ourselves.
By ignoring the immediate arena in which the innovations occurred, we wind up
with an impoverished view of what his achievement was, both as a late nineteenth-century
artist and as a key innovator in modern art. That achievement involved finding
new uses for old things in a double sense: understanding how aspects of sculpture
that seemed unique might be made expressive, and also how themes that seemed
embalmed in tradition could be revivified,in modern terms with these very devices.
"Broken
parts and replicas were a daily part
of a sculptor's working apparatus:
every studio in Paris was littered
with them. But where others would
have completed a work in progress,
Rodin said "enough": and
where others would have considered
a figure made, he made it again -
not because he thought these steps
would cancel meaning in his work,
but because he was willing to see
how such decisions might alter the
range of meanings he could convey.
The truly creative act was to see
how such forms could function within
- not just independently of, or in
antagonism to - his attempts to accord
new meaning to the themes he dealt
with.
"In
his first major commission, for The
Gates of Hell, he showed that in
foiling expectations of wholeness
and variety, he could at the same
time make incompletion and monotony
expressive. By not reconciling junctures
between bodies that had been conceived
separately, Rodin left the patched-together "couples" in
The Gates to collide and claw at
each other without any true mutuality.
Despite their fevered motion, these
figures and groups literally cannot
pull themselves together, so no actions
are resolved, and desires remain
unassuaged. And the reuse of identical
torsos, figures, and groups, hurtling
up and down across this portal, helps
deprive this pandemonium of any sense
of real change or culmination. Fragmentation
and repetition, as tools for dismantling
one's world, became building blocks
of another, an anti-world, where
frantic, incessant incoherence reigned.
They helped reorder the Renaissance
topography of The Gates' ostensible
subject, Dante's Inferno, into what
would properly be called a living
hell - a modern vision of chaos and
futility implanted in every alienated
existence, without discrimination
and without end.
"One
of the positive lessons that emerges
from this gloomy composition is that
treating a form as a movable cipher,
and moving it around from one context
to another, is a fruitful way of
extending the range of meanings it
can carry. The same head works differently
with different bodies, the same foot
or hand expresses something different
in combination with alternative legs
or arms, the same figure yields a
different emotion in combination
with a series of other bodies - or
for that matter, in combination with
itself, as the unrelenting pathos
of the Shades' three-beat dirge demonstrates.
"This
mobility of meaning operated on a
particular level with units in one
work, and also in the larger way
Rodin used fragmentation and repetition
in different contexts within his
work as a whole. Making evident his
piecemeal bodies and modular compositions
proved to be a way to give newly
expressive form both to the psychological
torments of fictive worlds, in The
Gates, and to complex dilemmas of
social order, in The Burghers of
Calais.
"In
his monument to The Burghers, Rodin
revivified a medieval story every
French schoolchild knew, of six citizens
who had volunteered as sacrificial
hostages to an English king in a
deal to end a wasting wartime siege.
Dissatisfied with old conventions
of summing up such a story in one
hero or rhetorical gesture, he decided
that, to get at the truth of what
happened, the monument should treat
all six equally. And to do that,
he followed an analytic process we
have seen before: imagining the cusp
moment of commitment when the victims
prepared to march out to what seemed
certain death, he decomposed the
event, conceptually and practically,
into its smallest bits.
"He
studied not just every man, but every
arm, every hand, and even every finger,
as an individual entity, in order
to build up an atomized repertoire
of discrete units of expression.
Then when he built the monument from
this lavish palette of recombinant
possibilities, he exercised an odd
kind of economy. Two of the final
figures have the same head, and a
third bears that same face only slightly
altered. Identical fingers, hands,
and feet also keep reappearing on
different bodies, in different orientations,
or modified only by flexions. Moreover,
when the time came to put the six
figures together, Rodin did not -
at least not in any conventional
sense of unity. He established no
shared glances or reciprocal gestures
to link them, and, most blatantly,
he did not smooth over the evidence
of the disparate bases on which he
made them. He made their heads all
level - a radical gesture against
the expected pyramidal elevation
of a hero - but he left them literally
without a common ground, standing
on separate axes of balance.
"All
these formal decisions were directly
tied to his conception of the meaning
of the event. The subtle disaccords
between the various limbs and expressions
of the individual figures, and the
variety of inflections among them,
suggested the different stages of
unresolved inner struggles. And the
disjoined bases underlined the isolation,
one from the other, of these private
agonies of regret and resignation,
denial and decision. But the recurrent
parts, along with the steady cadence
of the ponderous sackcloth, conveyed
that these victims were also a collective,
in aspects similar and interchangeable.
In this assembled but estranged group,
the weight of common destiny and
public duty on the one hand, and
the tug of individual wills on the
other, are kept in perpetual tension
by the play between the rhythms of
repetition and the centrifugal energies
of fragmentation.
"The
Burghers are not a professional or
occupational group of the kind Degas
favored, and their gestures have
less to do with the eroding force
of habit than with the engulfing
force of emotion. They form a community
of wills - voluntarist in every sense
- driven by the sparks of diverse
individual actions, pushing against
the resistance of self-interest.
This ad hoc polity, in its sacrifice
for a larger civic, good, lives by
a different mix of the same forms
and the same energies that made The
Gates hellish: private psychic struggles
are the elements, and their conflicted
nature is expressed as undissolved
in the whole. The turn-of-the-century
German sociologist Georg Simmel's
parallel vision of society as a continually
negotiated dispute reads like a meditation
on this monument. "Man has the
capacity," said Simmel, "to
decompose himself into parts and
to feel any one of those as his proper
self. Yet each part may collide with
each other and may struggle for dominion
over the individual's actions. This
capacity places man, insofar as he
feels himself to be a social being,
into an often contradictory relation
with those among his impulses and
interests that are not preempted
by his social character. In other
words, the conflict between society
and the individual is continued in
the individual himself as the conflict
among his component parts. Thus the
basic struggle between society and
individual inheres in the general
form of individual life."
-
Text from "A
Fine Disregard", by
Kirk Varnedoe
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