Pierre Bonnard (1867-1947)
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Edgar Degas (1834-1917)

Après le bain

Details
Edgar Degas (1834-1917)
Après le bain
stamped with signature ‘Degas’ (Lugt 658; lower left)
charcoal on joined paper
23 3/8 x 18 3/4 in. (59.4 x 47.6 cm.)
Executed circa 1895-1900
Provenance
The artist's estate; Second sale, Galerie Georges Petit, Paris, 11-13 December 1918, lot 293.
Galerie Durand-Ruel, Paris, by whom acquired at the above sale.
Acquavella Galleries, Inc., New York, by whom acquired from the above, in 1991.
Acquired from the above by the present owners, on 4 November 1991.
Literature
J. Pecirka, Edgar Degas Drawings, London, 1963, no. 56, p. 26 (illustrated pl. 56).
Exhibited
Paris, Galerie Durand-Ruel, Edgar Degas, 1834-1917, June - October 1960, no. 59, n.p.
Tokyo, Seibu Museum of Art, Exposition Degas, September - November 1976, no. 74, n.p. (illustrated n.p.); this exhibition later travelled to Kyoto, Musée de la Ville de Kyoto, November - December 1976; and Fukuoka, Centre Culturel de Fukuoka, December 1976 - January 1977.
Special Notice
These lots have been imported from outside the EU for sale using a Temporary Import regime. Import VAT is payable (at 5%) on the Hammer price. VAT is also payable (at 20%) on the buyer’s Premium on a VAT inclusive basis. When a buyer of such a lot has registered an EU address but wishes to export the lot or complete the import into another EU country, he must advise Christie's immediately after the auction.

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Keith Gill
Keith Gill

Lot Essay

Drawing may be the most haunting obsession the mind can experience… At once a curious and at times violent contest begins, in which this desire, along with chance, memory, the skill and variable proficiency of the hand, the idea and the instrument, are all engaged in an interchange whose more or less felicitous and foreseeable result consists of pencil strokes, shadings, shapes, the appearances of places and living things… in short, the work.’ – Paul Valéry

From around 1890 onward, Edgar Degas drew more than two hundred pastels in various series related to his bathers theme; only the dancers, this artist’s signature, most popular subject, surpassed them in quantity. Considering all other content in the artist’s late oeuvre, Jill DeVonyar and Richard Kendall have pointed out, ‘only his images of the female bathers approached the dancers in sustained originality and commitment’ (J. DeVonyar & R. Kendall, Degas and the Dance, exh. cat., Detroit Institute of Arts, 2002, p. 231).

Just as the drawing Femme s’essuyant les cheveux appears to have initiated an extensive series of drawings and pastels depicting a seated bather drying her hair (see also lot 7), the present charcoal study Après le bain, drawn a few years later, likely prompted the sequence of pastels in which the bather, seen in profile and seated beside the tub from which she had emerged, towels her bosom and beneath under her left arm (Lemoisne, nos. 1011 [re-dated circa 1895-1900; illustrated above] and 1340-1343). In this inceptive essay, Degas established the elevated position from which he viewed his model, having seated her in a scallop-back chair, draped with linens, in front of a classic porcelain-enamelled, cast-iron tub, tilted to comply with the perspective of the room.

Degas first exhibited his domestic bathers theme in the eighth and final Impressionist group exhibition of 1886; ten pastels comprised a ‘Suite de nuds [sic] de femmes se baignant, se lavant, se séchant, s’essuyant…’. While Seurat’s Un dimanche à la Grande Jatte, completed the previous year, became the lightning rod of public bemusement and ridicule, Degas’s scenes of the female nude à sa toilette were deemed scandalous—the artist’s models must be prostitutes, viewers believed, the rooms those of seedy, cheap hotels: ‘Degas lays bare for us,’ one critic complained, ‘the streetwalker’s modern, swollen, pasty flesh’ (quoted in The New Painting, exh. cat., The Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco, 1986, p. 431). Painting a bather as the mythical Diana or the biblical Susanna was perfectly acceptable—‘nude models are all right at the Salon’, Degas remarked to his dealer Ambroise Vollard, ‘but a woman undressing, never!’ (Degas, quoted in A. Vollard, Degas: An Intimate Portrait, New York, 1937, p. 48).

Dismayed at the outcry, and labeled a ‘misogynist’ for the direct treatment he accorded his feminine subject matter, Degas nevertheless persisted with the bathers theme. ‘Such pictures, in which the pleasure of observation is inextricably linked with the seductive qualities of the medium itself, came to dominate Degas’s production from the late 1880s onward, through the final decades of his career after 1890,’ George T.M. Shackelford has written. ‘Retreating from the public eye, after 1890 Degas treats the nude for himself, for his own gratification, and for his own celebration of the body’ (G.T.M. Shackelford, Degas and the Nude, exh. cat., Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 2011, p. 156).

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