The Dance Lesson

The Dance Lesson (sometimes known as The Dancing Lesson) is an oil on canvas painting by the French artist Edgar Degas created around 1879. It is currently kept at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. There is at least one other work by Degas by this title, also made in about 1879, which is a pastel.[1]

The Dance Lesson
The Dance Lesson by Edgar Degas
ArtistEdgar Degas
Year1879
Mediumoil-on-canvas painting
Dimensions33 cm × 88 cm (13 in × 35 in)
LocationNational Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
OwnerNational Gallery of Art

Description

The painting is the first of a series of about 40 pictures that Degas painted in this horizontal, frieze-like format.[2] It measures 38 by 88 centimetres (15 in × 35 in).[2]

To the far left is a double bass with an exhausted dancer wearing a bright orange shawl sitting on it.[2][3] There was also an open violin-case, which although painted out, is still visible.[2] In the centre of the painting is a dancer in a pink shawl sitting on a chair with another dancer, turned away, standing just behind her adjusting the dark coloured sash of her dress.[2] To the far right, at the back of the room, is a group of dancers practising their moves in the light from a large window.[2]

The painting was carefully composed and shows the inspiration Degas drew from Japanese prints, with figures deliberately placed off-centre or cut off at unexpected angles and the large expanse of floor which appears to tilt upwards.[2]

Location and provenance

The painting The Dance Lesson is currently kept at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.[4] Prior to its donation in 1995, the painting was part of the collection of Paul Mellon, who purchased it in 1957.[5] Prior to this it had been loaned to the Boston Museum of Fine Arts in the 1920s and was loaned to a 1937 Degas exhibition in Paris by its then owner, Mrs Fiske Howard.[5]

Relation to other paintings

The Metropolitan Museum of Art owns a painting titled Dancers in the Rehearsal Room with a Double Bass, dated 1882–85, which is possibly the second painting in the sequence.[6] Another painting from the sequence, Before the Ballet (1890/1892), is also in the National Gallery of Art.,[7] and |Ballet Rehearsal (La salle de danse, c.1885) is in the Yale University Art Gallery.[8] When placed side by side in a frieze format, the paintings take on a decorative aspect although were not originally intended to be hung this way.[9] It has been suggested that the 40-odd paintings collectively show how Degas examined his theory that the "intervals between figures and space were the basis for creating ornament".[9]

gollark: Also pain toggles and metadata and not just "something hurts now, good luck working out why and also you can't stop it".
gollark: You would probably need more than just brain-level tweaks for that, to provide the data in the first place.
gollark: If you did have a top-down-designed body/brain system, you could have useful features like an immune system which actually provides debug information instead of just mysteriously having you get a fever.
gollark: This reminds me of a paper I vaguely looked at a while ago about abusing human visual processing to do logic gates.
gollark: The decades starting then, I mean.

References

  1. "The Dance Lesson (pastel)". The Metropolitan Museum. Retrieved 10 July 2012.
  2. "The Dance Lesson". National Gallery of Art. Retrieved 10 July 2012.
  3. Willis, Margaret (30 September 2011). "Degas and the Ballet: Picturing Movement Exhibition". Balletco. Retrieved 10 July 2012.
  4. "The Dance Lesson by Edgar Degas". Washington, D.C.: National Gallery of Art. Retrieved 30 June 2012.
  5. "Provenance of "The Dance Lesson"". National Gallery of Art. Retrieved 10 July 2012.
  6. "Dancers in the Rehearsal Room with a Double Bass". Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved 30 June 2012.
  7. "The Dance Lesson by Edgar Degas (page 2)". National Gallery of Art. Retrieved 10 July 2012.
  8. "The Dance Lesson by Edgar Degas (page 5)". National Gallery of Art. Retrieved 10 July 2012.
  9. "The Dance Lesson by Edgar Degas (page 5a)". National Gallery of Art. Retrieved 10 July 2012.
  • The Dance Lesson, National Gallery of Art Washington DC. In-depth focus and examination of the 1879 painting.
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