The Maiden Kissed by the Ghost

The Maiden Kissed by the Ghost
The Museo Soumaya version.
Artist Auguste Rodin
Year 1880
Medium White marble

The Maiden Kissed by the Ghost (known by the artist as Le baiser du fantôme et la demoiselle[lower-alpha 1] or Le Rêve[lower-alpha 2] ) is an 1880 sculpture by the French artist Auguste Rodin. It was first exhibited at his fourteenth exhibition, hosted by the National Society Salon.[1] One of the marble versions of the work is now in the museo Soumaya in Mexico City.[2]

It shows a winged man above a young woman, who tries not to return his kiss. The work shows Rodin's admiration for Michelangelo's treatment of the human form and draws on The Divine Comedy as well as the story of Orpheus and descriptions of the underworld by Hesiod. He also particularly drew on lines 25-30 and 39-40 in The Horseman, poem 23 in the 1861 edition of Charles Baudelaire's Les Fleurs du Mal:[3]

Rodin reused the figure of the woman in several other variants such as the Torso of Adele, Eternal Springtime, Paolo and Francesca and The Kiss.[1]

Notes

  1. The Kiss of the Phantom and the Maiden
  2. The Dream, possibly referring to Sigmund Freud and his theory of the unconscious mind.[1]
  3. I will plunge my head, amorous with intoxication
    Into this black ocean where the other one is enclosed;
    And my subtle spirit that the wave caresses
    Shall find in you, oh fecund laziness,
    Infinite cradles of embalmed leisure!
    ...
    Are you not the oasis where I dream, and the gourd
    From which I gulp down the wine of memory in long draughts?

References

  1. 1 2 3 (in Spanish) Museo Soumaya (2005). Seis siglos de arte. Cien grandes maestros. México: Fundación Carso. ISBN 9687794305.
  2. (in Spanish) Museo Soumaya (2015). Museo Soumaya - catálogo. Fundación Carlos Slim. p. 128-129. ISBN 9786077805137.
  3. (in Spanish) Museo Soumaya (2007). «VI - Mitos y alegorías». La era de Rodin (1ª edición). México: Fundación Carlos Slim. p. 83-84. ISBN 9789687794365.
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