
Rodin Museum A Powerful, Relaxing Must-Visit In Paris
Who are the most famous artists whose work you can see in Paris? Number one, of course, would be Leonardo da Vinci, whose Mona Lisa at the Louvre is always surrounded by a gawking mob. The crowds got so bad that the staff at the Louvre recently held an impromptu strike motivated by over-tourism.
Then there's Vincent van Gogh, whose famed self-portrait and "Starry Night Over the Rhône" are in the Musée d'Orsay. Claude Monet's 'Water Lilies' is at the Musée de l'Orangerie, as are works by Renoir, Matisse and Picasso. 'David Hockney 25,' a popular show running through August 31, honors living master Hockney with an exhibit of 400 of his works at FOUNDATION LOUIS VUITTON.
But none of these luminaries have a big Parisian museum and garden devoted solely to their work. Nor are these artists considered among the most famous sculptors of their time.
That honor goes to Auguste Rodin, (1840-1917). A few of his masterpieces at the Rodin Museum include Monument to Balzac, Danaid, The Age of Bronze, Monument to the Burghers of Calais, The Gates of Hell, and of course, The Thinker.
Rodin Museum (Paris)
getty
The museum is located at 77 Rue de Varenne, in easy walking distance of the Tuileries and the Seine. The museum is open Tuesday through Sunday, 10AM to 6:30PM. Admission is 14 euros, although various passes and 'two-fers' like a combined ticket for the Musée Rodin + Musée d'Orsay for 25 euro are available.
Much of Rodin's journey is shown at the museum. Rodin the man doesn't quite come alive at his museum in Paris, but his statues do. His work almost vibrates with energy, as you see a head or a foot emerging from the stone. The museum shows off multiple plaster casts and sculptures of feet and hands, as Rodin was constantly working to achieve realistic detail.
Yet it has also been said that 'Rodin knew when to stop polishing.' Indeed, many of his works rise out of rough, seemingly unfinished stone, even classic pieces like 'The Kiss.'
Rodin said his approach to sculpting women was to portray them 'as full partners in ardor,' but such eroticism made his works controversial. A bronze version of 'The Kiss' sent to an 1893 Exposition in Chiago was hidden from the general public as 'unsuitable,' shown only on special request.
Rodin is best-known for The Thinker and The Kiss , but the museum and the sculpture gardens reveal his fluency in plaster, stone, marble and bronze, as well as his drawing and painting. The museum also includes paintings by Vincent Van Gogh and Claude Monet which Rodin collected . In the 1980's, the museum acquired works by Norwegian artist Edvard Munch (The Scream) who was heavily influenced by Rodin.
The museum is by no means as crowded as the Louvre, but it can get a little stuffy inside. That's when it's time to step out into the cool green gardens and wander among the powerful bronzes.
The Thinker, which has pride of place outside in the sculpture garden, dominates the space but may be the least dynamic of all the pieces. The rectangular gardens cover seven acres. The green retreat includes a fountain, rose gardens, lawns, and tree shaded areas where sculptures are displayed. Exhausted art lovers can sit in the shade at a bench or a table at the small café.
One of the most striking works in the gardens (other than The Thinker) is the Gates of Hell. In 1880 Rodin got a commission to create a bronze door for the Museum of Decorative Arts. The door, inspired by Dante's Inferno and later known as The Gates of Hell was commissioned for delivery in 1884. It was still unfinished at Rodin's death in 1917. Yet it would serve as source material for his most famous work, such as The Burghers of Calais, The Kiss, and The Thinker itself.
The Burghers of Calais commemorates the six nobles who volunteered to hand over the keys to the city of Calais to the victorious King of England at the end of the siege of 1346-47.These men face their death (each, barefoot, wears a rope around their neck) with their faces showing a timeless mixture of emotions, from nobility to despair, agony and acceptance.
On a lighter note, the great French writer Balzac comes to life in his plump glory, wearing the bathrobe he wore to write, his great head surveying passersby.
The garden is a peaceful space where visitors can enjoy the sculptures amidst nature. There is also a pleasant café where food and ice cream are served. A pair of ducks wandered among the art lovers the day we were there.
Rodin, from a poor family, went to a school to learn drawing and modeling skills at 13. He tried three times to enter the highly competitive Ecole des Beaux-Arts but failed the competitive examinations three times. At 18, he decided to earn his living by doing decorative stonework. He worked with other sculptors on decorative bronzes and did decorations to monuments in Brussels.
Dismissed by a mentor, he traveled to Florence, Rome, Naples, and Venice, where he gained inspiration from the work of great sculptors like Michelangelo and Donatello. He exhibited his first original work, The Age of Bronze, in Brussels and Paris. The emotional pain and the realism of the subject figure, so different from contemporary sculpture, led to accusations that he molded it on a living model. Rodin finally started getting significant commissions in his late 30's, with his most significant period of work being from around 1880 to 1910.
Before his death, Rodin bequeathed all his works and possessions to France. The gift was debated and finally approved in the French parliament.
Rodin wrote in 1909.'I bequeath to the state all my works in plaster, marble, bronze and stone, together with my drawings and the collection of antiquities that I had such pleasure in assembling for the education and training of artists and workers. And I ask the state to keep all these collections in the Hôtel Biron, which will be the Musée Rodin, reserving the right to reside there for the rest of my life.'
The state purchased the hotel and committed to turning it into a museum dedicated to the artist, with one of the most beautiful gardens in Paris.
The property today incudes the museum, the gardens, a lovely gift shop and a children's creative space, The Atelier Rodin, for children to explore sculpture through play and creativity. It's free for children accompanied by an adult. Children can model and create, and experience the joy of assembly and balance, as Rodin did.
'In the 1860s, when Rodin began making sculpture, art was deeply rooted in the past. It told stories from religion, history, myth, and literature, and it told them as if the artist had been a witness to the events. Just thirty years later, by the peak of his career, the 1890s, Auguste Rodin had transformed sculpture into something that today we call modern, that spoke to the artist's and viewer's emotions and imaginations,' according to the Cantor Foundation, which distributes Rodin's work to museums and did a film Rodin: The Gates of Hell.
'By the time Rodin died in 1917 he had through prodigious talent and a remarkable volume of work, challenged the established styles of his youth and revolutionized sculpture. Today his pioneering work is a crucial link between traditional and modern art.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Paris Hilton Performs ‘Paris & Pups' Theme Song in Children's Show's First Trailer
Paris Hilton's new animated children's series 'Paris & Pups' has a new trailer — featuring a theme song performed by the heiress and reality star. The series will premiere on YouTube with four episodes on Sept. 23, followed by weekly drops. Based on Hilton and her real-life pets, the series is aimed at children ages 5-8. 'I'm beyond excited to finally share 'Paris & Pups' with the world,' Hilton said in a statement. 'The series is set in a glamorous hotel full of sparkle, adventure, and heart — a place that feels like home to me after growing up in hotels and making them my playground. At the center is Star, a girl named after my childhood nickname. She's kind, creative, and just a little mischievous — just like I was as a kid. Star's surrounded by the most adorable squad of pups — Slivington, Baby, Diamond, Mugsy and Bijou — each with their own fabulous personality you're going to fall in love with. I've dreamed of bringing my love for animals to life on screen for as long as I can remember, and now, as a mom to two little animal lovers, it feels like the perfect time. 'Paris & Pups' isn't just about cute dogs — it's about love, friendship, chasing your dreams and living your best life.' More from Variety Paris Hilton's 11:11 Media Announces Feature-Length Music Documentary 'Infinite Icon' (EXCLUSIVE) Donna Langley and Paris Hilton Set for CNBC Changemakers Summit Paris Hilton Raises $800,000 for L.A. Fire Emergency Relief Efforts: 'Hundreds of Families Will Receive This Assistance Immediately' 'Paris & Pups' is developed and produced by Hilton's 11:11 Media banner; UTA and Stampede Ventures' HappyNest Entertainment; 9 Story Media Group, a subsidiary of Scholastic, which has retained global publishing rights across all formats and has announced plans for a release next fall. 9 Story Distribution holds worldwide distribution rights for 'Paris & Pups,' while Retail Monster leads licensing in the U.S with 9 Story Brands overseeing licensing in all other international markets. See the trailer for 'Paris & Pups' below. Best of Variety New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week What's Coming to Disney+ in August 2025 What's Coming to Netflix in August 2025


Fast Company
3 hours ago
- Fast Company
How this popular Parisian neighborhood is fighting overtourism and ‘Disneyfication'
When Olivier Baroin moved into an apartment in Montmartre about 15 years ago, it felt like he was living in a village in the heart of Paris. Not anymore. Stores for residents are disappearing, along with the friendly atmosphere, he says. In their place are hordes of people taking selfies, shops selling tourist trinkets, and cafés whose seating spills into the narrow, cobbled streets as overtourism takes its toll. Baroin has had enough. He put his apartment up for sale after local streets were designated pedestrian-only while accommodating the growing number of visitors. 'I told myself that I had no other choice but to leave since, as I have a disability, it's even more complicated when you can no longer take your car, when you have to call a taxi from morning to night,' he told The Associated Press. Overtourism in European cities From Venice to Barcelona to Amsterdam, European cities are struggling to absorb surging numbers of tourists. Some residents in one of Paris' most popular tourist neighborhoods are now pushing back. A black banner strung between two balconies in Montmartre reads, in English: 'Behind the postcard: locals mistreated by the Mayor.' Another, in French, says: 'Montmartre residents resisting.' Atop the hill where the Basilica of Sacré-Cœur crowns the city's skyline, residents lament what they call the 'Disneyfication' of the once-bohemian slice of Paris. The basilica says it now attracts up to 11 million people a year — even more than the Eiffel Tower — while daily life in the neighborhood has been overtaken by tuk-tuks, tour groups, photo queues and short-term rentals. 'Now, there are no more shops at all, there are no more food shops, so everything must be delivered,' said 56-year-old Baroin, a member of a residents' protest group called Vivre a Montmartre, or Living in Montmartre. The unrest echoes tensions across town at the Louvre Museum, where staff in June staged a brief wildcat strike over chronic overcrowding, understaffing and deteriorating conditions. The Louvre logged 8.7 million visitors in 2024, more than double what its infrastructure was designed to handle. A postcard under pressure Paris, a city of just over 2 million residents if you count its sprawling suburbs, welcomed 48.7 million tourists in 2024, a 2% increase from the previous year. Sacré-Cœur, the most visited monument in France in 2024, and the surrounding Montmartre neighborhood have turned into what some locals call an open-air theme park. Local staples like butchers, bakeries and grocers are vanishing, replaced by ice-cream stalls, bubble-tea vendors and souvenir T-shirt stands. Paris authorities did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Visitors seemed largely to be enjoying the packed streets on a sunny Tuesday this week. 'For the most part, all of Paris has been pretty busy, but full of life, for sure,' said American tourist Adam Davidson. 'Coming from Washington, D.C., which is a lively city as well, I would say this is definitely full of life to a different degree for sure.' Europe's breaking point In Barcelona, thousands have taken to the streets this year, some wielding water pistols, demanding limits on cruise ships and short-term tourist rentals. Venice now charges an entry fee for day-trippers and caps visitor numbers. And in Athens, authorities are imposing a daily limit on visitors to the Acropolis, to protect the ancient monument from record-breaking tourist crowds. Urban planners warn that historic neighborhoods risk becoming what some critics call 'zombie cities' — picturesque but lifeless, their residents displaced by short-term visitors. Paris is trying to mitigate the problems by cracking down on short-term rentals and unlicensed properties. But tourism pressures are growing. By 2050, the world's population is projected to reach nearly 10 billion, according to United Nations estimates. With the global middle class expanding, low-cost flights booming and digital platforms guiding travelers to the same viral landmarks, many more visitors are expected in iconic cities like Paris. The question now, residents say, is whether any space is left for those who call it home.
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Paris residents fight overtourism and ‘Disneyfication' of beloved Montmartre neighborhood
PARIS (AP) — When Olivier Baroin moved into an apartment in Montmartre about 15 years ago, it felt like he was living in a village in the heart of Paris. Not anymore. Stores for residents are disappearing, along with the friendly atmosphere, he says. In their place are hordes of people taking selfies, shops selling tourist trinkets, and cafés whose seating spills into the narrow, cobbled streets as overtourism takes its toll. Baroin has had enough. He put his apartment up for sale after local streets were designated pedestrian-only while accommodating the growing number of visitors. 'I told myself that I had no other choice but to leave since, as I have a disability, it's even more complicated when you can no longer take your car, when you have to call a taxi from morning to night," he told The Associated Press. Overtourism in European cities From Venice to Barcelona to Amsterdam, European cities are struggling to absorb surging numbers of tourists. Some residents in one of Paris' most popular tourist neighborhoods are now pushing back. A black banner strung between two balconies in Montmartre reads, in English: 'Behind the postcard: locals mistreated by the Mayor.' Another, in French, says: 'Montmartre residents resisting.' Atop the hill where the Basilica of Sacré-Cœur crowns the city's skyline, residents lament what they call the 'Disneyfication' of the once-bohemian slice of Paris. The basilica says it now attracts up to 11 million people a year — even more than the Eiffel Tower — while daily life in the neighborhood has been overtaken by tuk-tuks, tour groups, photo queues and short-term rentals. 'Now, there are no more shops at all, there are no more food shops, so everything must be delivered,' said 56-year-old Baroin, a member of a residents' protest group called Vivre a Montmartre, or Living in Montmartre. The unrest echoes tensions across town at the Louvre Museum, where staff in June staged a brief wildcat strike over chronic overcrowding, understaffing and deteriorating conditions. The Louvre logged 8.7 million visitors in 2024, more than double what its infrastructure was designed to handle. A postcard under pressure Paris, a city of just over 2 million residents if you count its sprawling suburbs, welcomed 48.7 million tourists in 2024, a 2% increase from the previous year. Sacré-Cœur, the most visited monument in France in 2024, and the surrounding Montmartre neighborhood have turned into what some locals call an open-air theme park. Local staples like butchers, bakeries and grocers are vanishing, replaced by ice-cream stalls, bubble-tea vendors and souvenir T-shirt stands. Paris authorities did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Visitors seemed largely to be enjoying the packed streets on a sunny Tuesday this week. 'For the most part, all of Paris has been pretty busy, but full of life, for sure," said American tourist Adam Davidson. "Coming from Washington, D.C., which is a lively city as well, I would say this is definitely full of life to a different degree for sure.' Europe's breaking point In Barcelona, thousands have taken to the streets this year, some wielding water pistols, demanding limits on cruise ships and short-term tourist rentals. Venice now charges an entry fee for day-trippers and caps visitor numbers. And in Athens, authorities are imposing a daily limit on visitors to the Acropolis, to protect the ancient monument from record-breaking tourist crowds. Urban planners warn that historic neighborhoods risk becoming what some critics call 'zombie cities' — picturesque but lifeless, their residents displaced by short-term visitors. Paris is trying to mitigate the problems by cracking down on short-term rentals and unlicensed properties. But tourism pressures are growing. By 2050, the world's population is projected to reach nearly 10 billion, according to United Nations estimates. With the global middle class expanding, low-cost flights booming and digital platforms guiding travelers to the same viral landmarks, many more visitors are expected in iconic cities like Paris. The question now, residents say, is whether any space is left for those who call it home. Thomas Adamson, The Associated Press 擷取數據時發生錯誤 登入存取你的投資組合 擷取數據時發生錯誤 擷取數據時發生錯誤 擷取數據時發生錯誤 擷取數據時發生錯誤