Currently not on view

The Age of Bronze,

1876

Auguste Rodin, 1840–1917; born Paris, France; died Meudon, France
y1959-54
Rodin was influenced by ancient art like the statue of Dionysos in the Museum’s Roman art gallery (downstairs), and by Renaissance sculpture such as Michelangelo’s Dying Slave (illustrated at right), but his visceral figures revolutionized European sculptural practice. A life-size version of The Age of Bronze was his first full-length work exhibited at the Salon, Paris’s annual contemporary art show. The figure’s ambiguous pose perplexed those accustomed to the tradition of sculpture based on historical or mythological subjects (such as François Rude’s Hebe and the Eagle, located in the gallery behind you). Critics did not know how to interpret the raised arms and closed eyes, and the man couldn’t be identified. Worse, the figure was so lifelike that they accused Rodin of having taken plaster casts directly from the model—an accusation Rodin denied. Ultimately, the artist won over the artistic establishment, and The Age of Bronze gained acclaim as one of the defining works of the age.

More Context

Handbook Entry

Information

Title
The Age of Bronze
Dates

1876

Medium
Bronze
Dimensions
115 × 29.5 × 29.5 cm (45 1/4 × 11 5/8 × 11 5/8 in.)
Credit Line
Museum purchase, gift of Walter N. Rothschild, Class of 1913, in memory of his mother, Mrs. Felix M. Warburg
Object Number
y1959-54
Place Made

Europe, France

Signatures
Signed on plinth, left: Rodin
Marks/Labels/Seals
Foundry mark at bottom right of back edge of plinth: Alexis Rudier, Fondeur, Paris.
Culture
Type
Materials