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dc.contributor.advisorConnelly, Frances S.eng
dc.contributor.authorStengle, Julie Marieeng
dc.contributor.sponsorArt and Art History
dc.coverage.spatialFranceeng
dc.date.issued2014eng
dc.date.submitted2014 Springeng
dc.descriptionTitle from PDF of title page, viewed on July 16, 2014eng
dc.descriptionThesis advisor: Frances Connellyeng
dc.descriptionVitaeng
dc.descriptionIncludes bibliographic references (pages 66-67)eng
dc.descriptionThesis (M. A.)--Dept. of Art and Art History. University of Missouri--Kansas City, 2014eng
dc.description.abstractDuring Camille Claudel's lifetime, she pursued a career that was largely defined in terms of Auguste Rodin. This perspective of her work may be seen most notably in the reactions to her sculpture L'Âge Mûr. This work was interpreted as an allegory of two women's struggle for one man -- the artist Rodin. The sculpture depicts an old woman on the left and at the apex, who leads away a middle-aged man. Reaching toward him is a young woman, appearing on bended knee. Claudel intended L'Âge Mûr to be the means for her to develop into an independent artist. The success of this ambitious sculptural group would also have meant a certain amount of financial independence and stability. However, the reception was not as she expected. Scholars interpreted the work within the narrow parameters of her relationship with Rodin despite the presence of themes of destiny and fate. Still today, when many scholars write about this piece, they emphasize Claudel's personal life and overlook the clues to a deeper meaning indicated by the title, her words, and in the context of her other sculptures. This thesis addresses the impact of Claudel's personal and professional relationship with Rodin on her work first, but then considers L'Âge Mûr in a different light. The path she took to become a woman sculptor in nineteenth-century France will be explored. Her relationship with Rodin, her use of themes of destiny, and the educational and societal restraints on a woman sculptor in nineteenth-century France all inform our understanding of L'Âge Mûr.eng
dc.description.sponsorshipCollege of Arts and Sciences
dc.description.tableofcontentsAbstract -- List of illustrations -- Introduction -- L'Âge Mûr: personal events revealed -- L'Âge Mûr: the progression of life -- The emergence of the woman sculptor in latter nineteenth-century France -- Appendix -- Illustrations -- Reference listeng
dc.description.versionmonographic
dc.format.extentvii, 68 pageseng
dc.format.mediumtext
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10355/43493eng
dc.languageEnglish
dc.relation.isversionofVersion of record
dc.rightsOpen Access (fully available)
dc.rights.holderCopyright retained by author
dc.subject.lcshClaudel, Camille, 1864-1943 -- Criticism and interpretationeng
dc.subject.lcshSculpture, Frencheng
dc.subject.lcshSculptors -- Franceeng
dc.subject.lcshArtists -- Franceeng
dc.subject.lcshClaudel, Camille, 1864-1943 -- Relations with meneng
dc.subject.lcshRodin, Auguste, 1840-1917 -- Relations with womeneng
dc.subject.otherThesis -- University of Missouri--Kansas City -- Art and art historyeng
dc.titleCamille Claudel: The Struggle for Artistic Idenityeng
dc.typeThesiseng
dc.type.genreGraduate
thesis.degree.disciplineArt and Art History (UMKC)eng
thesis.degree.grantorUniversity of Missouri--Kansas Cityeng
thesis.degree.levelMasterseng
thesis.degree.nameM.A. (Master of Arts)eng


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