cover image CAMILLE CLAUDEL: A Life

CAMILLE CLAUDEL: A Life

Odile Ayral-Clause, . . Abrams, $29.95 (280pp) ISBN 978-0-8109-4077-2

French sculptor Claudel (1864–1943) is best known for her love affair with fellow artist Auguste Rodin, the basis for a late '80s French film starring Gérard Depardieu and Isabelle Adjani. Ayral-Clause, a professor of French and the humanities at California Polytechnic State University at San Luis Obispo, cites original documents and other research to argue that although Rodin is usually depicted as having abandoned a wimpy Camille, in fact Camille was so feisty and in-your-face (a necessity for a woman artist in a man's world) that he wound up running for cover to escape her "insults" once their 15-year-long affair was over. Camille went mad and spent her last 30 years in an asylum. Ayral-Clause's account of these events is clear, although sometimes marred by an artificial prose style with odd syntax: "Events that are denied at the time they occur are often brought back to life through letters or journals discovered later on." Art history students may be disappointed by the generalized comments about Claudel's artworks themselves (shown, along with photos, in 69 b&w illustrations), since the woman, rather than the artist, is in the limelight in this biography. By contrast, Ayral-Clause fully accepts Rodin as a great artist and great man, reserving criticism for Camille's brother, the far-right-wing poet and diplomat Paul Claudel, who ensured she was buried in a common grave for paupers despite the family's great wealth. (June)

Forecast:Scholars will find this book, with its mastery of the sources in their original language, a welcome substitute for outdated previous studies, but they will want more in the way of artistic assessment all around; trade readers, by contrast, will want more fully dramatized narrative. The book may get caught in the middle.