Damned Women

Damned Women
A bronze cast with brown and green patina now in the Museo Soumaya, Mexico City
Artist Auguste Rodin
Year c. 1885 - 1890

Damned Women is a sculpture created by Auguste Rodin between 1885 and 1890 as part of his The Gates of Hell project - it appears on the upper right as the counterpart to The Fallen Caryatid[1]. It shows two embracing women, a theme also explored by the same artist in Youth Triumphant, Ovid's Metamorphoses and Illusions Received by the Earth.

According to Elsen[2]:

As in Metamorphoses, Rodin modelled the work on ballerinas from the Paris Opera, as recommended by Edgar Degas. The work also draws on Les Fleurs du Mal by Charles Baudelaire, particularly Lesbos and two poems entitled Femmes damnées. According to Miranda[3]:

References

  1. Elsen, Albert Edward (1985). The Gates of Hell by Auguste Rodin. Stanford, California, EUA: Stanford University Press. p. 211.
  2. Elsen, Albert Edward; Jamison, Rosalyn Frankel (2003). Bernard Barryte, ed. Rodin's Art: the Iris & B. Gerald Cantor Collection at Stanford University. New York, EUA: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195133811.
  3. (in Spanish) Miranda Márquez, Alfonso. Museo Soumaya, catálogo (1a edición). México: Fundación Carlos Slim. p. 135. ISBN 9786077805137.
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