As I mentioned in the piece, the museum in Philadelphia is the largest collection of the Rodin's works outside of Paris. That being said, it's relatively small; you can see the entire collection in a single afternoon. Still, there are plenty of other things to see in Philly, so I would recommend you take the trip.
We had the Rodin exhibition here in our museum several years ago, fortunately I was able to see it. The Gates of Hell were very small, as was The Thinker, and The Kiss, but to me the most impressive was his Balzac, probably because it was huge and imposing, and though it was not the center piece of the exhibit, its size made it so.
Wonderfully reflective piece on the perfect take on this prompt.
You must have seen a scaled-down reproduction of THE GATES OF HELL, as the final full-sized work is 20 feet tall and could hardly be described "small". However, the versions of THE THINKER and THE KISS you describe were likely the size that Rodin originally designed for the full-sized version of THE GATES OF HELL; however, Rodin also scaled THE THINKER and THE KISS up to "monumental" size, and there are multiple copies of the huge versions all around the globe. Hopefully you'll have the opportunity to see them with your own eyes some day.
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I agree on the third theory of who The Thinker represents. Thank you for reminding me of this glorious place. Hug and peace~~~
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I'm glad you enjoyed the piece. Thanks for the feedback!
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Thanks for the feedback!
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Wonderfully reflective piece on the perfect take on this prompt.
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Thanks for the feedback!
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