KENDAL.- One of Auguste Rodins most famous works will go on show at
Abbot Hall Art Gallery Kendal this summer.
Rodin: rethinking the fragment opens on 10 August and runs until 27 October. On display is The Thinker (1880-81) - one of Rodins most striking works.
The iconic piece is on loan from the Burrell Collection in Glasgow and takes centre stage. The Thinker is shown alongside three objects from the British Museum:
A classical torso from a marble statuette of Venus (about 1st century AD).
Royal Academy medal (about 1901), showing the Athenian Acropolis alongside the Belvedere Torso.
Eugène Carrières portrait of Auguste Rodin, Rodin sculpting (1900).
Abbot Hall is the very first venue in the country to host this British Museum Partnership Spotlight Loan, generously supported by the Dorset Foundation in memory of Harry M Weinrebe.
Venues on this tour will present the work in a different context. Abbot Hall will look at Rodins influences and in turn, his influence on Elisabeth Frink.
This is the first time Roman Art has been on show at Abbot Hall. The objects shed light on the influence of classical antiquity on Rodin.
Rodin: rethinking the fragment explores how the French sculptor (1840-1917) studied the fragments of ancient Greece and Rome, converting the limbless, headless torso into a new art genre.
Lakeland Arts Frances Guy, Director of Programming (temporary), said: We are thrilled to be the first gallery in the country to host this British Museum Spotlight Loan.
Rodin was the originator of twenty-first century sculpture. He was the catalyst for changing the way artists appreciated sculpture. He made society look at public sculpture in a different, more fluid way.
This is a really exciting time for Abbot Hall with two excellent exhibitions which are interlinked. Alongside Rodin we have a major exhibition by Elisabeth Frink - one of the most exciting sculptors of modern times. And of course, Frinks most important influence was Rodin.
The Spotlight Loan explores the history and development of sculpture from Classical Antiquity to the present. Showing Rodin alongside Frink will invite visitors to compare, contrast and make their own relationships and connections to both artists work.
Barbara Vujanović, Senior Curator, The Ivan Metrović Museums the Metrović Atelier, Zagreb, and Project Curator of this Spotlight loan said: I am delighted to have worked with the British Museum on this exciting partnership exhibition, which reveals how Rodin viewed fragments from antiquity as works of art to be celebrated. I look forward to seeing the different ways in which the venues approach this exhibition.
Rodin was a radical and innovative artist who challenged the rules of contemporary sculpture. Perhaps his most important legacy was the idea that a fragment an incomplete figure or even an isolated hand - could be a work of art in its own right.
The Thinker was conceived to sit high up on Rodins The Gates of Hell. His inspiration for the sculpture included one of the most celebrated sculpture fragments to survive from antiquity, the Belvedere Torso.
The spotlight on Rodin coincides with Elisabeth Frink Fragility and Power (Abbot Hall 22 June - 29 September). This exhibition celebrates one of the most exciting British sculptors of the twentieth century and is the first large scale show of her work in the North West for several years.
After Cumbria, rethinking the fragment travels to two UK venues: Holburne Museum, Bath and New Art Gallery, Walsall.