HOME
What's New Subscribe to our Electronic Newsletters Calendar of Events Recent Acquisitions Videos and Podcasts About the Gallery The Darker Side of Light: Arts of Privacy, 1850–1900 The Robert and Jane Meyerhoff Collection: Selected Works
Global Navigation Collection Exhibitions Planning a Visit Programs Online Tours Education Resources Gallery Shop Support the Gallery NGA Kids
National Gallery of Art - THE COLLECTION
image of The Kiss (Le Baiser)
Auguste Rodin (sculptor)
French, 1840 - 1917
The Kiss (Le Baiser), model 1880-1887, cast c. 1898/1902
bronze
overall: 24.7 x 15.8 x 17.4 cm (9 3/4 x 6 1/4 x 6 7/8 in.)
Gift of Mrs. John W. Simpson
1942.5.15
On View

Nineteenth-century viewers and critics were immediately taken with Rodin's three-dimensional group, entitled Paola and Francesca, the passionate lovers from the fifth canto of Dante's Inferno. When one enthusiastic critic referred to it as The Kiss, the new title stuck, and the association with Dante's ill-fated lovers gave way to a more contemporary, universal response to their passionate embrace.

By including only one specific reference to the lovers' story (Paolo holds in his left hand the book of courtly love they read together), Rodin encouraged viewers to become immersed in the spiraling rhythms of the entwined bodies and the sensuous finish of smooth limbs against pitted rock.

Rodin had intended to include this work in his monumental Gates of Hell, the high-relief sculptural doors that he would cover with figures from Dante's Divine Comedy. But the sculptor removed the pair of lovers from the Gates, instead developing it as an independent grouping. The original bronze sculpture (almost three feet high) was reproduced in bronze and marble, in both enlarged and reduced versions. The National Gallery's diminutive golden bronze work (under ten inches) is one of sixty-nine versions of this size. In 1902 Rodin presented it as a souvenir to a loyal American patron, Kate Simpson, after she posed for her portrait bust in the sculptor's Paris studio. It bears his personal inscription: "homage to Madame Kate Simpson in memory of hours in the studio. September 1902."

Full Screen Image
Artist Information
Bibliography
Detail Images
Exhibition History
Inscription
Location
Provenance