Edgar Degas, 1879 - The Dance Lesson - fine art print
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Artwork information by National Gallery of Art website (© Copyright - National Gallery of Art - National Gallery of Art)
Degas' best-known works are those inspired by the ballet. For an artist committed to the depiction of modern life, the theater in all of its forms--the ballet, the opera, even the more raucous café-concerts--held a special appeal. What intrigued him the most, however, was not the formal, polished performance, but rather the behind-the-scenes, casual, candid moments of dancers rehearsing or resting. It is a theme that the artist was to explore time and again, not only in his ballet paintings but also in his horse-racing scenes.
Painted c. 1879, The Dance Lesson is the first ballet scene in a distinctive group of some forty pictures, all executed in an unusual horizontal format. Degas had already begun to experiment with this format in some of his racing scenes in order to create an almost panoramic sense of space. In the ballet scenes, the setting was transformed into an oblong rehearsal room populated by dancers in various states of activity and exhaustion. This format, which has been likened to a frieze, has a decidedly decorative quality. Degas' fascination with the unexpected views and flattened forms of Japanese prints is also apparent: figures are sharply cropped and placed off center, while the floor, which dominates the scene, seems tipped upward, an illusion that is accentuated by the elongated format.
Like most of his ballet scenes, The Dance Lesson is a deceptively straightforward image. Although the overall effect seems spontaneous, the picture was carefully orchestrated from start to finish. Degas produced a compositional sketch in one of his notebooks (possibly after he had already started the painting), laying out several crucial components: the seated figure at the center, the window at the far right, and the double bass and open violin case at the far left. Into this basic framework he then introduced the figures of other dancers. Pulled from a number of his drawings and other paintings, these figures, like mannequins, were moved and arranged in artful configurations. The dancer adjusting her bow, for example, appears not only in a number of pastels but also in several paintings from this group of friezelike compositions (The Detroit Institute of Arts, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York). Even after the forms had been placed within the composition, they were subject to change. Degas altered a number of details, many still visible to the naked eye: the angle of the seated dancer's foot; the positioning of the legs and back of the chair; and the violin case, which the artist painted out at an early stage.
When shown in the fifth impressionist exhibition in 1880, The Dance Lesson passed largely unnoticed, and what commentary it elicited was equivocal. The critic Joris Karl Huysmans admired other works Degas exhibited and praised the artist's keen observational skills. Nevertheless, he characterized this painting as "dismal," though more in response to the mood than to the execution. Paul Mantz, troubled by the artist's tendency to slip into caricature, was less enthusiastic, though he did praise its "transparently fine atmosphere."
(Text by Kimberly Jones, published in the National Gallery of Art exhibition catalogue, Art for the Nation, 2000)
Details on the unique artwork
Name of the artwork: | "The Dance Lesson" |
Categorization: | painting |
General term: | modern art |
Temporal classification: | 19th century |
Created in: | 1879 |
Approximate age of artwork: | around 140 years |
Artwork original medium: | oil on canvas |
Original dimensions: | 38 x 88 cm (14 15/16 x 34 5/8 in) |
Museum / location: | National Gallery of Art |
Location of museum: | Washington D.C., United States of America |
Website of the museum: | www.nga.gov |
Artwork license: | public domain |
Courtesy of: | National Gallery of Art, Washington |
Artist details table
Name of the artist: | Edgar Degas |
Other artist names: | Hilarie Germain Edgar Degas, degas h.g.e., Degas Hilaire Germain Edgar, Te-chia, Degas, degas edgar, Degas Edgar, Degas Hilaire-Germain-Edgar, degas Hillaire germaine edgar, Degas Edgar Hilaire Germain, Degas E., Degas Edgar Germain Hilaire, degas hilaire germaine edgar, Edgar Germain Hilaire Degas, hilaire germain edgar degas, Degas Hilaire Germain Edgar Degas, degas e., hilaire degas, דגה אדגר, degas h.g.e., Degas Hilaire Germain, h.e.g. degas, Edgar Degas, e. degas, degas hilaire german edgar, Dega Edgar, degas edgar hillaire germaine, Hilaire-Germain-Edgar Degas, Gas Hilaire Germain Edgar De, degas jilaire germain edgar degas, Degas H. G. E., edgar hilaire germain degas, De Gas Hilaire-Germain-Edgar, h.g.e. degas, Jilaira Germain Edgar Degas, De Gas Hilaire Germain Edgar, דגה אדגאר |
Gender: | male |
Nationality of artist: | French |
Professions of the artist: | engraver, photographer, sculptor, poet, painter |
Home country: | France |
Artist category: | modern artist |
Art styles: | Impressionism |
Lifespan: | 83 years |
Birth year: | 1834 |
Died: | 1917 |
Place of death: | Paris, Ile-de-France, France |
About this item
Product classification: | fine art reproduction |
Reproduction method: | digital reproduction |
Manufacturing method: | UV print / digital printing |
Product Origin: | made in Germany |
Type of stock: | production on demand |
Product usage: | home décor, gallery wall |
Alignment: | landscape format |
Image ratio: | 5 : 2 length to width |
Implication of the side aspect ratio: | the length is two and a half times longer than the width |
Available options: | poster print (canvas paper), canvas print, acrylic glass print (with real glass coating), metal print (aluminium dibond) |
Canvas on stretcher frame (canvas print) options: | 50x20cm - 20x8", 100x40cm - 39x16", 150x60cm - 59x24", 200x80cm - 79x31" |
Acrylic glass print (with real glass coating): | 50x20cm - 20x8", 100x40cm - 39x16", 150x60cm - 59x24", 200x80cm - 79x31" |
Poster print (canvas paper): | 100x40cm - 39x16" |
Aluminium dibond print (aluminium material) sizes: | 50x20cm - 20x8", 100x40cm - 39x16" |
Picture frame: | not available |
Choose your product material
For every fine art print we offer different sizes and materials. We allow you to pick your favorite size and material among the following product individualization options:
- Printed poster on canvas material: A poster print is a UV printed flat canvas paper with a slightly roughened surface structure. It is suited for framing the fine art print in a personal frame. Please note, that depending on the absolute size of the poster we add a white margin of something between 2-6cm round about the painting in order to facilitate the framing with your custom frame.
- Canvas: The printed canvas, not to be confused with a painting on a canvas, is an image applied directly on canvas. Your printed canvas of this masterpiece will let you turn your fine art print into a large size collection piece like you know from art galleries. The great advantage of canvas prints is that they are relatively low in weight, meaning that it is easy to hang the Canvas print without the use of any wall-mounts. That is why, canvas prints are suitable for any kind of wall.
- Aluminium dibond print: Aluminium Dibond prints are prints on metal with a true depth effect. The colors of the print are luminous, the fine details of the print are clear and crisp, and you can perceive the matte appearance of the print.
- Acrylic glass print: The print on acrylic glass, which is often labelled as a UV print on plexiglass, will turn your favorite original work of art into great home decoration and is a viable alternative option to canvas and dibond fine art replicas. The artwork will be printed thanks to the help of modern UV direct print machines. This makes intense and deep color shades. With an acrylic glass fine art print contrasts plus granular painting details become more visible with the help of the fine tonal gradation.
Detailed information about the product
The more than 140 years old piece of art was created by the artist Edgar Degas in 1879. The 140 years old version of the masterpiece measures the size: 38 x 88 cm (14 15/16 x 34 5/8 in) and was painted with the techinque oil on canvas. Furthermore, the artpiece can be viewed in in the National Gallery of Art's collection. This modern art public domain artpiece is provided with courtesy of National Gallery of Art, Washington.: . In addition to this, the alignment is landscape with a side ratio of 5 : 2, which means that the length is two and a half times longer than the width. Edgar Degas was a photographer, poet, engraver, painter, sculptor, whose artistic style can be classified as Impressionism. The Impressionist artist was born in the year 1834 and passed away at the age of 83 in the year 1917.
Important information: We try the best we can in order to depict the products as accurate as possible and to showcase them visually in our shop. Still, some tone of the printed materials, as well as the printing can diverge somehwat from the presentation on the device's monitor. Depending on the screen settings and the nature of the surface, color pigments may not be printed one hundret percent realistically. Because our art reproductions are processed and printed by hand, there may also be slight discrepancies in the exact position and the size of the motif.
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