Fleurs du Mal Cover (Printed 1918)The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Les Fleurs du mal
Written by Charles Baudelaire
Illustrated by Auguste Rodin
In 1887, publisher and bibliophile Paul Gallimard asked Auguste Rodin to illustrate his personal copy of the rare 1857 edition of Charles Baudelaire's The Flowers of Evil (now in the Musée Rodin, Paris). In 1918, the Société des Amis du Livre Moderne (Society of Friends of the Modern Book) published 200 facsimile copies, of which this is number 74.
Baudelaire's poetry had inspired Rodin during the conception of his major monument The Gates of Hell. His illustrations echo drawings made during the germination of that project in the early 1880s, including three examples of his "black drawings," so-called for the darkness of their content and ink wash. He also included sketches made after sculptural compositions, such as Orpheus and Eurydice and The Thinker, enjoying the multiplicity of symbolic resonances present in his work.
Rodin at The Met
Produced in conjunction with the exhibition Rodin at The Met, on view at The Met Fifth Avenue, September 16, 2017, through January 15, 2018. For highlights of Les Fleurs du mal visit The Met on Google Arts & Culture.
Fleurs du Mal Frontispiece (Printed 1918)The Metropolitan Museum of Art
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Fleurs du Mal "Au Lecteur" (Printed 1918)The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Fleurs du Mal "Bénédiction" and "Le Guignon" (Printed 1918)The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Fleurs du Mal "Le Guignon" and "La Beauté" (Printed 1918)The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Fleurs du Mal "La Beauté" and "Les Bijoux" (Printed 1918)The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Fleurs du Mal "Les Bijoux" (Printed 1918)The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Fleurs du Mal "La Beauté" and "Les Bijoux" (Printed 1918)The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Fleurs du Mal "Les Bijoux" (Printed 1918)The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Fleurs du Mal "Une Charogne" (Printed 1918)The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Fleurs du Mal "De Prufudis clamavi" and "Tout entière" (Printed 1918)The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Fleurs du Mal "Remords posthume" and "Réversibilité" (Printed 1918)The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Fleurs du Mal "L'Aube spirituelle" and "Le Poison" (Printed 1918)The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Fleurs du Mal "Le Poison" (Printed 1918)The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Fleurs du Mal "L'Irréparable" (Printed 1918)The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Fleurs du Mal "Causerie" (Printed 1918)The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Fleurs du Mal "L'Irremédiable" (Printed 1918)The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Fleurs du Mal "Tristesses de la lune" and "La Destruction" (Printed 1918)The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Fleurs du Mal "La Destruction" and "Une Martyre" (Printed 1918)The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Fleurs du Mal "Une Martyre" and "Femmes damnées" (Printed 1918)The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Fleurs du Mal "Les Deux bonnes sœurs" (Printed 1918)The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Fleurs du Mal "La Béatrice" (Printed 1918)The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Fleurs du Mal Illustration insert (Printed 1918)The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Fleurs du Mal "L'Amour et le grane" (Printed 1918)The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Fleurs du Mal "Le Vin des amants" (Printed 1918)The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Fleurs du Mal "La Mort des pauvres" (Printed 1918)The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Fleurs du Mal "La Mort des artistes" (Printed 1918)The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Illustrations by Auguste Rodin (French, Paris 1840–1917 Meudon)
Text by Charles Baudelaire (French, Paris 1821–1867 Paris)
Vingt-sept poèmes des Fleurs du mal (Twenty-Seven Poems from the Flowers of Evil), 1918
Published by the Société des Amis du Livre Moderne, Paris
The Elisha Whittelsey Collection, The Elisha Whittelsey Fund, 1968 (68.632.1)
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