Details
Auguste Rodin (1840-1917)
Main crispée gauche, grand modèle
signed, dated and inscribed 'A. Rodin © .by musée Rodin 1967.’ (on the right side of the base); inscribed with foundry mark '.Georges Rudier..Fondeur.Paris.' (on the back of the base); with raised signature 'A. Rodin' (on the underside)
bronze with dark brown and green patina
Height: 1812 in. (46.8 cm.)
Conceived before 1898; this bronze version cast in 1967
Provenance
Musée Rodin, Paris.
B. Gerald Cantor, Los Angeles (acquired from the above, April 1967).
Acquired from the above by the family of the present owner, circa 1968.
Literature
C. Mauclair, L'oeuvre de Rodin, Paris, 1900, pp. 316-320 (another cast illustrated; titled Main d'expression).
F.G. Watkins, Rodin Museum of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, 1929, p. 14, no. 32.
J.L. Tancock, The Sculpture of Auguste Rodin: The Collection of the Rodin Museum, Philadelphia, Philadelphia, 1976, pp. 616-617, no. 120 (another cast illustrated, p. 619; dated circa 1885).
A.E. Elsen, Rodin's Art: The Rodin Collection of the Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford University, New York, 2003, pp. 582-583 and 587-589, no. 190 (another cast illustrated, p. 588, fig. 475; dated 1888).
A. Le Normand-Romain, The Bronzes of Rodin: Catalogue of Works in the Musée Rodin, Paris, 2007, vol. II, p. 499 (another cast illustrated, p. 500, fig. 1).
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Lot Essay

This work will be included in the forthcoming Auguste Rodin catalogue critique de l'oeuvre sculpté currently being prepared by the Comité Auguste Rodin at Galerie Brame et Lorenceau under the direction of Jérôme Le Blay under the archive number 2019-6925B.

To Rodin, hands were as expressive as the human face. His independent sculptures of hands are portraits of emotions. This emphatically modeled, dramatically gesturing hand—that both seeks and draws away, that clenches but cannot grasp—is one of Rodin’s most compelling depictions of powerless despair. The present sculpture was considered by Rodin to be a work in its own right, and a cast from the edition was exhibited during the artist’s lifetime.

When reproached for only showing “simple parts of the human body,” Rodin defended the expressive force of the partial figure: “Those people,” he said, “didn’t they understand anything about sculpture? About study? Don’t they think that an artist has to apply himself to giving as much expression to a hand or a torso as to a face? And that he is logical and far more of an artist to exhibit an arm rather than a 'bust' arbitrarily deprived by tradition of its arms, legs and abdomen? Expression and proportion are the goals. Modelling is the means: it’s through modelling that flesh lives, vibrates, struggles and suffers…” (quoted in D. Viéville, Rodin et Freud: Collectionneurs, La passion à l'oeuvre, Paris, 2008, p. 165).

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