Rodin’s Egypt

Rodin’s Egypt

Celebrated as one of the fathers of modern European sculpture, Auguste Rodin (1840–1917) created expressive and emotive human bodies in works that abandoned narrative and embraced the subject and materiality of his medium. While his revolutionary approach to the body broke from neoclassical tradition, he revered the works of antiquity, in which he saw the truest expressions of nature. Rodin was particularly enthralled by the art of ancient Egypt, amassing a collection of more than 1,000 Egyptian objects. Rodin’s Egypt—the companion volume to an exhibition at New York University’s Institute for the Study of the Ancient World—reveals the profound influence Egyptian art had on Rodin’s work and the advent of modernity in European sculpture.

Illustrated with some 120 color images, the book traces Rodin’s antiquity collecting; places masterpieces by Rodin in dialogue with Egyptian sculpture, statuettes, and reliefs; and reveals Rodin’s conception of the human form as a logical continuation of ancient Egyptian artistic canons. The book also illuminates how Rodin’s work provides new perspectives on the body in ancient Egypt, enriching conversations on corporeality across the centuries.

Editor: Bénédicte Garnier
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Published Date: January 6, 2026
ISBN: 9780691289304
Pages: 136 pages
Dimensions: 8.5 x 10.5 in.

Stock number:

RE2026

Price:

$45.00