Rodin Museum
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- For the Museum in Paris see Musée Rodin
The Rodin Museum, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, contains the largest collection of sculptor Auguste Rodin's works outside Paris.
The best-known of Rodin's works, The Thinker (1880-1882), sits outside the museum in the entry courtyard. At one point, visitors entered through The Gates of Hell, a massive 5.5m-high bronze doorway originally created for the Museum of Decorative Arts (which was to have been located in Paris but never came into existence). Rodin sculpted more than 100 figures for these doors from 1880 until his death in 1917. Several of his works, including The Thinker, are actually studies for these doors. The Gates is no longer used as an entrance, however.
The museum's several rooms house many more of the artist's works, including the The Kiss (1886), Eternal Springtime (1884), and The Burghers of Calais, a monument commissioned by the City of Calais in 1884.
The Museum was the gift of movie-theater magnate Jules Mastbaum (1872–1926) to the city of Philadelphia. Mastbaum began collecting works by Rodin in 1923 with the intent of founding a museum to enrich the lives of his fellow citizens. Within just three years, he had assembled the largest collection of Rodin’s works outside Paris, including bronze castings, plaster studies, drawings, prints, letters, and books. In 1926, Mastbaum commissioned French architects Paul Cret and Jacques Gréber to design the museum building and gardens. Unfortunately, the collector did not live to see his dream realized, but his widow honored his commitment to the city, and the Museum was inaugurated on November 29, 1929.