Hilaire Germain Edgar Degas, 1886 - The Millinery Shop - fine art print
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Description of this artwork from the French painter with the name Hilaire Germain Edgar Degas
The painting with the title The Millinery Shop was painted by the male artist Hilaire Germain Edgar Degas in 1886. The version of the artpiece has the size: 100 × 110,7 cm (39 3/8 × 43 9/16 in ) and was manufactured on the medium oil on canvas. The artwork is in the the Art Institute Chicago's digital collection, which is one of the world’s great art museums, housing a collection that spans centuries and the globe. With courtesy of: Art Institute Chicago (license - public domain). Furthermore, the artwork has the creditline: Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Larned Coburn Memorial Collection. Besides this, the alignment of the digital reproduction is in landscape format and has a ratio of 1.2 : 1, meaning that the length is 20% longer than the width.
Select your product material
For every fine art print we offer different materials & sizes. The following sizes and materials are the options we offer you for individualization:
- Poster print (canvas material): Our poster print is a printed cotton canvas paper with a slightly rough texture on the surface. It is excellently used for placing the fine art print in a custom frame. Please keep in mind, that depending on the size of the canvas poster print we add a white margin between 2-6cm around the print to facilitate the framing with your custom frame.
- The canvas print: A canvas direct print is a printed cotton canvas mounted on a wood stretcher. A canvas creates a exclusive impression of three-dimensionality. Your printed canvas of your favorite masterpiece will provide you with the opportunity of turning your into a large size artpiece. How can I hang a canvas print on my wall? The advantage of canvas prints is that they are relatively low in weight, which implies that it is easy to hang up the Canvas print without the help of extra wall-mounts. A canvas print is suited for any type of wall.
- Print on acrylic glass (with real glass coating): The acrylic glass print, often denoted as a UV print on plexiglass, will transform your favorite original work of art into amazing décor. The artwork will be printed with state-of-the-art UV print machines. It makes intense and stunning print colors. With an acrylic glass art print sharp contrasts and also details become recognizeable because of the precise tonal gradation in the print.
- Metal (aluminium dibond print): This is a metal print made on aluminium dibond with an impressive effect of depth. A direct Aluminium Dibond Print is the best introduction to art reproductions with aluminum. Colors are luminous and vivid in the highest definition, fine details appear crisp and clear, and the print has a a matte look you can literally feel. The direct UV print on aluminium is the most popular entry-level product and is a truly modern way to display artworks, because it puts all of the viewer’s focus on the whole artwork.
Disclaimer: We try everythig possible to describe our art products in as much detail as possible and to display them visually in our shop. At the same time, the tone of the print materials and the printing might differ marginally from the representation on the monitor. Depending on your settings of your screen and the nature of the surface, not all colors can be printed as exactly as the digital version on this website. Since all the fine art prints are processed and printed by hand, there might also be slight discrepancies in the motif's size and exact position.
About the item
Article type: | art copy |
Method of reproduction: | digital reproduction |
Production method: | UV direct print (digital printing) |
Provenance: | Germany |
Stock type: | production on demand |
Intended product use: | home design, art reproduction gallery |
Orientation: | landscape format |
Image ratio: | 1.2 : 1 |
Side ratio interpretation: | the length is 20% longer than the width |
Materials you can choose: | metal print (aluminium dibond), acrylic glass print (with real glass coating), poster print (canvas paper), canvas print |
Canvas print (canvas on stretcher frame) variants: | 60x50cm - 24x20", 120x100cm - 47x39", 180x150cm - 71x59" |
Acrylic glass print (with real glass coating) size options: | 60x50cm - 24x20", 120x100cm - 47x39", 180x150cm - 71x59" |
Poster print (canvas paper) sizes: | 60x50cm - 24x20", 120x100cm - 47x39" |
Dibond print (alumnium material) options: | 60x50cm - 24x20", 120x100cm - 47x39" |
Picture frame: | not included |
Artwork information
Work of art title: | "The Millinery Shop" |
Artwork categorization: | painting |
General category: | modern art |
Time: | 19th century |
Artpiece year: | 1886 |
Age of artwork: | 130 years old |
Medium of original artwork: | oil on canvas |
Size of the original artpiece: | 100 × 110,7 cm (39 3/8 × 43 9/16 in ) |
Exhibited in: | Art Institute Chicago |
Museum location: | Chicago, Illinois, United States of America |
Website of the museum: | Art Institute Chicago |
Artwork license type: | public domain |
Courtesy of: | Art Institute Chicago |
Artwork creditline: | Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Larned Coburn Memorial Collection |
General information about the artist
Name of the artist: | Hilaire Germain Edgar Degas |
Gender: | male |
Artist nationality: | French |
Professions of the artist: | painter |
Country of origin: | France |
Artist category: | modern artist |
Life span: | 83 years |
Born: | 1834 |
Died in the year: | 1917 |
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Additional description by the museum (© Copyright - by Art Institute Chicago - Art Institute Chicago)
Of at least fifteen pastels, drawings, and paintings that Edgar Degas created on this subject during the 1880s, The Millinery Shop is the largest and perhaps the most ambitious. As a result of its unusual cropping and tilted perspective, it seems to capture an unedited glimpse of the interior of a small nineteenth-century millinery shop. The identity of the young woman in the painting remains unclear: she may be a shop girl or a customer. In an early version of the composition, the woman is clearly intended to be a customer; she wears a fashionable dress, though her hat—a prerequisite token of bourgeois culture—is absent. In the final painting, however, the woman appears with her mouth pursed, as if around a pin, and her hands gloved, possibly to protect the delicate fabric of the hat she holds. Degas seems to have deliberately left her role as a creator or consumer ambiguous. She is totally absorbed in her activity and, like most of the women in Degas’s paintings, seems unaware of being watched. The bonnets that are displayed on the table next to her like a still life present an analogy to the artist’s creative process: where they are unfinished, so too is the painting.