











About Edgar Degas
sketching ballet dancers from the wings of the Paris Opera, not the performance but the stretching, waiting, and fatigue behind it

Where to see Edgar Degas
Ranked by works you can see in person.
-
49 works
Metropolitan Museum of Art
New York City, United States
-
22 worksNational Gallery of Art
Washington D.C., United States
-
55 worksMusée d'Orsay
Paris, France
-
15 worksNational Gallery
London, United Kingdom
-
3 worksCleveland Museum of Art
Cleveland, United States
-
12 works
Kunsthaus Zürich
Zurich, Switzerland
-
9 works
Norton Simon Museum
Pasadena, United States
-
9 worksMuseum of Fine Arts Boston
Boston, United States
-
9 works
Art Institute of Chicago
Chicago, United States
-
6 worksBrooklyn Museum
New York City, United States
Own a piece of it
Edgar Degas prints
Hand-finished archival prints from Edgar Degas's body of work.
The Dance Lesson - Edgar Degas
From £30.00
The Rehearsal - Hilaire-Germain-Edgar Degas
From £28.00
Portrait of a Young Woman - Edgar Degas
From £28.00
Dancers Practicing at the Barre - Edgar Degas
From £37.00
Sulking (La Bouderie) - Edgar Degas
From £28.00
Two Dancers - Edgar Degas
From £28.00
The Dance Lesson - Edgar Degas
From £28.00
Estérel Village - Edgar Degas
From £28.00
View all 54 museums
-
7 worksFoundation E.G. Bührle Collection
Zurich, Switzerland
-
7 works
Harvard Art Museums
Cambridge, United States
-
7 works
Fogg Museum
Cambridge, United States
-
6 works
Clark Art Institute
Williamstown, United States
-
6 works
Munich Central Collecting Point
Munich, Germany
Also here (6)
-
6 works
National Museum of Fine Arts, Argentina
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Also here (6)
-
6 works
Museo Soumaya
Mexico City, Mexico
-
6 works
Detroit Institute of Arts
Detroit, United States
-
6 worksNy Carlsberg Glyptotek
Copenhagen, Denmark
-
5 works
Burrell Collection
Glasgow, United Kingdom
-
5 works
J. Paul Getty Museum
Los Angeles, United States
-
5 works
Courtauld Institute of Art
London, United Kingdom
Also here (3)
-
5 works
Hamburger Kunsthalle
Hamburg, Germany
-
5 works
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
Richmond, United States
-
5 works
Fitzwilliam Museum
Cambridge, United Kingdom
-
5 worksPhiladelphia Museum of Art
Philadelphia, United States
-
5 works
Yale University Art Gallery
New Haven, United States
-
4 worksLouvre
Paris, France
-
4 works
Kunstmuseum Basel
Basel, Switzerland
-
4 works
Nationalmuseum
Stockholm, Sweden
-
4 works
Museum of Fine Arts of Lyon
Lyon, France
-
4 worksThyssen-Bornemisza Museum
Madrid, Spain
-
3 worksSolomon R. Guggenheim Museum
New York City, United States
-
3 works
Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco
San Francisco, United States
-
3 works
National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design
Oslo, Norway
-
2 worksToledo Museum of Art
Toledo, United States
-
2 works
Tel Aviv Museum of Art
Tel Aviv, Israel
-
2 works
Wallraf–Richartz Museum
Cologne, Germany
-
2 worksHermitage Museum
Saint Petersburg, Russia
-
2 worksRISD Museum
Providence, United States
-
2 worksCalouste Gulbenkian Museum
Lisbon, Portugal
-
1 worksIsabella Stewart Gardner Museum
Boston, United States
-
1 worksGalleria Nazionale d'Arte Moderna e Contemporanea di Roma
Rome, Italy
-
1 works
Shelburne Museum
Shelburne, United States
Also here (3)
-
1 worksDumbarton Oaks
Washington D.C., United States
-
1 works
Museum of Modern Art
New York City, United States
-
1 worksVictoria and Albert Museum
London, United Kingdom
-
1 worksLos Angeles County Museum of Art
Los Angeles, United States
-
1 works
Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art
Hartford, United States
-
1 works
The Frick Collection
New York City, United States
4 more museums hold works by Edgar Degas with smaller collections, not listed here.
Can't travel? Bring Edgar Degas home.
See all Edgar Degas prints →Frequently Asked Questions
Who was Edgar Degas inspired by?
Edgar Degas studied with Louis Lamothe, a former student of Ingres. Lamothe taught him the importance of Ingres's teachings.Did Edgar Degas marry?
The biography states that Edgar Degas never married.What is Edgar Degas best known for?
More than half of Edgar Degas's paintings depict young ballerinas who performed at the Paris Opera. He painted the dancers in intimate, behind-the-scenes situations, but viewed them with a cool detachment.How did Edgar Degas paint?
Edgar Degas worked hard to make the dancers in his paintings appear spontaneous and natural. His compositions were influenced by photography and Japonisme.When did Edgar Degas start painting?
In 1855[8], Edgar Degas began his training as an artist.Edgar Degas art movement?
Although Edgar Degas detested painting outdoors, he was considered a charter member of the Impressionist group. This was due to friendship, his dedication to contemporary subject matter, and his opposition to official academic painting.Why did Edgar Degas paint dancers?
More than half of Edgar Degas's artistic output depicts dancers. He was a regular at the Paris Opera, observing from the wings and boxes, and sketching the work behind the performance, such as stretching, waiting, adjusting shoes, and corrections from the ballet master, as the backstage fatigue interested him more than the applause.Was Edgar Degas an impressionist?
Although Edgar Degas was associated with the Impressionists, his approach differed, and he rejected the label. Despite this, he helped organise their independent exhibitions from 1874[8] to 1886 and participated in all but one of them.
Sources
Where to See guide aggregates verified holdings of Edgar Degas's works across the following collections.
- [1] museum Brooklyn Museum Used for: museum holdings.
- [2] museum Toledo Museum of Art Used for: museum holdings.
- [3] museum Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum Used for: museum holdings.
- [4] museum Department of Prints and Drawings of the Louvre Used for: museum holdings.
- [5] museum Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Moderna e Contemporanea di Roma Used for: museum holdings.
- [6] museum Shelburne Museum Used for: museum holdings.
- [7] wikidata Wikidata: Q46373 Used for: identifiers.
- [8] wikipedia Wikipedia: Edgar Degas Used for: biography.
- [9] book Masterpieces of western art : a history of art in 900 individual studies from the Gothic to the present day Used for: biography.
- [10] book Post-impressionism : cross-currents in European painting Used for: biography.
- [11] book Post-impressionism : cross-currents in European painting Used for: biography.
Editorial overseen by Solis Prints. Sources verified 2026-07-15. Click a source for details, or hover over [N] in the page above to preview.
Editorial standardsMethodologyCorrectionsAI disclosureAbout the editorial team





























