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FONDAZIONE ANTONIO PRESTI -FIUMARA D’ARTE
International Museum of Image
Terzocchio Meridiani di Luce - Sole di Mezzanotte
(ThirdEye Meridian of
Light - Midnight Sun)


Librino,Catania
Deadline: Ongoing


Call to Artist
DEGAS AND THE BALLET:
                
PICTURING MOVEMENT

Main Galleries, Royal Academy of Arts, London
until 11 December
THE ROYAL Academy of Arts presents a landmark exhibition focusing on Edgar Degas’s preoccupation with movement as an artist of the dance. Degas and the Ballet: Picturing Movement traces the development of the artist’s ballet imagery throughout his career, from the documentary mode of the early 1870s to the sensuous expressiveness of his final years. The exhibition is the first to present Degas’s progressive engagement with the figure in movement in the context of parallel advances in photography and early film; indeed, the artist was keenly aware of these technological developments and often directly involved with them. The exhibition comprises around 85 paintings, sculptures, pastels, drawings, prints and photographs by Degas, as well as photographs by his contemporaries and examples of early film. It brings together selected material from public institutions and private collections in Europe and North America including both celebrated and little-known works by Degas.

Highlights of the exhibition include such masterpieces as the celebrated sculpture Little Dancer Aged Fourteen (1880-81, cast. c.1922, Tate, London), which is displayed with a group of outstanding preparatory drawings that together show the artist tracking around his subject like a cinematic eye; Dancer Posing for a Photograph (1875, Pushkin State Museum of Art, Moscow); Dancer on Pointe (c. 1877-78, Private collection); The Dance Lesson (c. 1879, The National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC); Dancers in a Rehearsal Room with a Double Bass (c. 1882-85, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York); and Three Dancers (c. 1903, Beyeler Foundation, Basel).

Degas and the Ballet: Picturing Movement explores the fascinating links between Degas’s highly original way of viewing and recording the dance and the inventive experiments being made at the same time in photography by Etienne-
Jules Marey and Eadweard Muybridge and in film-making by such pioneers as the Lumière brothers. By presenting the artist in this context, the exhibition demonstrates that Degas was far more than merely the creator of beautiful images of the ballet, but instead a modern, radical artist who thought profoundly about visual problems and was fully attuned to the technological developments of his time.
Edgar Degas. The Dance Lesson, c. 1879

Edgar Degas. The Dance Lesson, c. 1879
Oil on canvas 38 x 88 cm National Gallery of Art, Washington. Collection of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mellon, 1995.47.6 Photo National Gallery of Art, Washington

Edgar Degas. Dancers, c. 1899. Pastel on tracing paper laid down on board. 588 x 463 mm.Princeton University Art Museum. Bequest of Henry K. Dick, Class of 1909. Image Bruce M. White
Edgar Degas. The Little Dancer, Aged Fourteen, 1880-1, cast c. 1922. Painted bronze with muslin and silk. 98.4 x 36.5 cm. Tate. Purchased with assistance from The Art Fund 1952. Image copyright Tate, London, 2010
Edgar Degas.Dancer (Preparation en dedans), c. 1880-85. Charcoal with stumping on buff paper.336 x 227 mm. Trinity House, London and New York
Edgar Degas.La Danse Grecque (Dancing Ballerinas) 1885-90. Pastel on joined paper laid down on board. 580 x 490 mm. On loan from the Honorable Earle I. Mack Collection
Edgar Degas. Ballet Scene from Meyerbeer's Opera Robert le Diable, 1876.Oil on canvas.76.6 x 81.3 cm. Victoria & Albert Museum, London. Image copyright V&A Images / Victoria and Albert Museum, London
Edgar Degas. The Rehearsal, c. 1874. Oil on canvas. 58.4 x 83.8 cm. Lent by Culture and Sport Glasgow on behalf of Glasgow City Council. Gifted by Sir William and Lady Constance Burrell to the City of Glasgow, 1944. Image copyright Culture and Sport Glasgow (Museums)
Hilaire-Germain-Edgar Degas was born in Paris in 1834. His father was a banker and his mother a French Créole from New Orleans. After studying briefly at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris, Degas travelled in Italy, largely teaching himself by copying works of art in museums and churches. From 1865 to 1870 he regularly submitted large historical compositions to the Salon, but in around 1870 he began to concentrate on subjects from modern life, including the dance. A leader of the Impressionists, Degas exhibited regularly at their group exhibitions. Apart from the dance, racehorses and bathing women were his principal subjects. Increasing blindness forced Degas to give up working in around 1912. He died in Montmartre in 1917.
Degas and the Ballet: Picturing Movement has been curated by Richard Kendall, Curator at Large, The Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, USA; Jill DeVonyar, independent curator; and Ann Dumas, Exhibition Curator, Royal Academy of Arts.