Female nude reclining
Auguste Rodin, 1909–1910
About this artwork
In the twilight of his illustrious career, Auguste Rodin created *Female Nude Reclining* around 1909–1910, a delicate graphite drawing that captures the sculptor's enduring fascination with the human form Best known for monumental bronzes like *The Thinker* and *The Kiss*, Rodin was equally masterful as a draughtsman, producing of studies that explored anatomy, movement, and emotion. This intimate work, measuring 14 3/16 × 9 1/4 inches, exemplifies his late style: fluid lines and subtle modeling that evoke the sensuous curves of the reclining figure, a motif rooted in classical antiquity yet infused with modern vitality. Rodin's use of graphite with stumping—a technique blending the medium with a soft stump for velvety tones—brings the nude's skin to luminous life, blurring edges to suggest warmth and depth. Housed in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Drawings and Prints department since a 1913 gift from Thomas F. Ryan, this piece highlights the nude's timeless role in Western art, from Renaissance masters to Impressionist explorations of light and flesh. It invites viewers to appreciate Rodin's genius in translating three-dimensional sculpture into two-dimensional poetry, celebrating the body's natural grace.