
JULY 19

Edgar Degas
Born July 19, 1834, Paris, France
Died September 27, 1917, Paris, France
French Painter
Edgar Degas
In Full - Hilaire-Germain-Edgar De Gas later
Degas
French painter, sculptor, and printmaker who was
prominent in the Impressionist group and widely
celebrated for his images of Parisian life.
Degas's principal subject was the
humanespecially the femalefigure,
which he explored in works ranging from the
sombre portraits of his early years to the
studies of laundresses, cabaret singers,
milliners, and prostitutes of his Impressionist
period. Ballet dancers and women washing
themselves would preoccupy him throughout his
career. Degas was the only Impressionist to truly
bridge the gap between traditional academic art
and the radical movements of the early 20th
century, a restless innovator who often set the
pace for his younger colleagues. Acknowledged as
one of the finest draftsmen of his age, Degas
experimented with a wide variety of media,
including oil, pastel, gouache, etching,
lithography, monotype, wax modeling, and
photography. In his last decades, both his
subject matter and technique became simplified,
resulting in a new art of vivid colour and
expressive form, and in long sequences of closely
linked compositions. Once marginalized as a
painter of dancers, Degas is now
counted among the most complex and innovative
figures of his generation, credited with
influencing Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, and
many of the leading figurative artists of the
20th century.
Beginnings
Born in Paris just south of Montmartre, Degas
always remained a proud Parisian, living and
working in the same area of the city throughout
his career. Though detailed knowledge of his
middle-class family is limited, it is known that
they maintained the outward forms of polite
society and that they were related to minor
aristocracy in Italy and to the business
community in New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S. The
family was also prosperous enough to send Degas
in 1845 to a leading boys' school, the Lycée
Louis-le-Grand, where he received a conventional
classical education. Music featured prominently
in the Degas home, where the artist's mother sang
opera arias and his father arranged occasional
recitals, one of which is represented in Degas's
painting of 1872, Lorenzo Pagans and Auguste De
Gas. The artist's mother died when he was 13
years old, leaving three sons and two daughters
to be brought up by his father, a banker by
profession. Knowledgeable about art but
conservative in his preferences, Degas's father
helped to develop his son's interest in painting
and in 1855 encouraged him to register at the
École des Beaux-Arts under the supervision of
Louis Lamothe, a minor follower of J.-A.-D.
Ingres. Surviving works from this period show
Degas's aptitude for drawing and his attention to
the historical precedents he viewed in the
Louvre. He also began his first solemn
explorations of the self-portrait.
In 1856 Degas surprisingly abandoned his studies
in Paris, using his father's funds to embark on a
three-year period of travel and study in Italy,
where he immersed himself in the painting and
sculpture of antiquity, the trecento, and the
Renaissance. Staying first with relatives in
Naples, he later worked in Rome and Florence,
filling notebooks with sketches of faces,
historic buildings, and the landscape, and with
hundreds of rapid pencil copies from frescoes and
oil paintings he admired. Among these were copies
after Giotto, Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci,
and Titian, artists who were to echo through his
compositions for decades; the inclusion of
less-expected works, however, such as those by
Sir Anthony Van Dyck and Frans Snyders, hinted at
wider interests. The same sketchbooks include
written notes and reflections, as well as drafts
for his own figure-based paintings in a variety
of eclectic styles. Together they suggest a
literate and serious young artist with high
ambitions, but one who still lacked direction.
Colour and line
From his beginnings, Degas seemed equally
attracted to the severity of line and to the
sensuous delights of colour, echoing a historic
tension that was still much debated in his time.
In Italy he consciously modeled some drawings on
the linear restraint of the Florentine masters,
such as Michelangelo, although he gradually
acknowledged the lure of the Venetian painters,
such as Titian, and their densely hued surfaces.
Characteristically, the young Degas developed a
near reverence for Ingres, the 19th-century
champion of Classical line, while almost guiltily
imitating Eugène Delacroix, who was the leading
proponent of lyrical colour in the century and
considered to be Ingres's antithesis. Many of the
pictures of Degas's maturity grew out of a
confrontation between these impulses, which
arguably found resolution in the vigorously drawn
and brilliantly coloured pastels of his later
years.
Returning to Paris in April 1859, Degas attempted
to launch himself through the established
art-world channels of the day, though with little
success. He painted large portraits of family
members and grandiose, historically inspired
canvases such as The Daughter of Jephthah and
Semiramis Building Babylon, intending to submit
them to the annual state-sponsored Salon. Each
work was painstakingly prepared in drawings that
still rank among the most beautiful of his
career, but he found the paintings themselves
difficult to complete to his satisfaction.
Perhaps humbled by his exposure to the Italian
masters, Degas scraped down and reworked parts of
his own canvases, initiating a habit of technical
self-criticism that was to last a lifetime. In
1865 his more simply executed Scene of War in the
Middle Ages was accepted by the Salon jury, but
it remained almost unnoticed in the thronged
exhibition halls. The following year his dramatic
painting The Steeplechase was again met with
indifference, despite its startlingly close-up
view of a contemporary horse race that seems, in
retrospect, like the public announcement of a
transformation in his art.
Degas's transition to modern subject matter,
evident in The Steeplechase, was a long and
gradual one, not an overnight conversion. Before
he left Italy, he had made drawings of street
characters and paintings of fashionable
horse-riders, but always on a small scale. In
Paris in the early 1860s, his pictures of French
racing events broke new ground both for their
decidedly contemporary subject matter and for
their surprising viewpoints and bold colours,
which preceded the canvases of similar scenes by
his renowned contemporary Édouard Manet. Degas's
portraits, too, at this time became less remote
and more actively engaged with the top-hatted,
restless world in which he lived. When he met
Manet around 1862, Degas developed an
affectionate but pointed rivalry with the
slightly older man and soon shared something of
Manet's oppositional stance toward the artistic
establishment and its traditional subject matter.
Degas's notebooks from these years teem with
contrary possibilities for the direction of his
art, as sketches of the countryside follow
glimpses of theatrical performances, and studies
from objects in the Louvre are interspersed among
topical caricatures. After mid-decade he
abandoned historical themes, sending a portrait
of a current ballet star at the Paris Opéra,
Eugénie Fiocre, to the Salon of 1868; he would
soon reject such official exhibitions altogether.
By 1870 Degas was a familiar figure in
independent art circles in Paris, at home with
Realists such as James Tissot and Henri
Fantin-Latour, acquainted with the vanguard
critics Edmond Duranty and Champfleury, and
involved as an occasional but forceful presence
at the Café Guérbois, where avant-garde artists
such as Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Camille Pissarro,
and Claude Monet would also meet. He was famously
opinionated, supporting these radical artists'
shared belief that painting should engage with
the sights and subjects of the modern world. As
part of his own process of engaging with
modernity, he self-consciously aligned himself
with Realist novelists such as Émile Zola and
Edmond and Jules Goncourt, drafting illustrations
for their novels and briefly adopting a similar
social descriptiveness.
Like most of the future Impressionists, Degas
lightened his palette and adopted more abrupt,
simplified compositions during this period,
partly under the influence of Japanese prints,
which were very popular among contemporary
artists. But, unlike his colleagues, who were
experimenting with painting en plein-air, Degas
affected disdain toward the improvised outdoor
landscape studies for which many of the
Impressionists became known. Although he clung to
the habit of drawing in preparation for his
pictures and insisted on working in the studio
rather than outdoors, in 1869 Degas did
experiment in private with a series of pastel
landscapes executed on the Normandy coast. While
he is not generally associated with them, he
would turn to other rural subjects on several
occasions in later life. Degas's advancing
self-confidence at this date, boosted by the
first signs of public recognition, is palpable in
his letters and the range of his technical
accomplishment.
The early 1870s were critical in defining Degas's
personal and artistic trajectory, as they were
for the other artists who would be known as the
Impressionists. Between 1870 and 1873 he painted
a pioneering group of ballet rehearsal and
performance scenes, such as his Dance Class of
1871, finding eager buyers for many of them and
soon becoming identified with their theme. The
dance allowed Degas to test his skills in a
daring new context: the world of the Paris Opéra
was surrounded by sexual intrigue as well as high
glamour and had previously been the province of
popular illustrators. Degas built on his
knowledge of past art, but he cleverly directed
it at audiences of his own day in his choice of
subject matter; his views of backstage activity
are conspicuously casual and occasionally
scurrilous. In 1874 he was one of the leading
organizers of the first Impressionist exhibition
(which he called a salon of
Realists), showing his signature repertoire
of dancers, horse races, and women ironing.
Astonishingly, these developments coincided with
or followed the terrible months of the
Franco-German War, when Paris was besieged and
Degas and several of his colleagues enlisted in
the National Guard to defend the city. Escaping
the worst horrors of the Commune, Degas left in
1872 for a protracted visit to his relatives in
New Orleans, where he pursued his experiments in
family portraiture in spectacular works such as
the Cotton Market at New Orleans (1873). Over
this same period he began to describe a
deterioration in his eyesight, complaining of
intolerance to bright light and wondering if he
might soon be blind.
The pictures Degas showed at the series of eight
Impressionist exhibitions, held between 1874 and
1886, revealed him at his most inventive. Whereas
the paintings of Claude Monet, Alfred Sisley,
Paul Cézanne, Berthe Morisot, Mary Cassatt,
Camille Pissarro, and Pierre-Auguste Renoir were
largely concerned with the landscape or with
figures of rural toil and urban glamour, Degas
specialized in startling and enigmatic scenes of
Parisian life. Visitors were frequently
disconcerted by his images of popular
entertainment or back-street squalor, depicted
with a sharp eye for the topical gesture and
heightened by a radical use of perspective, which
embodied the extreme viewpoints of a newly mobile
society. Already famed for his dry humour, Degas
seemed to tease his viewers by opting for
ambiguity, revealing a glamorous nightclub singer
in all her awkwardness, while elevating a tired
laundress to near-Classical grandeur. Degas was
seen as the leader of a more traditionally
skilled faction within the group, and his
pictures were sought out by collectors. Critics
approvingly pointed out that his work was
grounded in a knowledge of the Old Masters and a
firm line, qualities they found lacking in some
of Degas's peers.
For much of his long working life, Degas was
attracted to the pleasures and difficulties of
the artist's materials. His drawings include
examples in pen, ink, pencil, chalk, pastel,
charcoal, and oil on paper, often in combination
with each other, while his paintings were carried
out in watercolour, gouache, distemper, metallic
pigments, and oils, on surfaces including card,
silk, ceramic, tile, and wood panel, as well as
widely varied textures of canvas. There was
something contradictory about much of this
activity: Degas invoked the techniques of the Old
Masters while creating anarchic methods of his
own. He effectively developed the black-and-white
monotype as an independent medium, for example,
sometimes with an added layer of pastel or
gouache, as in Dancer with a Bouquet Bowing
(1877). The results can be exhilarating, notably
when the effects of light and texture are subtly
expressive of the chosen subject, but he soon
tired of the technique. The late 1870s marked the
height of Degas's graphic experimentation, after
which he moved away from printmaking to
concentrate on enriching his use of pastel.
Between 1890 and 1892 he briefly returned to
monotype, perfecting a new colour procedure in a
dazzling series of landscapes, manylike
Wheatfield and Green Hillwith pastel
embellishments.
By the early 1880s the variety of Degas's
exhibited art seemed endless, encompassing
portraits and theatre scenes, pastels of women at
their toilette and of notorious criminals, and
series of drawings and prints. During this period
Degas began to experiment with making pictures as
charcoal drawings on tracing paper and retracing
them several times before adding pastel to
produce a family of related
compositions, analogous to the series paintings
of Monet. Such sequences were deeply challenging
artistic exercises, allowing him to move beyond
subject matter and to manipulate the finest
nuance of gesture or detail, while seeming to
elevate the fundamentals of
picture-makingcolour, form, and
compositionto a newly independent level.
For some years Degas had also been quietly
exploring the medium of sculpture, using wax and
other materials to make modest statuettes of
horses and a group of figures that culminated in
the tantalizingly lifelike wax sculpture, The
Little Dancer Aged 14. Shown at the Impressionist
exhibition of 1881, this work carried the
possibilities of visual realism to new extremes
by incorporating an actual, reduced-scale tutu,
ballet slippers, a human hair wig, and a silk
ribbon.
Final years
In 1884 Degas reached the age of 50 and confessed
to his friends that he felt some disillusionment
about his career. Already known for his
abrasiveness toward visitors during working
hours, he became notorious for his single-minded
dedication to the making of art and for his
hostility to journalists and the merely curious.
The next decade was one of continuous invention,
as he gradually refined his artistic ambitions
and shed the preoccupations of his middle years.
He abandoned many of the topical themes of the
1870sthe café-concerts, shop scenes, and
brothels, for exampleand replaced them with
a new phase of concentration on the human figure
in intimate, if more indistinct, settings. After
a controversial sequence of pastels in the 1886
Impressionist exhibition, which showed women
bathing and drying themselves indoors and in the
open air, Degas produced hundreds of obsessive
studies of the nude female form on paper and
canvas or in wax and clay. While some of the
earlier scenes had been considered voyeuristic
and the models identified as prostitutes, these
later figures avoid easy classification. The
figure in The Morning Bath ( 189295) is
almost monumental in the manner of the antique
sculpture he admired, while others seem overtly
sensual or burdened by their massiveness.
The second great subject of Degas's later years
was the dancer, now infrequently on stage or in
compromising situations, but rather more often
waiting in the wings. He hired models to pose in
his studio for both his ballet and bathing
scenes, often freely improvising his settings or
utilizing familiar props. Though they never
became abstract in any sense that Degas would
have understood, the works of this period moved
significantly away from the urban context that
had formerly inspired him. His late pictures of
dancers are essentially engagements with the
human form, at times in rhythmic relationships
with each other's bodies, and at times expressing
a forceful individual presence. In a large oil
painting of around 1900, Dancers at the Barre,
for example, Degas created a vital equilibrium
between the energy of the two women in a tense
composition of verticals and diagonals and of
green skirts and orange walls.
In such works Degas seemed to be confronting the
beginnings of a new art, where documentary
description counts for little and the
preoccupations with structure and expression of
the early 20th century are spelled out. As in his
nude studies, his pastels of dancers were
sometimes lightly tinted over an energetic
charcoal drawing, or were otherwise densely built
up in crusty layers of brilliant, unnatural hue.
The old dialogue between colour and line
continued, but in an emphatically modern idiom. A
fascination with varied techniques haunted Degas
to the end, resurfacing in dramatic and
occasionally bizarre late canvases that involved
finger-painting, glazes of contrasting colour,
and heavily impastoed surfaces.
The audacity of Degas's art during this period
was often at odds with the narrowness of his
life. In 1890 he took over a large studio on the
rue Victor Massé, later moving into an adjoining
apartment that was to remain his home until 1912.
He never married but was a fiercely loyal friend,
counting among his intimates a number of women,
including Mary Cassatt. Degas enjoyed society on
his own terms, dining out within a trusted circle
and regaling families such as Ludovic and Louise
Halévy with his trenchant opinions and humorous
aphorisms on art, literature, and politics. His
letters from these years are typically brief and
businesslike, but occasionally allow glimpses of
a melancholy, strong-willed personality. Degas
relished the company of the young, from small
children to the new generation of writers and
artists who increasingly sought him out. With the
flamboyant artist Paul Gauguin, for example, he
exchanged both ideas and works of art, learning
much from the younger man's views on colour while
also prompting Gauguin to make experimental
prints and boldly drawn figure compositions.
Degas himself remained sombre in appearance,
wearing a dark suit and top hat on formal
occasions and remaining aloof from the mores of
bohemianism.
Despite many myths about Degas's later years,
some encouraged by the artist himself, he did not
(until the very end) retreat from the art world,
but rather he promoted his work energetically and
closely followed the careers of perceived rivals
such as Monet and Cézanne. In 1892 he staged a
much-noted exhibition of his landscape monotypes
at the Durand-Ruel Gallery, partly as a riposte
to Monet's gathering fame and the recent success
of Pissarro's and Cassatt's own prints. Becoming
an avid collector, he also acquired the art of
many of his contemporaries, as well as hundreds
of drawings and paintings by his lifelong idols,
Delacroix and Ingres. And, while he remained
loyal to his Montmartre studio when his
contemporaries painted abroad or in their country
retreats, he also traveled regularly through
France, Switzerland, and Italy (his last visit
was in 1906, at the age of 72) to visit
acquaintances and make occasional landscapes. His
world began to narrow at the turn of the 20th
century, however, partly because of his
reactionary views and violently anti-Semitic
response to the Dreyfus Affair, which alienated
many of his friends. His declining health also
began to preoccupy him; although Degas never went
completely blind, a complex of eye troubles
obliged him to wear dark glasses outdoors and
take frequent rests from work. (His emphasis on
the strikingly simplified yet eloquent forms of
his final decades was partly linked to his
declining sight.)
In an unusual move for an artist of his renown,
Degas gave up work in old age after being obliged
to move from his last studio in 1912. Suffering
from reduced sight and hearing, he surrounded
himself with pictures he had made and collected,
retreating into his memories. His reputation in
France and beyond grew steadily, with his work
reaching prices of unprecedented heights and
beginning to enter major museums. With his
cooperation, dealers such as Paul Durand-Ruel and
Ambroise Vollard placed pictures from all periods
with leading collectors, among them the American
Louisine Havemeyer, the Russian Shchukin family,
and the German Count Harry Kessler. Degas was
idolized by artists of several early 20th-century
persuasionsincluding Suzanne Valadon,
Walter Richard Sickert, Maurice Denis, Georges
Rouault, Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, and Edward
Hopperwho visited his studio or emulated
him from afar.
It was not until after Degas's death in 1917,
however, that the wealth of his output was
revealed in a succession of vast public sales in
the war-shocked Paris of 1918 and 1919. Thousands
of his previously unexhibited works on paper and
canvas were sold, and some of the later, less
naturalistic examples distressed even his most
loyal admirers. Certain aspects of his
achievement gained prominence for the first time,
principally the wide range of his printmaking.
Also surprising was the extent of his collection
of pictures by El Greco, Ingres, Delacroix,
Manet, Gauguin, and Cézanne. In the early 1920s,
when the first series of posthumous bronze casts
were unveiled in Europe and the United States,
Degas's sculpture provided a further revelation
to the art world.
Degas's greatness is summarized in his ability to
explore the language of artits technical
and tactile complexity, its refinement as well as
its implicit energyto a more extreme degree
than any of his contemporaries, yet without
losing sight of his subject of the human animal
in its most public and private moments. He
combined a Romantic sensibility with a Classical
command of his means, fusing sensuality with
unsparing observation and an insistence on visual
structure. More than any of the other
Impressionists, Degas's art has long been
simplified or over-categorized: in reality, the
evolution from the gloomy academicism of his
youth to the full-blooded social realism of the
1870s, and then to the pyrotechnical, defiant
breadth of his last two- and three-dimensional
work, is one of the most awe-inspiring of the
modern period. In a single lifetime, Degas
abandoned the certainties of a state-controlled,
historical culture for an art of individual
crisis, even approaching the nihilism of the
following generation.
Degas's reputation has followed an unusual
trajectory, rising steeply in his maturity but
suffering from the angry retreat of his old age,
and from the preference for nonfigurative modes
in the new century. Though respected in
subsequent decades, he was sidelined by formalist
criticism and relegated too often to the role of
mere social commentator. The 1960s and '70s saw
the beginnings of a major reevaluation of Degas's
significance, with specialist publications on his
portraits, drawings, prints, monotypes,
notebooks, and sculpture, and a growing wave of
popular exhibitions. His imagery became a
battleground for feminist critics, who centred on
the artist's alleged misogyny and the perceived
prurience of his brothel and backstage scenes.
More recently, the self-consciously elusive
quality of much of Degas's depiction has been
increasingly acknowledged, as well as his
underestimated shift away from topicality in
later years. Such debates and discoveries
continue to attract vast crowds and to stimulate
curators, academics, and practicing artists,
suggesting that Degas's full stature has yet to
be fully measured.
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