The New Art History and the Impressionist canon seem to have successfully claimed Edgar Degas as a misogynist, rabid nationalist and misanthrope whose art was both masterly and experimental. By analysing Degas’s approach to space and his self-fashioning attitude towards identity within the ambiguities of the political and artistic culture of nineteenth-century France, this book questions the characterisation of Degas as a right-wing Frenchman and artist, and will change the way in which Degas is thought about today. -- Taken from http://www.cambridgescholars.com/mapping-dega
The paintings, prints, and sculpture of Edgar Degas (1834-1917) have been used to characterize Natur...
Photograph of elderly Degas. Before the Start at the Horse Race (1885-1892), illustrating Degas’s d...
This essay, composed for a first-year writing seminar in Art History, compares Mary Cassatt's In The...
Includes bibliographical references (pages [66]-67)The art of Edgar Degas (1834-1917) has long been ...
In this paper, Edgar Degas’ history paintings are read as the painter’s reflection on the irreconcil...
Edgar Degas’ paintings of people in personal, everyday moments are images that have resonated throug...
Includes bibliographical references (pages [107]-109)Degas’ manipulation and interpretation of the m...
The first comprehensive assessment of Degas's legacy to be published in over two decades, Perspectiv...
In the late nineteenth century, a debate ensued related to the legitimacy of photography as an artis...
Intimacy and exclusion: Degas's illustrations for Ludovic Halevy's La Famille Cardina
Kendall believes Degas looked on reproducing the human body in a new and different way as a challeng...
Richard Kendall posing nude model in copy of a Degas painting (in a reconstruction of his studio) fo...
This article looks to the work of Degas as an exemplar of a kind of Capitalist Realism, a kind of se...
Kendall looking at pictures by Degas, not the usual Impressionist outdoor scenes, but L’Absinthe / I...
Degas applied pastel in so many successive layers that the pigment became burnished and the underlyi...
The paintings, prints, and sculpture of Edgar Degas (1834-1917) have been used to characterize Natur...
Photograph of elderly Degas. Before the Start at the Horse Race (1885-1892), illustrating Degas’s d...
This essay, composed for a first-year writing seminar in Art History, compares Mary Cassatt's In The...
Includes bibliographical references (pages [66]-67)The art of Edgar Degas (1834-1917) has long been ...
In this paper, Edgar Degas’ history paintings are read as the painter’s reflection on the irreconcil...
Edgar Degas’ paintings of people in personal, everyday moments are images that have resonated throug...
Includes bibliographical references (pages [107]-109)Degas’ manipulation and interpretation of the m...
The first comprehensive assessment of Degas's legacy to be published in over two decades, Perspectiv...
In the late nineteenth century, a debate ensued related to the legitimacy of photography as an artis...
Intimacy and exclusion: Degas's illustrations for Ludovic Halevy's La Famille Cardina
Kendall believes Degas looked on reproducing the human body in a new and different way as a challeng...
Richard Kendall posing nude model in copy of a Degas painting (in a reconstruction of his studio) fo...
This article looks to the work of Degas as an exemplar of a kind of Capitalist Realism, a kind of se...
Kendall looking at pictures by Degas, not the usual Impressionist outdoor scenes, but L’Absinthe / I...
Degas applied pastel in so many successive layers that the pigment became burnished and the underlyi...
The paintings, prints, and sculpture of Edgar Degas (1834-1917) have been used to characterize Natur...
Photograph of elderly Degas. Before the Start at the Horse Race (1885-1892), illustrating Degas’s d...
This essay, composed for a first-year writing seminar in Art History, compares Mary Cassatt's In The...