Through February 21, 2016
Gallery 240
Of all the Impressionists who focused on modern
life, Edgar Degas was the most dedicated to the classical tradition of
depicting the human form, especially that form in movement and performance.
In
this focused exhibition, two exceptional loans—a remarkable painting from the
National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., Scene from the Steeplechase:
The Fallen Jockey, and a beloved sculpture from a private Chicago
collection, Little Dancer Aged Fourteen—join other loans and
paintings, drawings, pastels, and sculpture from the Art Institute’s permanent
collection to explore the artist’s career-long fascination with the figure in
motion through the subjects of the racetrack and ballet.
A striking canvas, Degas’s Scene from the
Steeplechase: The Fallen Jockey marked a momentous transition for the
artist from the classically inspired history paintings of his youth toward the
depiction of subjects drawn from modern life. In the mid-1860s, when Degas
premiered this work, the cross-country obstacle race known as the steeplechase
had reached the height of its popularity, but the sport’s potential for danger
also made it controversial. This highly dramatic image, possibly inspired by a
recent tragedy, underscores the perils inherent to the race. Painted on a
public scale, it nevertheless captures an intimate and unsettling moment. Is
the jockey, for which Degas’s younger brother Achille served as the model, dead
or merely fallen? The sense of immediacy evoked by the painting contrasts
sharply with the artist’s own working method for the piece, which was complex
and painstaking; Degas returned to the work over the course of nearly 30 years
radically reworking both subject and brushwork.
He reportedly deemed the
painting “one of those works which are sold after a man’s death. . . . Artists
buy them not caring whether they are finished or not.”
Degas’s fascination with Parisian cultural life
extended also to the café concert, theatrical performances, and above all, the
ballet. Like the steeplechase, the ballet existed to entertain the wealthy, and
the artist paid for the privilege of going behind the scenes of the ballerina’s
world. This intimate vantage point allowed him to capture what fascinated him
most: the movement of the performer—caught in the poetry of the onstage illusion
or backstage practice. That poetry is highlighted in this presentation byLittle
Dancer Aged Fourteen, a bronze cast from the original wax sculpture
displayed at the sixth Impressionist exhibition in 1881. With her feet turned
out, shoulders pressed down and back, and chin lifted high, her body brims with
energy. That grace and athleticism, physical peril and transport—whether
through the form of a young dancer, a robust singer, or a daring rider—come
alive in the works selected for this intimate exhibition.
Sponsor
Degas: At the Track, On the Stage is made possible by Louise S. Hart.
Degas: At the Track, On the Stage is made possible by Louise S. Hart.
http://www.artic.edu/exhibition/degas-track-stage
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