Edgar Degas was the firstborn in the wealthy family of Breton aristocrat Auguste de Gaire and Celestine Mousson, who came from Louisiana (the USA). Subsequently, he simplified his full name, Hlier-Germain-Edgar de Ga, to a short one, Edgar Degas.
1834 - 1917
A French painter, an outstanding draftsman and sculptor, one of the original and most prominent representatives of Impressionism, although the artist rejected this term.
The artist began to pay more attention to the genre of sculpture after his vision had deteriorated by the beginning of the 1970s. The theme of these creations repeated his favorite themes of the paintings – women at their toilet, ballet dancers, horses and jockeys on them. Degas created these works for himself, replacing etudes with modeling, so he completed only a few sculptures, and exhibited only one – “The Fourteen-Year-Old Dancer”, which was criticized by experts.
Wax figures (about 70) found by his heirs in the master’s workshop were fragile, and it was decided to immortalize them in bronze, with which Degas never worked. The first cast samples appeared in 1921, and the originals were considered lost for a long time. However, the foundry master managed not to damage the fragile wax, and in 1954 they were found in the cellars of the foundry.
All the originals put up for auction by the artist’s heirs were acquired by American collector Paul Mellon. He presented several works to the Louvre, and the largest collection, 52 statuettes, is in the Washington National Gallery.
According to the agreement with the foundry, each of the wax sculptures was reproduced approximately 20-25 times – out of almost 1,500 copies, many are exhibited in major museums around the world. For example, in Copenhagen’s Glyptotek, there is a complete set of them, although the debate about whether copies can be signed with the name of the master is still ongoing.
Key ideas:
– Although Degas enriched the palette with bright and clear colours, like other Impressionists, he was indifferent to the landscape as the primary genre of this movement. For the master, the human figure was more important. Degas sculptures are characterized by a unique drama of images, often born from the bold and unexpected movement of the line, from an unusual composition.
– The artist studied the mechanics of the movement of people and animals, using the snapshots. Ballet and horse racing, those areas where everything is subject to movement, became the topic for his small sculptural works. Degas began to sculpt small wax images by the end of the 1860s because his vision started rapidly impairing. All sculptures by Degas suggested the possibility of a circular inspection.
– Having a sharp natural observation, the master sought to capture the nuances of the movement process, to find and capture the moment. A virtuoso drawing – the cornerstone method of Degas, formed the basis of wax sculptures. In them, he achieved amazing naturalism, accuracy, but did not work out the details.
– Degas’s attempt to use factual materials instead of imitating them became a unique phenomenon in the history of sculpture art. He “wore” real clothes on wax sculptures, fitted natural hair on their heads, fixing them with a satin ribbon. Such an innovation was disapproved by critics, and Degas no longer exhibited his sculptures after the first attempt.
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Edgar Degas was the firstborn in the wealthy family of Breton aristocrat Auguste de Gaire and Celestine Mousson, who came from Louisiana (the USA). Subsequently, he simplified his full name, Hlier-Germain-Edgar de Ga, to a short one, Edgar Degas.
Got a certificate of the famous Lyceum Louis-le-Grand (Louis the Great), began to study law at the University of Paris, at the same time took painting lessons at the workshop of Barrias, attended the School of Fine Arts, working at the studio of Louis Lamothe, a student of Ingres.
He went several times to Italy (Naples, Rome, Florence), where he made sketches from paintings by Raphael, Bellini, Titian, as well as from ancient sculpture, which the beginning artist adored.
Met Edouard Manet, who was his friend until the end of his life. He began to work in a new style, following methods of Ingres and Manet.
He fought as a volunteer on the Franco-Prussian front, and then made a trip to his maternal relatives who lived in the United States (New Orleans). He began to sculpt, using wax, clay and plasticine.
Became a member of the Anonymous Society of Artists, participated in the first exhibition of the Impressionists, showing ten of his paintings (in 1876 there was 24), sold the canvas “Exam for Dance” for five thousand francs.
He exhibited 27 of his works in the group exhibition of the Impressionists, taking an active part in its preparation; he worked mainly in pastel; made friends with Louis Halevi. Two years later, at the exhibition of Impressionists, he presented eight of his works, then traveled to Spain.
During the sixth exhibition in Paris, he presented his wax figurine of a ballerina in a tutu, as well as drawings made by pastel. The sculpture “Little Fourteen-Year-Old Dancer” caused a flurry of indignant criticism for a radical approach to the genre of sculpture. Degas never again exhibited his sculptures.
Marchand Durand-Ruel organized an exhibition of the artist in London. The artist’s previously poor eyesight (an echo of participation in the war) was deteriorating sharply. Instead of sketches, the artist sculpted small sculptures, depicting the dynamics of the movement of people and horses.
Twenty-three works by Degas were presented at an exhibition in New York; participated in the last exhibition of Impressionists, showing five of his oil paintings and a series of ten pastels with nudes.
His solo exhibition took place at the Paris gallery Duran-Ruel. He gradually stopped painting and then stopped creating sculptures.
Edgar Degas died on September 27, 1917 in Paris, France.
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