He is buried in front of his famous statue, “The Thinker”. Strangely, there is an old photograph showing that a pond was once there. It would appear that he was placed in the pond and covered over. They should have put a bed frame around the grave to keep the dogs from digging him up.
The museum is a large open room with plasters casts of his famous works. I hadn’t seen this one before it was from his little-known “trying to make the rent” period.
It was definitely a worthwhile trip, Meudon is outside Paris so it had very few people other than hard-core Rodin fans- there were no “Da Vinci Code” people there.
If that piece is from his "Gates of Hell" then I'm going.
ReplyDeleteHoly crap, that was funny.
ReplyDeleteI don't know I'd want to be buried under The Thinker. Smug thinking bastard, watching me rot.
Hmph.
I tried to leave a comment but I think I messed up. Bear with me if it is a duplicate.
ReplyDeleteI lived in Meudon during the 6 months I studied in Paris (in the 80's). I boarded in a drafty old house that looked like a small chateau. Living in the "banlieux" was nowhere near as cool as saying you lived in Paris.
I never saw the Rodin house. I wonder if it was open to the public back then.