Edgar Degas
Degas, Hilaire-Germain-Edgar
French, 1834 - 1917
The eldest son of a Parisian banker, Edgar Degas reinforced his formal academic art training by copying Old Master paintings both in Italy, where he spent three years (1856–1859), and at the Louvre. Degas early on developed a rigorous drawing style and a respect for line that he would maintain throughout his career. His first independent works were portraits and history paintings but in the early 1860s he began to paint scenes from modern life. He started with the world of horse racing and by the end of the 1860s had also turned his attention to the theater and ballet.
Soon after a trip to New Orleans, where his uncle and two of his brothers worked in the cotton trade, in 1873, Degas banded together with other artists interested in organizing independent exhibitions without juries. He became a founding member of what soon would be known as the impressionists, participating in six impressionist exhibitions between 1874 and 1886.
Despite his long and fruitful association with the impressionists, Degas preferred to be called a realist. His focus on urban subjects, artificial light, and careful drawing distinguished him from other impressionists, such as Claude Monet, who worked outdoors, painting directly from their subjects. A steely observer of everyday scenes, Degas tirelessly analyzed positions, gestures, and movement.
Degas developed distinctive compositional techniques, viewing scenes from unexpected angles and framing them unconventionally. He experimented with a variety of media, including pastels, photography, and monotypes, and he used novel combinations of materials in his works on paper and canvas and in his sculptures. He primarily viewed his sculpture as a means of researching movement and publicly exhibited only one, Little Dancer Aged Fourteen (1878–1881).
Degas was frequently criticized for depicting unattractive models from Paris’ working class, but others, like realist novelist Edmond de Goncourt, championed Degas as “the one who has been able to capture the soul of modern life.” By the late 1880s, Degas was recognized as a major figure in the Parisian art world. Financially secure, he could be selective about exhibiting and selling his work. He also bought ancient and modern works for his own collection, including paintings by El Greco, Edouard Manet, and Paul Gauguin, who became close friends. Depressed by the limitations of his failing eyesight, he created nothing after 1912; at his death in 1917, he was hailed as a French national treasure. About 150 deteriorating clay and wax sculptures were found in Degas’s studio following his death. Their existence had been unknown to all but Degas’s closest associates.
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Dancer Holding Her Right Foot in Her Right Hand
Dancer Holding Her Right Foot in Her Right Hand
Edgar Degas · possibly 1900/1911 · pigmented beeswax, plastiline, metal armature, on wooden base · Accession ID 1985.64.56
Artwork
Dancer Holding Her Right Foot in Her Right Hand
Dancer Holding Her Right Foot in Her Right Hand
Edgar Degas · possibly 1900/1911 · pigmented beeswax, metal armature, wood?, cork, on wooden base · Accession ID 1985.64.53
Artwork
Artwork
Woman Stretching
Woman Stretching
Edgar Degas · c. 1896/1911 · pigmented beeswax, metal armature, on wooden base · Accession ID 1985.64.55
Artwork
Pregnant Woman
Pregnant Woman
Edgar Degas · c. 1896/1911 · pigmented beeswax, plastiline, metal armature, cork, on wooden base · Accession ID 1985.64.54
Artwork
Head, Study for a Portrait of Mme Salle
Head, Study for a Portrait of Mme Salle
Edgar Degas · original clay c. 1892, cast 1920/1926 · copper alloy · Accession ID 1995.47.16
Artwork
The Masseuse, Group
The Masseuse, Group
Edgar Degas · mid 1890s · plastiline, metal armature, wood, cork, on wooden base · Accession ID 1985.64.61
Artwork
Jockey with Cap
Jockey with Cap
Edgar Degas · possibly 1890s · pigmented beeswax, metal armature, cloth, paper · Accession ID 1999.80.15
Artwork
Woman Seated in an Armchair, Wiping Her Neck
Woman Seated in an Armchair, Wiping Her Neck
Edgar Degas · original plastiline 1890s/c.1905, cast 1920/1952 · copper alloy · Accession ID 1985.64.66
Artwork
Dancer Looking at the Sole of Her Right Foot
Dancer Looking at the Sole of Her Right Foot
Edgar Degas · c. 1890s · pigmented beeswax, metal armature, cork, on wooden base · Accession ID 1999.80.5
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Bibliography
1918
Lafond, Paul. Degas. 2 vols. Paris, 1918-1919.
1921
Ref Numbers: 657, 658
Lugt, Frits. Les marques de collections de dessins & d'estampes; marques estampillees et ecrites de collections. Amsterdam: Vereenigde drukkerijen, 1921.
1924
Vollard, Ambroise. Degas (1834-1917). Paris, 1924.
1944
Rewald, John. Degas, Works in Sculpture: A Complete Catalogue. Translated by John Coleman and Noel Moulton. New York, 1944.
1946
Lemoisne, Paul André. Degas et son oeuvre. 4 vols. Paris, 1946-1949.
1956
Rewald, John. Degas Sculpture: The Complete Works. Translated by John Coleman and Noel Moulton. New York, 1956.
1976
Millard, Charles W. The Sculpture of Edgar Degas. Princeton, 1976.
1984
Lemoisne, Paul-André. Degas et son Oeuvre. 5 vols. New York, 1984 (reprint of Paris edition, 1946-1949).
McMullen, Roy. Degas: His Life, Times, and Work. Boston, 1984.
1986
Vollard, Ambroise. Degas: An Intimate Portrait. Translated by Randolph T. Weaver. New York, 1986.
1991
Loyrette, Henri. Degas. Paris, 1991.
Pingeot, Anne. Degas Sculptures. Paris, 1991.
2002
Czestochowski, Joseph S., and Anne Pingeot. Degas--Sculptures. Catalogue Raisonné of the Bronzes. Memphis, 2002.
2010
Lindsay, Suzanne Glover, Daphne S. Barbour, and Shelley G. Sturman. Edgar Degas Sculpture. The Collections of the National Gallery of Art Systematic Catalogue. Washington, D.C., 2010: 5-45.