File:Four Dancers by Edgar Degas (4987904881).jpg

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Four Dancers, c. 1899 by Edgar Degas, oil on canvas

Degas studied his preferred subject, ballet performers, in hundreds of works. Four Dancers, one of the largest and most ambitious of his late works, exists in several variants that show different kinds and degrees of modification. While Degas suppressed descriptive detail elsewhere in the painting, emphatic dark lines shape the heads and arms, underlining the artist's formal concerns. Theatrical lighting over the off-stage performers recolors the figures and creates a simple color scheme of complementary red-orange and green hues.

Two of the figures repeat poses of a model who appears in a unique set of three photographic negatives. Photographed between about 1895 and 1898, the original plates solarized into colors that resemble, in reverse, the oranges and greens in Four Dancers. Degas owned the photographic plates and may even have shot the pictures. The same model, hair piled on her head and features indistinct or hidden, posed for all three photographs, and the four dancers in the painting resemble her. The arrangement of the four dancers may also have been influenced by Eadward Muybridge's sequential photographs, particularly his 1887 book, Animal Locomotion. Their poses, a succession of preparatory gestures, depict a progression of intricate movements.

As Degas' eyesight worsened, the artist increasingly preferred pastels to oil paints. In Four Dancers, Degas used oils to imitate the color effects and matte surface of pastels.

National Gallery of Art, Washington, D. C., online collection

Dancers, c. 1899 by Edgar Degas, oil on canvas

Degas studied his preferred subject, ballet performers, in hundreds of works. Four Dancers, one of the largest and most ambitious of his late works, exists in several variants that show different kinds and degrees of modification. While Degas suppressed descriptive detail elsewhere in the painting, emphatic dark lines shape the heads and arms, underlining the artist's formal concerns. Theatrical lighting over the off-stage performers recolors the figures and creates a simple color scheme of complementary red-orange and green hues.

Two of the figures repeat poses of a model who appears in a unique set of three photographic negatives. Photographed between about 1895 and 1898, the original plates solarized into colors that resemble, in reverse, the oranges and greens in Four Dancers. Degas owned the photographic plates and may even have shot the pictures. The same model, hair piled on her head and features indistinct or hidden, posed for all three photographs, and the four dancers in the painting resemble her. The arrangement of the four dancers may also have been influenced by Eadward Muybridge's sequential photographs, particularly his 1887 book, Animal Locomotion. Their poses, a succession of preparatory gestures, depict a progression of intricate movements.

As Degas' eyesight worsened, the artist increasingly preferred pastels to oil paints. In Four Dancers, Degas used oils to imitate the color effects and matte surface of pastels.

National Gallery of Art, Washington, D. C., online collection
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Source Four Dancers by Edgar Degas
Author Cliff from Arlington, Virginia, USA

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This image was originally posted to Flickr by cliff1066™ at https://www.flickr.com/photos/28567825@N03/4987904881. It was reviewed on 13 June 2015 by FlickreviewR and was confirmed to be licensed under the terms of the cc-by-2.0.

13 June 2015

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current12:16, 13 June 2015Thumbnail for version as of 12:16, 13 June 20152,670 × 2,133 (1.47 MB)GautierPoupeau (talk | contribs)Transferred from Flickr via Flickr2Commons

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