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The Cantor Arts Center's collection houses over 38,000 items, including African Art, American Art, Ancient Art, the Andy Warhol Photography Archive, Art of Asia and Oceania, Art of the Indigenous Americas, Auguste Rodin, Eadweard Muybridge, European Art, Modern and Contemporary Art, Photographs, Prints and Drawings, Richard Diebenkorn Sketchbooks, Sculptures on Campus, and collections and ...
This list is incomplete ; you can help by adding missing items. (February 2011) The Thinker in front of the Rodin Museum in Philadelphia This is a list of The Thinker sculptures made by Auguste Rodin. The Thinker, originally a part of Rodin's The Gates of Hell, exists in several versions. The original size and the later monumental size versions were both created by Rodin, and the most valuable ...
The Thinker, Iris & B. Gerald Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford University, Object Number 1988.106, bronze cast No. 10, edition of 12. Auguste Rodin and The Thinker Archived 2018-02-02 at the Wayback Machine, the story behind his most iconic sculpture of all time at biography.com.
Musée Rodin, Paris 37 x 35 x 21 Diane Chasseresse [14] 1865 to 1870 Marble Musée Rodin, Paris 50 x 33.5 x 29.5 Alsatian Orphan [15] 1871 White marble Museum of Fine Arts, Reims 39.1 x 22.7 x 19.4 More images: Mignon [16] 1870 Bronze Musée des beaux-arts, Angers 40 x 32 x 27 More images: Masque de femme [16] 1870 Bronze 47 x 37 Madame Garnier ...
“Rodin: Contemplation and Dreams – Selections from the Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Collections” will include nine life-size statues, portraits, full figures, torsos, fragments, and reliefs ...
Subsequent bronzes have been distributed by the Musée Rodin to a number of locations, including: The Kunsthaus Zürich, Zürich; The Iris & B. Gerald Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford University; The Plateau, Seoul, South Korea(closed since 2016, now the bronze is at the storage of the Ho-Am Art Museum) Museo Soumaya, Mexico City, Mexico
Between 1981 and 1984, part of the Cantor Rodin collection was displayed in a private museum beside Cantor's 105th-floor offices in the World Trade Center. [6] Much of the collection was donated to over 70 art institutions worldwide, such as the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and the Iris & B. Gerald Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford ...
Despair (French: Le Désespoir) or Despair at the Gate (French: Désespoir de la Porte) is a sculpture by Auguste Rodin that he conceived and developed from the early 1880s to c. 1890 as part of his The Gates of Hell project. The figure belongs to a company of damned souls found in the nine circles of Hell described by Dante in The Divine Comedy.