portrait of this blog's author - by Stephen Blackman 2008

Tuesday, January 21, 2025

Camille Claudel (1864 -1943)


Camille Claudel 

Born in 1864, died in 1943—forgotten by the world, left to languish in a mental hospital.

She came to Paris to study art at a time when the prestigious École des Beaux-Arts was open only to men. Undeterred, she joined studios that welcomed women.
There, she met and became the lover of the celebrated sculptor Auguste Rodin.
Their relationship was one of fiery passion and shared artistry—they created side by side, their collaborative genius preserved in works housed today in the Rodin Museum and Musée d’Orsay. 
But Rodin, already entangled in a long-standing relationship with another woman, eventually left Camille. As his reputation soared, hers plummeted. She was scorned, shunned, and dismissed—not just as a lover but as an artist. Alone, distrusting, and out of favor, she struggled to sell her works. 
Adding to her isolation, her brother, the renowned poet and diplomat Paul Claudel, played a pivotal role in her downfall. Camille, seen as "too modern" and a source of familial shame, was forcibly institutionalized by her family. 
For 30 years, she fought to explain the injustice of her confinement, writing anguished letters to friends and family, pleading for release. Her clarity and heartbreak resonate in these preserved writings. 
On October 19, 1943, Camille Claudel died of malnutrition in a French hospital.
No family members attended her funeral, and her body was buried in a common grave.
Decades later, the world has finally recognized her brilliance. Her legacy has been restored: her sculptures now stand proudly beside Rodin’s, and a museum near Paris is dedicated entirely to her work. 
Camille Claudel is no longer forgotten. She is honored as the visionary she always was.


 source: Facebook/Instagram

Marcia A Lane

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