Edgar Degas: Difference between revisions
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| caption = Edgar Degas |
| caption = Edgar Degas |
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| birthname = Hilaire-Germain-Edgar Degas |
| birthname = Hilaire-Germain-Edgar Degas |
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| birthdate = [[ |
| birthdate = [[19 July]] [[1834]] |
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| location = [[Paris]], [[France]] |
| location = [[Paris]], [[France]] |
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| deathdate = [[ |
| deathdate = [[27 September]] [[1917]], aged {{age|1834|7|19|1917|9|27}} |
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| deathplace = [[Paris]], [[France]] |
| deathplace = [[Paris]], [[France]] |
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| nationality = [[French people|French]] |
| nationality = [[French people|French]] |
Revision as of 18:21, 12 July 2007
Edgar Degas | |
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File:EdgarDegas.jpg | |
Born | Hilaire-Germain-Edgar Degas |
Nationality | French |
Known for | Painting, Sculpture, Drawing |
Movement | Impressionism |
Edgar Degas (19 July 1834 – 27 September 1917), born Hilaire-Germain-Edgar Degas (IPA /ilɛʀ ʒɛʁmɛ̃ ɛdɡɑʀ dəɡɑ/), was a French artist famous for his work in painting, sculpture, printmaking and drawing. He is regarded as one of the founders of Impressionism although he rejected the term, and preferred to be called a realist.[1] A superb draughtsman, he is especially identified with the subject of the dance, and over half his works depict dancers. These display his mastery in the depiction of movement, as do his racecourse subjects and female nudes. His portraits are considered to be among the finest in the history of art.
Early in his career, his ambition was to be a history painter, and for this his academic training and close study of classic art had superbly prepared him. Upon abandoning this project, he brought the traditional methods of a history painter to bear on contemporary subject matter, and became a classical painter of modern life.[2]
Biography
Early life
Degas was born in Paris, France, the eldest of five children of Célestine Musson De Gas and Augustin De Gas, a banker. The family was moderately wealthy. At age eleven, Degas (as a young man he abandoned the more pretentious spelling of the family name)[3] began his schooling with enrollment in the Lycée Louis-le-Grand, graduating in 1853 with a baccalauréat in literature.
Degas began to paint seriously early in life. By eighteen he had turned a room in his home into an artist's studio, and had begun making copies in the Louvre, but his father expected him to go to law school. Degas duly registered at the Faculty of Law of the University of Paris in November 1853, but made little effort at his studies there. In 1855, Degas met Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres, whom he revered, and was advised by him to "draw lines, young man, many lines." In April of that same year, Degas received admission to the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, where he studied drawing with Louis Lamothe, under whose guidance he flourished, following the style of Ingres.[4] In July 1856, Degas traveled to Italy, where he would remain for the next three years. There he drew and painted copies after Michelangelo, Raphael, Titian, and other artists of the Renaissance, often selecting from an altarpiece an individual head which he treated as a portrait.[5] It was during this period that Degas studied and became accomplished in the techniques of high, academic, and classical art.[6]
Artistic career
After returning from Italy in 1859, Degas continued his education by copying paintings at the Louvre; he was to remain an enthusiastic copyist well into middle age.[7] In the early 1860s, while visiting his childhood friend Paul Valpinçon in Normandy, he made his first studies of horses. He exhibited at the Salon for the first time in 1865, when the jury accepted his painting Scene of War in the Middle Ages, which attracted little attention.[8] Although he exhibited annually in the Salon during the next five years, he submitted no more history paintings, and his Steeplechase—The Fallen Jockey (Salon of 1866) signaled his growing commitment to contemporary subject matter. The change in his art was influenced primarily by the example of Edouard Manet, whom Degas had met in 1864 while copying in the Louvre.[9]
At the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War in 1870, Degas enlisted in the National Guard, where his defense of Paris left him little time for painting. During rifle training his eyesight was found to be defective, and for the rest of his life his eye problems were a constant worry to him.[10]
After the war, in 1872, Degas began an extended stay in New Orleans, Louisiana, where his brother René and a number of other relatives lived. Staying in a house on Esplanade Avenue, Degas produced a number of works, many depicting family members. One of Degas' New Orleans works, depicting a scene at The Cotton Exchange at New Orleans, garnered favourable attention back in France, and was his only work purchased by a museum (that of Pau) during his lifetime.
Degas returned to Paris in 1873. By now thoroughly disenchanted with the Salon, in 1874 Degas joined forces with a group of young artists who were intent upon organizing an independent exhibiting society. The result was the first of the exhibitions that became labeled Impressionist Exhibitions. The Impressionists subsequently held seven additional shows, the last in 1886. Degas showed his work in all but one, even though he was, in the words of Andrew Forge, "continually at odds with the landscape painters. He deplored the scandal that surrounded the exhibitions and the publicity and advertisement that his colleagues quite naturally looked for. He objected violently to the label Impressionist that the press had hung on them."[11]
At about the same time, Degas also began a hobby as a photographer, using it for pleasure, and to accurately capture action for his paintings and artwork.[12]
At the death of his father in 1874, the subsequent settling of the estate revealed that René had amassed enormous business debts. To preserve the family name, Degas was forced to sell his house and a collection of art he had inherited. He now found himself suddenly dependent on sales of his artwork for income. [13]
After several years, his financial situation improved and sales of his own work permitted him to indulge his passion for collecting works by artists he admired—old masters such as El Greco, moderns such as Delacroix, and his contemporaries Cézanne, Gauguin, and Van Gogh. Ingres and Manet were especially well represented in his collection.
As the years passed, Degas became isolated, due in part to his belief "that a painter could have no personal life."[14] The Dreyfus Affair controversy brought his antisemitic leanings to the fore and he broke with all his Jewish friends.[15] In later life, Degas regretted the loss of those friends.
While he is known to have been working in pastel as late as the end of 1907, and is believed to have continued making sculpture as late as 1910, he apparently ceased working in 1912, when the impending demolition of his longtime residence on the rue Victor Massé forced a wrenching move to quarters on the boulevard de Clichy.[16] He never married and spent the last years of his life, nearly blind, restlessly wandering the streets of Paris[17] before dying in 1917. Degas's last years were sad and lonely ones, especially as he outlived many of his closest friends. [18]
Artistic style
Degas is often identified as an Impressionist, an understandable but insufficient description. Impressionism originated in the 1860s and 1870s and grew, in part, from the realism of such painters as Courbet and Corot. The Impressionists painted the realities of the world around them using bright, "dazzling" colors, concentrating primarily on the effects of light, and hoping to infuse their scenes with immediacy.
Technically, Degas differs from the Impressionists in that, as art historian Frederick Hartt says, he "never adopted the Impressionist color fleck",[19] and he continually belittled their practice of painting en plein air.[20] Degas is, however, described more accurately as an Impressionist than as a member of any other movement: his scenes of Parisian life, his off-center compositions, his experiments with colour and form, and his friendship with several key Impressionist artists, most notably Mary Cassatt and Edouard Manet, all relate him intimately to the Impressionist movement.[21]
Degas has his own distinct style, one reflecting his deep respect for the old masters and his great admiration for Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres and Eugène Delacroix. He was also a collector of Japanese prints, whose compositional principles influenced his work, as did the vigorous realism of popular illustrators such as Daumier and Gavarni. Although famous for horses and dancers, Degas began with conventional historical paintings such as The Young Spartans, although his treatment of such subjects became progressively less idealized. During his early career, Degas also painted portraits of individuals and groups; an example of the latter is The Bellelli Family of (1859), a brilliantly composed and psychologically poignant portrayal of his aunt, her husband, and their children. In this painting, as in The Young Spartans and many later works, Degas was drawn to the tensions present between men and women. In his early paintings, Degas already evidenced the mature style that he would later develop more fully by cropping subjects awkwardly and by choosing unusual viewpoints.
By the late 1860s, Degas had shifted from his intitial forays into history painting to an original observation of contemporary life. Racecourse scenes provided an opportunity to depict horses and their riders in a modern context. He began to paint women at work, milliners and laundresses. Mlle. Fiocre in the Ballet La Source, exhibited in the Salon of 1868, was his first major work to introduce a subject with which he would become especially identified, dancers.[22]
In many subsequent paintings dancers were shown backstage or in rehearsal, emphasizing their status as professionals doing a job. Degas began to paint café life as well. He urged other artists to paint "real life" instead of traditional mythological or historical paintings. His rare literary scenes were modern and of highly ambiguous content; for example, Interior, which was probably based on a scene from Thérèse Raquin.[23]
As his subject matter changed, so, too, did Degas' technique. The dark palette that bore the influence of Dutch painting gave way to the use of vivid colors and bold brushstrokes. Paintings such as Place de la Concorde read as "snapshots," freezing moments of time to portray them accurately, imparting a sense of movement. The changes to his palette, brushwork, and sense of composition all evidence the influence that both the Impressionist movement and modern photography, with its spontaneous images and off-kilter angles, had on his work. [24]
Blurring the distinction between portraiture and genre pieces, he painted his bassoonist friend, Désiré Dihau, in The Orchestra of the Opera (1868-69) as one of fourteen musicians in an orchestra pit, viewed as though by a member of the audience. Above the musicians can be seen only the legs and tutus of the dancers onstage, their figures cropped by the edge of the painting. Art historian Charles Stuckey has pointed out that the viewpoint is that of a distracted spectator at a ballet, and that "it is Degas' fascination with the depiction of movement, including the movement of a spectator's eyes as during a random glance, that is properly speaking 'Impressionist'."[25]
Degas' mature style is distinguished by conspicuously unfinished passages, even in otherwise tightly rendered paintings. He frequently blamed his eye troubles for his inability to finish, an explanation that met with some skepticism from colleagues and collectors who reasoned, as Stuckey explains, that "his pictures could hardly have been executed by anyone with inadequate vision."[26] The artist provided another clue when he described his predilection "to begin a hundred things and not finish one of them,"[27] and was in any case notoriously reluctant to consider a painting complete.
His interest in portraiture led him to study carefully the ways in which a person's social stature or form of employment may be revealed by their physiognomy, posture, dress, and other attributes. In his 1879 Portraits, At the Stock Exchange, he portrayed a group of Jewish businessmen with a hint of antisemitism; while in his paintings of dancers and laundresses, he reveals their occupations not only by their dress and activities but also by their frames. His ballerinas exhibit a type of athletic physicality, while his laundresses are heavy and solid.[28]
By the later 1870s Degas had mastered not only the traditional medium of oil on canvas, but pastel as well. The dry medium, which he applied in complex layers and textures, enabled him more easily to reconcile his facility for line with a growing interest in expressive color.
In the mid-1870s he also returned to the medium of etching, which he had neglected for ten years, and began experimenting with less traditional printmaking media—lithographs and experimental monotypes. He was especially fascinated by the effects produced by monotype, and frequently reworked the printed images with pastel.[29]
These changes in media engendered the paintings that Degas would produce in later life. Degas began to draw and paint women drying themselves with towels, combing their hair, and bathing (see: After the Bath). The strokes that model the form are scribbled more freely than before; backgrounds are simplified.
The meticulous naturalism of his youth gave way to an increasing abstraction of form. Except for his characteristically brilliant draftsmanship and obsession with the figure, the pictures created in this late period of his life bear little superficial resemblance to his early paintings. Ironically, it is these paintings, created late in his life, and after the heyday of the Impressionist movement, that most obviously use the coloristic techniques of Impressionism. [30]
For all the stylistic evolution, certain features of Degas's work remained the same throughout his life. He always painted indoors, preferring to work in his studio, either from memory or using models. [31] The figure remained his primary subject; his few landscapes were produced from memory or imagination. It was not unusual for him to repeat a subject many times, varying the composition or treatment. He was a deliberative artist whose works, in the words of art historian Andrew Forge, "were prepared, calculated, practiced, developed in stages. They were made up of parts. The adjustment of each part to the whole, their linear arrangement, was the occasion for infinite reflection and experiment."[32]
Reputation
During his life, public reception of Degas' work ranged from admiration to contempt. As a promising artist in the conventional mode, and in the several years following 1860, Degas had a number of paintings accepted in the Salon. These works received praise from Pierre Puvis de Chavannes and the critic, Castagnary.[33]
Degas soon joined forces with the Impressionists, however, and rejected the rigid rules, judgements, and elitism of the Salon—just as the Salon and general public initially rejected the experimentalism of the Impressionists.
Degas's work was controversial, but was generally admired for its draftsmanship. The suite of nudes Degas exhibited in the eighth Impressionist Exhibition in 1886 produced "the most concentrated body of critical writing on the artist during his lifetime.[...] The overall reaction was positive and laudatory."[34] His La Petite Danseuse de Quatorze Ans, or Little Dancer of Fourteen Years, was probably his most controversial piece, with some critics decrying what they thought its "appalling ugliness" while others saw in it a "blossoming." [35]
Recognized as an important artist by the end of his life, Degas is now considered "one of the founders of impressionism".[36] His involvement with the other major figures of Impressionism and their exhibitions, his dynamic paintings and sketches of everyday life and activities, and his bold colour experiments, among other things, serve to finally tie him to the Impressionist movement as one of its greatest early artists, though his work crossed many stylistic boundaries.
His paintings, pastels, drawings, and sculpture—most of the latter were not intended for exhibition, and were discovered only after his death—are on prominent display in many museums.
Although Degas had no formal pupils, he greatly influenced several important painters, most notably Jean-Louis Forain, Mary Cassatt, and Walter Sickert;[37] his greatest admirer may have been Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec.[38]
See also
References
Notes
- ^ Gordon and Forge, 1988, p. 31
- ^ Turner, p. 139
- ^ The family's ancestral name was Degas. Jean Sutherland Boggs explains that De Gas was the spelling, "with some pretentions, used by the artist's father when he moved to Paris to establish a French branch of his father's Neopolitan bank." While Edgar Degas's brother René adopted the still more aristocratic de Gas, the artist had reverted to the original spelling, Degas, by age thirty. Baumann, et al., 1994, p. 98.
- ^ Canaday, 1969, p. 930-931
- ^ Baumann, et al., 1994, p. 154
- ^ Roskill, 1983, p. 33
- ^ Baumann, et al., 1994, p. 151
- ^ Thomson, 1988, p. 48
- ^ Gordon and Forge, 1988, p. 23
- ^ Guillaud and Guillaud, 1985, p.29
- ^ Gordon and Forge, 1988, p. 31
- ^ Hartt, p. 365
- ^ Guillaud and Guillaud, 1985, p.33
- ^ Canaday, 1969, p. 929
- ^ Guillaud and Guillaud, 1985, p. 56
- ^ Thomson, 1988, p. 211
- ^ Mannering, 1994, p. 7
- ^ Roskill, 1983, p. 33
- ^ Hartt, 1976, p. 365
- ^ Gordon and Forge, 1988, p. 11
- ^ Roskill, 1983, p.33
- ^ Dumas, 1988, p. 9.
- ^ Mannering, 1994, pp. 22, 25
- ^ Roskill, 1983, p.33
- ^ Guillaud and Guillaud, 1985, p.28
- ^ Guillaud and Guillaud, 1985, p. 29
- ^ Guillaud and Guillaud, 1985, p.50
- ^ Muehlig, 1979, p. 6
- ^ Thomson, 1988, p. 75
- ^ Mannering, 1994, pp. 70-77
- ^ Benedek "Style."
- ^ Gordon and Forge, 1988, p. 9
- ^ Bowness, 1965, pp. 41-42
- ^ Thomson, 1988, p. 135
- ^ Muehlig, 1979, p.7
- ^ Mannering, 1994, p. 6-7
- ^ J. Paul Getty Trust
- ^ Guillaud and Guillaud, 1985, p. 48
Sources
- Baumann, Felix; Karabelnik, Marianne, et al. (1994). Degas Portraits. London: Merrell Holberton. ISBN 1-85894-014-1
- Benedek, Nelly S. "Chronology of the Artist's Life." Degas. 2004. 21 May 2004 <http://www.metmuseum.org/explore/Degas/html/indexl.html>.
- Benedek, Nelly S. "Degas's Artistic Style." Degas. 2004. 21 March 2004 <http://www.metmuseum.org/explore/Degas/html/index1.html>.
- Bowness, Alan. ed. (1965) "Edgar Degas." The Book of Art Volume 7. New York: Grolier Incorporated :41.
- Brettell, Richard R.; McCullagh, Suzanne Folds (1984). Degas in The Art Institute of Chicago. New York: The Art Institute of Chicago and Harry N. Abrams, Inc. ISBN 0-86559-058-3
- Canaday, John (1969). The Lives of the Painters Volume 3. New York: W.W. Norton and Company Inc.
- Dorra, Henri. Art in Perspective New York: Harcourt Brace Jocanovich, Inc.:208
- Dumas, Ann (1988). Degas's Mlle. Fiocre in Context. Brooklyn: The Brooklyn Musem. ISBN 0-87273-116-2
- "Edgar Degas, 1834-1917." The Book of Art Volume III (1976). New York: Grolier Incorporated:4.
- Gordon, Robert; Forge, Andrew (1988). Degas. New York: Harry N. Abrams. ISBN 0-8109-1142-6
- Guillaud, Jaqueline; Guillaud, Maurice (editors) (1985). Degas: Form and Space. New York: Rizzoli. ISBN 0-8478-5407-8
- Hartt, Frederick (1976). "Degas" Art Volume 2. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall Inc.: 365.
- "Impressionism." Praeger Encyclopedia of Art Volume 3 (1967). New York: Praeger Publishers: 952.
- J. Paul Getty Trust "Walter Richard Sickert." 2003. 11 May 2004 <http://www.getty.edu/art/collections/bio/a3670-1.html>.
- Mannering, Douglas (1994). The Life and Works of Degas. Great Britain: Parragon Book Service Limited.
- Muehlig, Linda D. (1979). Degas and the Dance, April 5-May 27, 1979. Northampton, Mass.: Smith College Museum of Art.
- Peugeot, Catherine, Sellier, Marie (2001). A Trip to the Orsay Museum. Paris: ADAGP: 39.
- Roskill, Mark W. (1983). "Edgar Degas." Collier's Encyclopedia.
- Thomson, Richard (1988). Degas: The Nudes. London: Thames and Hudson Ltd.
- Tinterow, Gary (1988). Degas. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art and National Gallery of Canada.
- Turner, J. (2000). From Monet to Cézanne: late 19th-century French artists. Grove Art. New York: St Martin's Press. ISBN 0-312-22971-2