As a young woman, Camille Claudel was recognized for
both her artistic talent and her physical beauty; nevertheless,
she spent most of her adult life as a recluse. Much attention
has been focused on Claudel's relationship with her teacher, mentor,
and lover, Auguste Rodin.
Born in Fère-en-Tardenois, Aisne, in 1864, moved with her
family to Paris around 1881.
She studied sculpture at the Académie Colarossi, one of
the few art academies in France open to female students. Along
with other sculptors, she also shared an independent studio where
Alfred Boucher taught.
In 1883 Boucher won a Prix de Rome and departed for Italy; he
asked Rodin to serve as adviser to Claudel and her colleagues
in his stead.
Two years later, Rodin asked Claudel to become a studio assistant.
By working as Rodin's apprentice, Claudel had the chance to study
the nude figure, an unusual opportunity for a woman in the 19th
century, but one that gave the artist a profound understanding
of anatomical nuances. Claudel modeled hands and feet for Rodin's
Burghers of Calais and posed for figures in his Gates of Hell.
In 1893, because Rodin's work and stature occupied front stage
in French culture, Claudel secluded herself in her studio to disassociate
herself from him and to try to establish her own reputation.
Her love for portraying the human form resulted in certain sculptures
that the state and an infuriated press censored as overly sensual
and inappropriate for public display.
These circumstances may have contributed to the decline of her
career and her mental state.
In 1913 Claudel was committed to a mental asylum, where she remained
without sculpting until her death 30 years later in 1943.