Degas, Edgar (1834-1917)
Danseuses sur la scène (Ballet Dancers on the Stage)
1883
Pastel on paper, 61.6 x 47.31 cm
Dallas Museum of Art, Dallas
In the 1880s and 1890s, Edgar Degas became increasingly fascinated by the ballet, especially its physical demands on dancers. Instead of presenting ballerinas as light and graceful, the artist depicted them in the awkward poses between movements. The dancers’ arms (eleven total) overlap in a rhythmic play of form. Degas’s use of cropping and an unconventional vantage point gives the appearance of limbs detached from bodies. It is as though we are spectators in a balcony peering down at a performance. The dancers are garishly illuminated by the gas footlights of the stage. Degas’s mastery of the medium of pastel allowed him to suggest both the density of the tangled bodies and the airiness of their tulle costumes. (DMA)