Lot Essay
Le penseur was conceived circa 1880 for the center of the tympanum of Rodin's La porte de l'Enfer. He later explained the genesis of his project: "The Thinker has a story. In the days long gone by, I conceived the idea of the Gates of Hell. Before the door, seated on a rock, Dante, thinking of the plan of his poem. Behind him, Ugolino, Francesca, Paolo, all the characters of the Divine Comedy. This project was not realized. Thin, ascetic, Dante separated from the whole naked man, seated upon a rock, his feet drawn under him, his fist at his teeth, he dreams. The fertile thought slowly elaborates itself in the brain. He is no longer dreamer, he is creator" (quoted in A.E. Elsen, op. cit., 1963, p. 53).
Rodin expressed his own thoughts directly in the bronze and thus it is no surprise that he aimed to combine within Le penseur the attributes of both physical and mental acumen. This monumental figure, possibly his most celebrated work, was discussed by the sculptor shortly before his death, where he stressed the physicality and the vitality and power of the creative mind:
"Nature gives me my model life and thought; the nostrils breathe, the heart beats, the lungs inhale... the being thinks and feels... What makes my Thinker think is that he thinks not only with his brain, with his knitted brow, with his distended nostrils and compressed lips, but with every muscle of his arms, back and legs, with his clenched fist and gripping toes" (Saturday Night, Toronto, December 1917).
Le penseur belongs to the group of major early works inspired by Michelangelo, whose sculpture had greatly impressed Rodin on his visit to Italy in 1875. Rodin soon considered Le penseur to be valid as an independent work and exhibited it on its own in Copenhagen in 1888.
A letter (dated 15 May 1926) and a postcard (dated 29 December 1925) from Albert Rosenberg to his sister accompanies the bronze. He writes,
"I am anxious to inform you that I propose to offer to our dear little Henriette for her marriage the beautiful statue, called "The Thinker" made by the sculptor Rodin, that I had bought from Monsieur Rudier in 1920 at the time of my passage to Paris on returning from Algeria."
Rodin expressed his own thoughts directly in the bronze and thus it is no surprise that he aimed to combine within Le penseur the attributes of both physical and mental acumen. This monumental figure, possibly his most celebrated work, was discussed by the sculptor shortly before his death, where he stressed the physicality and the vitality and power of the creative mind:
"Nature gives me my model life and thought; the nostrils breathe, the heart beats, the lungs inhale... the being thinks and feels... What makes my Thinker think is that he thinks not only with his brain, with his knitted brow, with his distended nostrils and compressed lips, but with every muscle of his arms, back and legs, with his clenched fist and gripping toes" (Saturday Night, Toronto, December 1917).
Le penseur belongs to the group of major early works inspired by Michelangelo, whose sculpture had greatly impressed Rodin on his visit to Italy in 1875. Rodin soon considered Le penseur to be valid as an independent work and exhibited it on its own in Copenhagen in 1888.
A letter (dated 15 May 1926) and a postcard (dated 29 December 1925) from Albert Rosenberg to his sister accompanies the bronze. He writes,
"I am anxious to inform you that I propose to offer to our dear little Henriette for her marriage the beautiful statue, called "The Thinker" made by the sculptor Rodin, that I had bought from Monsieur Rudier in 1920 at the time of my passage to Paris on returning from Algeria."