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Edgar Degas Sculpture

Hardback

Main Details

Title Edgar Degas Sculpture
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Suzanne Glover Lindsay
By (author) Daphne S. Barbour
By (author) Shelley G. Sturman
Contributions by Barbara H. Berrie
Contributions by Suzanne Quillen Lomax
SeriesNational Gallery of Art Systematic Catalogues
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:408
Dimensions(mm): Height 286,Width 241
Category/GenreImpressionism and post-Impressionism
Sculpture
Individual artists and art monographs
ISBN/Barcode 9780691148977
ClassificationsDewey:730.92
Audience
Tertiary Education (US: College)
Professional & Vocational
Illustrations 221 color illus. 209 halftones.

Publishing Details

Publisher Princeton University Press
Imprint Princeton University Press
Publication Date 2 January 2011
Publication Country United States

Description

As an artist, Edgar Degas (1834-1917) defies easy description. Allied with the French impressionists through his commitment to portraying modern life, he also took an independent course, preferring line over color and the visible brushstroke, and working in a studio instead of out-of-doors. He is perhaps best known as a painter, but his most widely known work is a sculpture, Little Dancer Aged Fourteen. Executed in wax, near life-sized, dressed in a ballerina's tutu, with real ballet slippers and real hair, the sculpture caused a sensation when it was exhibited in 1881. It is the only sculpture Degas ever showed publicly, though more than one hundred--of dancers, horses, and bathers--were found in his studio after he died, all dusty, some fallen apart. For almost forty years after his death, these works were known only through the bronzes his heirs had cast from the originals.Then, in 1955, the waxes themselves appeared on the art market. Thanks to the discernment and generosity of Paul Mellon, the majority are now preserved at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, most on permanent display. This groundbreaking volume honors this extraordinary gift by linking art and science. It brings together the insights of a distinguished art historian of nineteenth-century painting and sculpture and the specialized knowledge of National Gallery conservators and scientists who have published pioneering technical studies. Including essays on Degas' life and work, his sculptural technique and materials, and the story of the sculptures after his death, it features art-historical and technical discussions of every work in the collection as well as indispensable concordances and bibliography. The richly illustrated text is intended for both art lover and specialist. Was Degas the sculptor technically inept or unusually inventive? How do we understand his sculpture in light of his paintings, prints, and photographs? These questions and many others are explored with originality and depth, adding immeasurably to our understanding of the artistic avant-garde in the late nineteenth century and to our appreciation of this controversial artist.

Author Biography

Suzanne Glover Lindsay is adjunct associate professor in the history of art at the University of Pennsylvania. Daphne S. Barbour is a senior object conservator at the National Gallery of Art. Shelley G. Sturman is head of object conservation at the National Gallery of Art.

Reviews

"Edgar Degas Sculpture is the sumptuously illustrated, richly documented catalogue of the important collection of Degas sculpture in the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C... [A] penetrating, eye-opening presentation of Degas' work in this other medium, which too often is relegated to the sideline of his work as a painter."--Choice