Artists

The images and information presented below are for the instruction of students and scholarly research.

 


Hilaire Germain Edgar Degas
(1834-1917)

Think that you may own a painting by Edgar Degas? We authenticate, appraise, research and issue certificates of authenticity (COA) and provide consultations for all paintings by Edgar Degas.

The Star

Edgar Degas is generally thought of as one of the greatest French artists to have ever lived, though his mother was American and he spent a great deal of his life in the United States. This great artist was originally expected to study law, but gave up his formal education at the age of 20 to pursue the arts. In 1856 he left for Italy to study the works of the old master of the Renaissance, and also copied works from the Louvre that same year.

Promenade by the Sea, Bay of Naples 1860

It is quite possible that some of his sketches from this time could surface in Florence, Venice or Naples and would probably look like this:

Study of Gentle Bellini 1865

After he returned from Italy, Degas painted mostly portraits and pictures with historical subjects. These works are entirely different than what most people associate him with.

Young Spartans Exercising

Degas also created landscapes that were quite bland in comparison to his other works, which may cause an art researcher or authenticator to overlook it as a Degas.


Beach and Dunes


For the next few years, Degas showed his works frequently at the salons until he was called to fight in the Franco-Prussian war of 1870. During that time he had very few chances to paint. After the war, Degas traveled to New Orleans to visit his brother Rene where he stayed and painted portraits of his relatives until 1873.


Portrait of the Artists Grandfather



Portrait of the Artists Sister

During this time, he also painted a scene of the office in his family’s cotton company.


The Cotton Exchange in New Orleans
 

Degas work while in New Orleans is perhaps the least known of his oeuvre, and the exciting possibility exists that some of his sketches or paintings could show up somewhere in Louisiana.


The Suffering of the City of New Orleans 1865
 

Upon his return to Paris, Degas resumed exhibiting his work in the salons, often showing alongside his friend and “rival” painter Edouard Manet. The two shared similar styles and interests and often painted similar subjects like Parisian life.


The Absinthe Drinker

Of course, when people think of Degas, they have ballerinas in mind, or perhaps women drying up after a bath.


Dance Class 1871
 


Dance Class 1874


Dancers in the Old Opera House

In reality Degas cared more about race horses than he did about ballerinas and women pulling up their stockings. A survey of all his works from 1860 to 1900 shows that he worked 91 times on a composition involving horses; far more than he worked on any other subject. If you consider his sculpture production, horses win by several lengths.


Race Horses


The Races Before the Start
 


Race Horses Pastel

Sadly, the death of Degas father brought him into financial ruin in his later years. He was forced to sell much of his art collection to pay off his fathers’ debts and could scarcely get by on his art commissions towards the end of his career.


The Duke and Dutchess Morbilli
 

Edgar Degas was a master, a giant really, in the entire world history of painting. Ask any art scholar to pick the top 25 painters of all time and Degas will almost always be included. The fact that he has not sold any works for as much as Claude Monet or Pierre-Auguste Renoir is not due to his lack of immense superiority. Rather, it is because it takes a deeper, more advanced understanding of art, to appreciate him. Discerning museum curators have long acquired most of his major and secondary works; therefore it leaves fewer in the marketplace. However, even some of his more prominent works, such as “Ballet Scene” have disappeared and their whereabouts are unknown.


Ballet Scene 1880

But a new Degas discovery may not be a pastel, oil, or a drawing. It could even come in a seemingly unexpected form.

Nude Putting on Stockings


Louise Reading


Woman Drying

Yes, these are photographs, by Edgar Degas the photographer. Of course they are very valuable. We only have some 50 of them right now. Could these have been studies for some of his more famous nudes and portraits?

Nude wiping her foot


Woman combing her hair

In 1895, at sixty-one years of age, in spite of failing eyesight, Degas took up photography. His photos were never exhibited in his lifetime and very little ever since. Few people even know Degas was ever a photographer. Do we have all of them? Probably not.

Blue Dancers

Degas was a prolific artist and it is not likely that every single painting, sketch or sculpture that he ever created is accounted for or destroyed. Could that French painting hanging in your family estate be a genuine Degas? Contact us to find out.
 

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