The Dance Lesson - Edgar Degas
Archival giclée
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Description
A study of ballet dancers in a rehearsal studio, capturing a quiet moment of preparation through Degas's characteristic observational style.
Edgar Degas produced this work during a period when he focused on the rigorous training of ballet dancers in Paris. The composition captures a moment of quiet observation within a rehearsal studio. A dancer sits on a chair, adjusting her costume, while another stands nearby, her posture suggesting a pause in the instruction. The background reveals other figures in the distance, their forms rendered with looser brushwork to suggest movement and depth. Degas employed an asymmetrical arrangement, placing the primary figures towards the centre and right, leaving a significant portion of the floorboards visible. This technique draws the viewer into the space of the studio. The palette relies on muted tones, including pale greens, browns, and soft whites, which contrast with the sharp red of the seated dancer's bodice. The lighting, filtered through a window, creates soft shadows and highlights the textures of the tulle skirts. Unlike many of his contemporaries who painted outdoor scenes, Degas preferred the artificial light and controlled environments of theatres and studios. He observed his subjects with a detached, analytical eye, often choosing angles that mimic the perspective of a spectator. This work reflects his interest in the repetitive nature of dance practice and the physical toll it took on the performers. The floorboards, depicted with precise lines, provide a sense of perspective that anchors the figures within the room. The painting remains a clear example of his ability to capture fleeting moments of human activity without resorting to sentimentality.
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Each print is produced to order using 12-colour giclée printing on FSC-certified archival paper. Designed in Britain and printed at your nearest production hub to reduce waste and speed up delivery.
The Dance Lesson - Edgar Degas
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Specific Features
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Materials & Sizing
Museum-grade giclée on FSC-certified archival matte paper, with framed and canvas options.
- Paper sizes: A4, A3, A2, A1, A0 and B2 (50×70 cm)
- Canvas: XS (20×30 cm) to Large (60×90 cm)
- Frames: black, natural wood, dark wood or white
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Artist Biography
Edgar Degas
More than half of his entire output depicts dancers. He became a fixture at the Paris Opera, watching from the wings and from boxes above the stage, sketching not the performance but the work behind it: the stretching, the waiting, the adjusting of shoes, the corrections from the ballet master. The backstage fatigue interested him more than the applause.
In 1881, he exhibited Little Dancer Aged Fourteen, a two-thirds life-size wax figure of Marie van Goethem, a real student at the Opera ballet school. She wore a real tutu, real ballet slippers, and a wig of human hair, all coated in wax. Critics called it repulsive. One described the girl as having a face marked by the hateful promise of every vice. Wax was a material for anatomical specimens, not art. It was the only sculpture he exhibited in his lifetime. After his death, 150 more wax figures were found in his studio, many falling apart.
His eyesight began failing during the Franco-Prussian War. By his forties he had lost central vision. By fifty-seven he could not read. The deterioration drove him from fine brushwork to bolder strokes, then to pastels, then to sculpture he could work by touch. He avoided daylight and painted under controlled artificial light. Collectors joked they should chain their Degas paintings to the wall, because he would try to take them back to rework them. He compulsively revised everything.
He disliked being called an Impressionist. He preferred Realist or Independent. He never painted outdoors, which was supposedly the whole point of the movement. Despite this, he co-founded the group, organised their exhibitions, and showed in all eight. He said: there is love and there is art and we only have one heart. He never married.
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