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| Photos courtesy of 1° Reggimento Re |
February 16, 2026
February 15, 2026
Looking Back at Rodin
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| Bellona, bronze, modeled 1879, cast 1925 by the foundry Alexis Rudier |
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| Bellona, bronze, modeled 1879, cast 1925 by the foundry Alexis Rudier |
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| (L) The Thinker, bronze, modeled 1880-1881, cast 1924 by the founder Alexis Rudier. (R) The Crouching Woman, modeled 1881-1882, cast 1925 by the foundry Alexis Rudier |
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| The Age of Bronze, bronze, modeled 1875-1877, cast in 1925 by the founder Alexis Rudier |
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| Details: The Burghers of Calais, modeled 1884-1895, cast 1919-1921 by the founder Alexis Rudier |
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| Details: The Burghers of Calais, modeled 1884-1895, cast 1919-1921 by the founder Alexis Rudier |
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| Details: The Burghers of Calais, modeled 1884-1895, cast 1919-1921 by the founder Alexis Rudier |
Southern Italian Music for Holy Week
• Passione
• La Voce Della Passione
• Tenebrae: Neapolitan Music for the Holy Week
• Passio Secundum Joannem by Francesco Feo
All are available from Amazon.com
February 14, 2026
Dinner and a Show: A Valentine's Memory
Years ago, for our first Valentine’s Day, I took a girlfriend to a small Neapolitan restaurant in a quiet corner of Manhattan. It was warm and dim; candlelight flickered off bottles of wine. The tables were close enough to require manners, and everyone spoke softly so as not to intrude on each other’s company.
We ordered cocktails first, then wine, then dinner, then dessert. The slow way, piano, piano. We leaned in to talk, using table voices out of courtesy and restraint. It felt like the night was proceeding as intended.
Then the couple beside us arrived.
He was loud immediately, as if offended by the restaurant itself. He spoke in a thick accent I couldn’t place and complained about everything. The wine was wrong. The temperature was wrong. The utensils were wrong. Each complaint grew more theatrical than the last. He sent dishes back with flourishes, performing dissatisfaction like a party trick. His date—American, pretty, and visibly shrinking—stared into her glass as if hoping to disappear into it.
I assumed this was his idea of charm. Some men confuse arrogance with respect. She looked mortified. The room began to listen, despite itself.
When the bill arrived, he made a show of that too. Voices rose. Gestures expanded. The waiter remained calm, professional, almost serene. Then came the line none of us were prepared for.
The man announced, loudly, that the sausages were “too sexual.”
My date and I nearly spit out our drinks. Around us, a few diners froze mid-bite. The waiter paused and asked why he had eaten them if that was the case. The room broke out laughing, unchecked and merciless.
The man flushed, paid his bill, and left with his date in tow, his authority tarnished beyond repair.
The restaurant settled back into itself, pleased and slightly drunk on satisfaction. Candle flames steadied. Conversations resumed.
My date leaned in and smiled. She said she hadn’t been expecting a show.
~ By Giovanni Di Napoli, February 13th, Feast of Beata Beatrice di Ornacieu
We ordered cocktails first, then wine, then dinner, then dessert. The slow way, piano, piano. We leaned in to talk, using table voices out of courtesy and restraint. It felt like the night was proceeding as intended.
Then the couple beside us arrived.
He was loud immediately, as if offended by the restaurant itself. He spoke in a thick accent I couldn’t place and complained about everything. The wine was wrong. The temperature was wrong. The utensils were wrong. Each complaint grew more theatrical than the last. He sent dishes back with flourishes, performing dissatisfaction like a party trick. His date—American, pretty, and visibly shrinking—stared into her glass as if hoping to disappear into it.
I assumed this was his idea of charm. Some men confuse arrogance with respect. She looked mortified. The room began to listen, despite itself.
When the bill arrived, he made a show of that too. Voices rose. Gestures expanded. The waiter remained calm, professional, almost serene. Then came the line none of us were prepared for.
The man announced, loudly, that the sausages were “too sexual.”
My date and I nearly spit out our drinks. Around us, a few diners froze mid-bite. The waiter paused and asked why he had eaten them if that was the case. The room broke out laughing, unchecked and merciless.
The man flushed, paid his bill, and left with his date in tow, his authority tarnished beyond repair.
The restaurant settled back into itself, pleased and slightly drunk on satisfaction. Candle flames steadied. Conversations resumed.
My date leaned in and smiled. She said she hadn’t been expecting a show.
~ By Giovanni Di Napoli, February 13th, Feast of Beata Beatrice di Ornacieu
February 13, 2026
Auguste Rodin Redux
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| Eternal Springtime, bronze, modeled 1884, cast between 1898-1918 by Ferdinand Barbedienne |
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| (L) Eternal Springtime, plaster, painted white, modeled 1884, cast 1886. (R) Eternal Springtime, bronze, modeled 1884, cast between 1898-1918 by Ferdinand Barbedienne |
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| (L) The Thinker, bronze, modeled 1880-1881, cast 1924 by the founder Alexis Rudier. (R) The Centauress, bronze, modeled c. 1887, cast 1925 by the founder Alexis Rudier |
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| (L) The Gates of Hell, bronze, modeled 1880-1917, cast 1926-1928 by the founder Alexis Rudier. (R) The Age of Bronze, bronze, modeled 1875-1877, cast 1925 by the founder Alexis Rudier |
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| The Sirens, bronze, modeled 1887, cast 1925 by the founder Alexis Rudier |
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| Kneeling Fauness, bronze, modeled c. 1887, cast 1900 by the founder Alexis Rudier |
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| (L) The Minotaur, plaster, modeled c. 1885, cast c. 1886. (R) Medea, plaster, modeled c.1880, cast before 1917 |
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| Andromeda, marble, modeled 1885, carved 1886 |
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| Young Mother in the Grotto, modeled 1885, carved 1891 by Jean Escoula |
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| Danaid (The Source), marble, modeled 1885, enlarged 1889, carved before 1902 by Jean Escoula |
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| Danaid (The Source), marble, modeled 1885, enlarged 1889, carved before 1902 by Jean Escoula |
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| (L) Naked Balzac, plaster painted with varnish, modeled c. 1892-1893, cast before 1917. (R) Polyphemus, Acis, and Galatea, plaster, modeled 1888, cast before 1895 |
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| The Hand of God, bronze, modeled 1898, cast 1925 by the founder Alexis Rudier |
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| Jules Barbey d'Aurevilly, bronze, modeled 1909-1912, cast 1925 by the founder Alexis Rudier |
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| (L) Jules Barbey d'Aurevilly, bronze, modeled 1909-1912, cast 1925 by the founder Alexis Rudier. (R) Mignon, bronze, modeled c. 1867-1868, cast 1925 by the founder Alexis Rudier |
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| Victor Hugo, plaster made in 1886, modeled 1883 |
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| (L) George Bernard Shaw, bronze, modeled 1906, cast 1926 by the founder Alexis Rudier. (R) Pierre Puvis de Chavannes, bronze, modeled 1890, cast 1926 by the founder Alexis Rudier |
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| Madame Vicuña, bronze, modeled 1887, cast 1925 by the founder Alexis Rudier |
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| (L) The Left Hand, bronze, modeled c. 1885, cast 1925 by the founder Alexis Rudier. (R) The Clenched Hand, bronze, modeled c. 1885, cast 1925 by the founder Alexis Rudier |
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| (L) The Cathedral, modeled 1908, cast 1925 by the founder Alexis Rudier. (R) The Athlete, bronze, modeled 1901, cast 1925 by the founder Alexis Rudier |
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| Oceanides, bronze, modeled 1903-1906, cast 1925 by the founder Alexis Rudier |
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| Balzac, bronze, modeled 1897, cast 1925 by the founder Alexis Rudier |
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| (L) The Call to Arms, bronze, modeled 1879, cast 1925 by the founder Alexis Rudier. (R) The Benedictions, bronze, modeled 1894, cast by the founder Alexis Rudier |
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| The Shade, bronze, modeled 1881-1886, enlarged 1901-1904, cast 1923 by the founder Alexis Rudier |
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| Adam, bronze, modeled 1880-1881, cast 1925 by the founder Alexis Rudier |
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| The Burghers of Calais, modeled 1884-1895, cast 1919-1921 by the founder Alexis Rudier |
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