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Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City 44.6 × 21.9 × 21.8 More images: The Burghers of Calais: 1884 to 1889 Bronze Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City 201.6 × 205.4 × 195.9 More images: Kneeling Female Faun: 1884 Bronze Gates of Hell, Musée Rodin, Paris More images: Torso of Adele: 1884 Plaster Musée Rodin, Paris 11×37.5 More ...
Brooklyn Museum, New York Suzon is an early bust of a woman by Auguste Rodin , created between 1872 and 1873 [ 1 ] when he wholly worked on commissions. [ 2 ] It was inspired by late 18th century Romantic works whilst Rodin was in exile in Brussels due to the Franco-Prussian War . [ 3 ]
You Must Change Your Life: the Story of Rainer Maria Rilke and Auguste Rodin, New York: W. W. Norton and Company. ISBN 0393245063. Elsen, Albert (1980). In Rodin's Studio: A Photographic Record of Sculpture in the Making. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. ISBN 9780801413292. Le Normand-Romain, Antoinette (2014). Rodin. New York: Abbeville.
This statue of Christopher Columbus may look familiar to anyone who has visited New York's Columbus Circle as the one that's on a 75-foot-tall granite column in the middle of the traffic circle ...
The Columbus Monument is a 76-foot (23 m) column in the center of Columbus Circle in New York City honoring the Italian explorer Christopher Columbus, who first made an expedition to the New World in 1492. The monument was created by Italian sculptor Gaetano Russo in 1892.
The Rodin Studios, also known as 200 West 57th Street, is an office building at Seventh Avenue and 57th Street in Midtown Manhattan in New York City. It was designed by Cass Gilbert in the French Gothic style and built from 1916 to 1917.
Columbus Circle is a traffic circle and heavily trafficked intersection in the New York City borough of Manhattan, located at the intersection of Eighth Avenue, Broadway, Central Park South (West 59th Street), and Central Park West, at the southwest corner of Central Park.
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.