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Portfolios%3D%222293%22%20and%20Century%3D%2219th%20century%22%20and%20Sort_Artist%3D%22Degas,%20Edgar%22
Drawing
Dancer, Seen from Behind (Danseuse vue de dos)
Edgar Degas, 1834 - 1917
Degas, Edgar
France
1834 - 1917
Male
19 3/16 x 11 11/16 in. (48.7 x 29.7 cm)
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sheet
sheet
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overall
frame
Chalk
Chalk
ca. 1878-1881
1878
1881
1800-1900, 19th century, dance, drawing, Lockhart Collection, women
Drawing
Often called “the painter of modern life,” Edgar Degas filled his canvases with images from the vibrant world of performance and spectacle in the clubs and theaters of Paris during the latter part of the 1800s. Ballet dancers appealed to Degas as a pictorial subject for two key reasons: they represented modern subjects, and they offered female bodies that could be naturally observed in a host of complicated poses. Drawing from innumerable studies, he created light-filled images that represent the essence of natural movement.
Dancer, Seen from Behind is a study for a figure in the far right of Dancers in the Rehearsal Room, with a Double Bass, which is now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
[Label copy from Monet: Vision and Process exhibition, 2018]
lower left, oval Degas atelier stamp [Lugt 657]lower left, Degas atelier sale stamp
1987.65
item
Memorial Art Gallery
2/21/2001
87.65TR1
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