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Hilaire-Germain-Edgar Degas, 'Ukrainian Dancers', about 1899

About the work

Overview

In the late 1890s a number of dance troupes from Eastern Europe visited Paris and performed at the Moulin Rouge, the Folies-Bergère, the Casino de Paris and at a brasserie near Degas’s Montmartre home. This pastel may have been one of three showing ‘dancers in Russian costume’ that Degas showed a visitor to his studio in 1899, although these dancers are almost certainly Ukrainian rather than Russian. Wearing traditional folk dress and stomping on the ground, they are very different from the classical ballerinas he had drawn and painted for almost four decades.

The drawing is on tracing paper, which allowed Degas to reverse individual figures and combine dancers in different arrangements from sheet to sheet. He added a strip of paper to the bottom of this sheet so he could include the lower leg of the dancer closest to us. The simple, bold outlines convey dynamic movement and the thickly applied pastel creates rich surfaces made up of many colours.

Key facts

Details

Full title
Ukrainian Dancers
Artist dates
1834 - 1917
Date made
about 1899
Medium and support
pastel and charcoal on tracing paper, mounted on paper and mounted on board
Dimensions
73 × 59.1 cm
Acquisition credit
Presented by the Sara Lee Corporation, Chicago, through the American Friends of the National Gallery, London, 1998
Inventory number
NG6581
Location
Not on display
Collection
Main Collection
Frame
18th-century French Frame

About this record

If you know more about this painting or have spotted an error, please contact us. Please note that exhibition histories are listed from 2009 onwards. Bibliographies may not be complete; more comprehensive information is available in the National Gallery Library.

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