Rodin’s Studio & Process

A seated nude woman clasps her right foot in both hands, while her head hangs down.

Auguste Rodin. Le Désespoir (Despair). ca. 1893 (model), 1942 (sand casting by Alexis Rudier). Bronze. Donation Rodin 1916. Musée Rodin: S.01307. Checklist no. 49.

Rodin’s studio was more than a workspace—it was a living laboratory for modern sculpture. Within its walls, sculpture became a process of evolution rather than a fixed outcome. Rodin upended traditional practices by foregrounding experimentation, fragmentation, and the continual reworking of form, challenging the long-held ideal of the perfectly finished object.

A bearded man wearing a shirt, jacket, and pants stands on a wooden platform with sculptural fragments at his feet. To his left is a plaster model of a sculpture of Balzac. To his right, on a pedestal, is a small plaster figure of a nude woman on her knees.

Eugène Druet. Rodin in his studio in Meudon. c. 1902. Photograph. Musée Rodin.

Central to Rodin’s method was modeling: a direct, tactile engagement with clay and wax. Working instinctively, Rodin shaped figures by hand to capture movement, tension, and emotion. From these models, he produced plaster casts that became pivotal to his artistic process. While plaster had traditionally served as a transitional step toward marble or bronze, Rodin treated it as an expressive medium in its own right. The casts—often unpolished and marked by fingerprints, seams, and surface irregularities—celebrated the act of making and revealed the sculptor’s hand in motion.

Rodin’s studio also operated as a collaborative workshop. He relied on a skilled team of assistants—molders, casters, marble carvers, and foundry workers—who translated his clay models into more durable materials. Though he rarely carved marble or cast bronze himself, Rodin oversaw every stage of production, ensuring that each enlargement, reduction, or translation retained the dynamic energy of the original.

A room with multiple small objects on shelves and in a glass-fronted case. On pedestals are three headless nude figures, with incomplete arms and legs.

François Antoine Vizzavona. The Egyptian antiquities in the “Little Museum of Antiquities,” known as the Tweed Studio, at Meudon. ca. December 1906. Aristotype. Musée Rodin: Ph.06135.

A large hand holds the nude figure of a woman who clasps her arms and legs to her torso.

Auguste Rodin. La Main du Diable (The Devil’s Hand). 1903. Plaster. Donation Rodin 1916. Musée Rodin: S.04044.

One of Rodin’s most radical innovations was his approach to fragmentation and recomposition. His studio was filled with plaster fragments—torsos, hands, limbs, heads—known as abattis. These were not discarded remnants but active elements in his creative process. Rodin recombined, reoriented, enlarged, and reduced them to form entirely new works.

Photography also played a vital role. Rodin had his works photographed to study them at various stages, experimenting with light and perspective. Images captured by professional photographers such as Karl Bodmer documented the evolving forms within his studio, reinforcing the iterative and experimental nature of his process.

A nude male embraces a nude female with arched torso.

L’Éternel printemps (Eternal Spring). ca. 1884. Musée Rodin: Ph.00958

The Gates of Hell, commissioned in 1880, brought all of these methods together. The work occupied Rodin for decades and became the ultimate expression of his experimental process. The doors themselves evolved continually within his studio, embodying his fascination with human struggle and transformation, although the project was not completed in his lifetime. The reliefs emerged from endless cycles of modeling, casting, and recombination, making The Gates of Hell not only a work of art but a record of artistic invention in motion.

Numerous figures project from the surface of a massive double door. Three nude males, their heads hanging low, are set atop the door

Auguste Rodin. La Porte de l'Enfer (The Gates of Hell). 1880–90 (model); 1926–28 (sand casting by Rudier Foundry). Bronze. Musée Rodin: S.01304

: An oblique view of massive double doors depicting multiple figures.

Pauline Hisbacq and Jérome Manoukian. La Porte de l'Enfer (The Gates of Hell) installed at the Musée Rodin. Photograph.

Rodin’s approach redefined sculpture itself. By elevating process over product, embracing fragmentation and recomposition, and fostering interdisciplinary collaboration, he laid the groundwork for modern artistic practice. His studio became a space where art was never static, but always in motion—a continuous act of creation that expanded the very possibilities of sculptural form.

ISAW Logo