Edgar Degas (1834-1917)
羅納德.P.斯坦頓遺產珍藏
艾德加.德加 (1834-1917)

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細節
艾德加.德加 (1834-1917)
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簽名、編號及鑄造標記:Degas 40/B AA HÉBRARD CIRE PERDUE (Lugt 658;底座上方)
銅雕 褐色銅銹
高 18 1/8 吋 (46.1 公分)
蠟原版本約1895年作;此銅雕1922年鑄;編號A至T的22個鑄版、特別保留給藝術家繼承人及鑄造師艾柏哈的兩個標誌HER及HER.D鑄版
來源
巴黎艾柏哈鑄造廠 (1922年)
紐約費拉基爾畫廊 (1925年)
紐約C.W.克勞沙爾畫廊 (1928年)
紐約阿道夫.劉易斯恩 (購自上述收藏)
紐約塞繆爾.A.劉易斯恩 (1938年前繼承自上述收藏)
紐約瑪格麗特.塞利格曼.劉易斯恩 (1952年繼承自上述收藏)
紐約阿黛爾及亞瑟.雷曼 (1954年前受贈自上述收藏,直至至少1965年)
紐約阿奎維拉畫廊
紐約露西.米切爾─英尼斯 (1996年購自上述收藏)
已故藏家約1996年購自上述收藏
出版
M. Rebatet著 《Degas》,巴黎,1944年 (另一鑄版插圖,圖號128)
J. Rewald編 《Degas: Works in Sculpture: A Complete Catalogue》,紐約,1944年,第25頁,編號XLV (石膏版本插圖,第100頁;另一鑄版插圖,第101頁;另一鑄版局部插圖,第102頁)
P. Borel著 《Les sculptures inédites de Degas》,日內瓦,1949年 (石膏版本插圖)
J. Fevre著 《Mon oncle Degas》,日內瓦,1949年 (石膏版本插圖)
P.-A. Lemoisne著 《Degas et son oeuvre》,巴黎,1954年,第185頁 (另一鑄版插圖,編號112及113)
J. Rewald著 《Degas Sculpture》,紐約,1956年,第150至151頁,編號XLV (另一鑄版插圖,圖號57至61)
P. Cabanne著 《Edgar Degas》,巴黎,1957年,第61頁 (另一鑄版插圖,圖b)
C. Virch著 《The Adele and Arthur Lehman Collection》,紐約,1965年,第110頁 (插圖,第111頁)
F. Russoli及F. Minervino著 《L'opera completa di Degas》,米蘭,1970年,第142頁,編號S32 (另一鑄版插圖)
C.W. Millard著 《The Sculpture of Edgar Degas》,普林斯頓,1976年,第18至19頁,編號99 (另一鑄版插圖)
D. Sutton著 《Edgar Degas: Life and Work》,紐約,1986年,第9頁,編號182 (另一鑄版插圖,第195頁;1880年作)
J. Rewald著 《Degas's Complete Sculpture: Catalogue Raisonné》,三藩市,1990年,第128頁,編號XLV (蠟原版插圖;另一鑄版插圖,第129及198頁)
A. Pingeot著 《Degas Sculptures》,巴黎,1991年,第169至170頁,編號35 (另一鑄版插圖,第169頁;石膏版本插圖,第170頁)
S. Campbell 〈Degas: The Sculptures, A Catalogue Raisonné〉《Apollo》,1995年8月,第CXLII期,第30頁,編號40 (另一鑄版插圖)
J.S. Czestochowski及A. Pingeot著 《Degas Sculpture: Catalogue Raisonné of the Bronzes》,孟菲斯,2002年,第199頁,第40頁 (另一鑄版插圖)
S. Campbell,R. Kendall,D. Barbour及S. Sturman著《Degas in the Norton Simon Museum》,第2冊,帕薩迪納,2009年,第382頁,編號74 (另一鑄版彩色插圖,第382至385頁)
展覽
1922年12月 紐約杜蘭德.魯埃爾畫廊 「Exhibition of Bronzes by Degas」展覽;編號34
1925年11月 紐約費拉基爾畫廊 「Degas」展覽;第6頁,編號35
1951年11月至12月 紐約大都會藝術博物館 「The Lewisohn Collection」展覽;編號167 (插圖,第33頁;封面內頁插圖)

榮譽呈獻

Jessica Fertig
Jessica Fertig

拍品專文

This elegantly poised figure is Degas’s most fully resolved and finely finished statement on a theme to which he returned repeatedly during the last two decades of his career–that of a nude model who balances on her left leg as she bends to inspect the sole of her right foot. “This subject is often considered one of Degas’s most inspired and audacious sculptural inventions,” Richard Kendall has written. “Movement is fused with stability, precariousness with momentary equilibrium, in a succession of forms that animate both the human body and the flurry of space around it” (op. cit., 1996, n.p.).
Although this figure has traditionally been titled a danseuse, only the delicate balance required to sustain the stance connects the sculpture explicitly to the ballet. Degas’s model Pauline, who narrated a memoir to Alice Michel sometime after 1910, recalled that it was an especially taxing pose to assume. “Standing on her left foot,” Michel recounted, “knee slightly flexed, she raised her other foot behind her with a vigorous movement, capturing her toes in her right hand, then turned her head to look at the sole of that foot as she raised her left elbow high to regain her balance” (quoted in S.G. Lindsay et al., op. cit., 2010, p. 231). The pose has loose classical precedent in sculptures of Nike or Aphrodite adjusting a sandal and the latter nursing a wound. Most of these show the goddess reaching across her body to grasp her foot with the opposite hand; in Degas’s version, by contrast, the model holds her foot with the hand on the same side, carrying the lateral imbalance of the precarious posture to the extreme.
In addition to the present sculpture, Degas modeled at least three variants on the same pose, all more summarily handled and probably later (Rewald, nos. XLIX, LX, and LXI). Pauline noted a further example that collapsed from an inadequate armature and another that the artist abandoned midway; the motif appears too in numerous pastels and drawings. “It is essential to do the same subject over again, ten times, a hundred times,” Degas declared (quoted in Degas: Beyond Impressionism, exh. cat., The Art Institute of Chicago, 1996, p. 186). The Danseuse offered here is noteworthy for the careful rendering of details such as the facial features, the toes, and the folds of the flesh, as well as for the abundant sweep of hair that cascades over the right shoulder, emphasizing the twisting motion of the body.
Degas himself evidently considered this sculpture one of his most significant achievements in three dimensions. Of the several dozen wax figurines that he modeled over the course of his career, it is one of only three that he is known to have had cast in the more durable medium of plaster, being famously reluctant to declare his work complete. Contemporary accounts indicate that he proudly displayed the plaster Danseuse in a large glass cabinet in his studio, where it was visible to visiting dealers, colleagues, and friends.

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