Selling cast bronzes of Rodin sculptures could give lifeline to struggling Paris museum
Record ID:
1561221
Selling cast bronzes of Rodin sculptures could give lifeline to struggling Paris museum
- Title: Selling cast bronzes of Rodin sculptures could give lifeline to struggling Paris museum
- Date: 7th July 2020
- Summary: ***WARNING: CONTAINS NUDITY*** VARIOUS OF GARDEN AND STATUES RODIN SCULPTURE "THREE SHADOWS"
- Embargoed: 21st July 2020 13:48
- Keywords: France Paris Rodin museum bronze re-opening sculptures
- Location: PARIS, FRANCE
- City: PARIS, FRANCE
- Country: France
- Topics: Art,Arts / Culture / Entertainment
- Reuters ID: LVA003CLTA3BB
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: The Rodin museum in Paris reopened on Tuesday (July 7) and is hoping the sale of limited-edition cast bronzes of work by the 19th-century sculptor will help make up some of its financial losses from a fall in visitor numbers due to the coronavirus pandemic.
The museum, which is self-financed, has always earned money through the sale of bronzes and has a target to sell 3 million euros worth each year, director Catherine Chevillot said. Buyers range from museums worldwide to art collectors.
Home of Auguste Rodin masterpieces such as "The Kiss" and "The Thinker", the museum was allowed by Rodin to cast and sell bronzes after his death.
It must, however, limit original editions to 12 casts, meaning pieces like "The Thinker" can no longer be cast while four more editions of "The Gates of Hell" can go on sale.
The museum, which opened to the public in 1919, and its three-hectare sculpture park attracted 570,000 visitors last year. About 75% were foreign tourists.
But with France's borders still closed to many foreign tourists, notably Americans, and with social distancing in place, it expects visitor numbers to fall to 200,000 this year.
The museum expects a revenue shortfall of 4.4 million euros this year because of the pandemic's impact on visitor numbers and other sources of revenue, Chevillot said.
Usually, the museum draws 3.8 million euros from ticket sales, 1.5 million euros from its souvenir shop and one million euros from renting the location each year.
The French government began easing its lockdown measures from mid-May and cultural venues are slowly reopening. The Musee d'Orsay reopened on June 23 and the Louvre museum on July 6.
(Production: Melodie Sforza, Emilie Delwarde, Ardee Napolitano) - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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