Aristide Maillol
Monument à Debussy (Monument to Debussy)
c. 1930
Homage à Debussy by the French artist Aristide Maillol presents a quiet and self-contained female nude devoid of descriptive detail or emotion. The essence of Maillol’s crouching sculpture resides not in a naturalistic representation of a person or a dramatic depiction of movement, but in its smooth lines and simplified form. The surface of the bronze sculpture is even and non-expressive, and the shape is composed of a series of soft curving lines. Instead of trying to emulate the dynamism of twentieth-century life, as did so many artists of his time, Maillol sought an art of serenity and stillness, of classical elegance and simplicity. "For my taste,” the artist declared in 1937, “there should be as little movement as possible in sculpture." As the title of this work suggests, the sculpture was created in homage to Claude Debussy, the experimental French composer associated with Symbolism, a movement that championed the idea of art for art’s sake, rejecting external or objective reality in favor of subjective, intuitive ideals. The sobriety and perfection of Maillol’s nude reflects both the artist’s desire to reinvigorate the classical tradition of Greek and Roman sculpture and his commitment to a relatively conservative artistic approach bolstered by principles of formal beauty and constancy.[Cell phone tour, 2019]
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Artist
Aristide Maillol
(French, 1861–1944)
- Title Monument à Debussy (Monument to Debussy)
- Date c. 1930
- Medium Cast bronze
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Dimensions
unframed | 35 x 20 x 37 in.
- Credit line Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Morton D. May, 1969
- Object number WU 4413
Saint Louis Bicentennial Sculpture Exhibition
Missouri Botanical Garden (St. Louis, Missouri), 10/03/1965 - 10/31/1965
Closing Exhibition: Sculpture Paintings and Drawings
Curt Valentin Gallery (New York, New York), 06/08/1955
June 21, 1965–January 16, 1969
Morton D. May (1914-1983), purchase from the above, St. Louis
Inscription [on top of base, near back, engraved:] Alexis Rudier. / Fondeur. Paris.
Inscription [on top of base, engraved in metal, encircled:] M / 2/5
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