Can a newly launched new web site help to authenticate a 130 year old treasure? It will stir up some interest and that's one thing I am sure about.
Working on the Villeneuve Statue project has been a highlight in my life and something I am very passionate about. It has also helped me become incredibly knowledgeable about French Sculptor Auguste Rodin – famous for his renowned works ‘The Kiss’, ‘The Thinker’, ‘The Gates of Hell’ and many more exotic pieces.
During the
late 1800’s Rodin redesigned sculpture in his era and for future generations.
His work demonstrates a crucial transition between the European academic art of
the 18th and 19th centuries and the more conceptual early modern movements of
the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
The project consists
of authenticating a rare bronze-over-plaster female believed by my partners and
I, to have been created in Rodin Studio somewhere around 1880. At that time the
open-minded Rodin was experimenting in a process called ‘Galvano Plastique’ - also
known as ‘electroplating’. Our research has proven this was the exact process
and materials used to create the Villeneuve Statue.
The one-third
scale nude has been in Neville Hale’s family since 1886 when she came into the
hands of his great grandfather, a London goldsmith named Theodore Villeneuve. He
accepted the ornate figure as ‘payment of a debt’ and it has remained in the
care of his descendants ever since - his great-grandson being the fourth
custodian. Sadly Neville passed away in 2010 without seeing the project to completion
however he died leaving the authentication process of his rare treasure in
competent hands. John Bigelow (the fifth custodian of the statue) and myself, continue
working towards this end. We recently completed and launched a web site: www.exiled-rodin.com to make our extensive research public.
The Villeneuve
Statue project has been an exciting journey which has taken me to the
far corners of the world including trips to Paris France and London England to follow
the creative history of Rodin. The research has been very motivating and we now
have an impressive photo collection of the master’s works.
I am forever
indebted to Neville who became a close friend and mentor during the near decade
we spent working together on this project. It involved many hours of reading, computer
writing, emailing letters and seeking out possible connections that would help
us. For several years Neville and I got together weekly to compare notes, share
new information and strategies. During my travels, we communicated daily through
email.
Neville Hale
and I met by chance at an antiques road show when I was working as a reporter/photographer.
The sleek, black patina statue he was holding caught my eye. When he told me it
was a family heirloom, I was interested in writing a story. At the time Neville
had only begun his fated journey into the past. As for me, I had never seen
anything so unique – her poise and beauty left me in awe.
My story
made front page of a local newspaper and generated many comments, but it was nearly
two years before I heard from Neville asking permission to use my picture in a
book he had written entitled ‘The Rodin
Quest’. When it was published Neville contacted me again to write a review
for him and I agreed, more than pleased to be involved.
During that
meeting I became intrigued by the statue’s history while Neville’s enthusiasm won
me over. I wanted to know more. The research he had managed to gather on his
family roots and about his “Little Rodin” made so much sense. Ironically the mysterious
lady had stood in silence for over 120 years remaining well protected by her
guardians. Boasting solid provenance in the Villeneuve family, Neville had also
discovered the heirloom was made of materials used by Rodin Studio during the
1880’s and bore strong resemblance to Rodin works of that era. We both knew
there was much more to her than met the eye – but proving it would be another story.
During the
next six years I became the aging senior’s helping hands and legs in the
project, and his wings by travelling abroad to collect information and
photographs that expanded our research file and evidence. Meeting John Bigelow
and his family, has been a highlight in this adventure and since Neville’s
untimely demise, John and I have become dedicated to proving the origin of the Villeneuve
Statue.
In dealing
with the project over the years ‘our team’ experienced rejection,
disappointment and dead ends in some cases, while other leads brought amazing
results, fresh inspiration and new direction in helping us connect loose
threads. Remaining optimistic, John and I continue to find strength and
motivation in the endless research Neville compiled. His legacy speaks for
itself and his quest has become ours. In our work we have touched on the
intimate love affair between Rodin and his student Camille Claudel – a talented
sculptor in her own right and the sorrowful challenges she endured. Falling prey to his influence led to her
ultimate destruction in career and life itself. There is a portion of the web
site dedicated to this sad story and details about why we think the young model
of the Villeneuve Statue was in fact Camille herself.
Our work is
still not done. The goal of www.exiled-rodin.com is to draw the attention of others who love
the work of Auguste Rodin and Camille Claudel. Web designer - Dalene Smith, has
helped us to achieve this. We are revealing crucial information to try and gain
support for this exclusive and believable story. In doing so, we hope to solve
it. We want to hear from art experts, museum authorities and Rodin collectors,
challenging them to share their views. Please enjoy the web site and share our passion
to authenticate the Villeneuve Statue. One
way or another we’ll find out exactly who she is.