Country Life

Exhibition

Matthew Dennison enjoys two exhibition­s devoted to Degas that explore the artist’s thoughtful, reflective approach to his work–and his habit of revisiting favourite subjects

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NO art was ever less spontaneou­s than mine,’ confessed Edgar Degas. ‘Of inspiratio­n, spontaneit­y, temperamen­t I know nothing.’ Instead, the artist emphasised the importance of ‘reflection’. He revisited favourite subjects—milliners, laundresse­s, dancers at the barre, women bathing or arranging their hair, horses and race-goers at fashionabl­e race meetings —‘over again, ten times, one hundred times’, driven by what one acquaintan­ce labelled his ‘passion for perfection’.

Degas died a century ago. His death is commemorat­ed in exhibition­s at Cambridge’s Fitzwillia­m Museum and the National Gallery in London. At the centre of the National’s show is an outstandin­g collection of Degas pastels and oil paintings on loan from Glasgow’s Burrell Collection. Highlights include The Rehearsal of the Ballet Dancers (1874), justly acclaimed for its bravura evocation of sun-flecked space and the inclusion—simultaneo­usly humorous and poignant—of a wooden spiral staircase with a tortured tilt mirrors the pose of Degas’ half-glimpsed dancers.

Called ‘Drawn in Colour’, the show is supplement­ed by works from the gallery’s own collection, such as the giddily vibrant image of a girl at her toilette, Combing the Hair, and further loans, among them a characteri­stically awkward sketch, Russian Dancers, which William Burrell donated to the town of Berwick-upon-tweed in 1949.

The Fitzwillia­m show, ‘A Passion for Perfection’, is larger in scale, scope and intent. More than 50 loans from collection­s across the globe supplement the Museum’s own significan­t holdings to showcase an artist whose work embraced multiple media, whose painting was inspired by Classical sculpture, Old Master paintings, Japanese prints and photograph­y, and whose working practice did, indeed, embrace reflection.

There is a meditative quality to any number of exhibits here, a reflection of Degas’ own cerebral approach. Dancers in the Wings (1900–5), is a moment frozen in time. The viewer’s attention is drawn both to the dancers’ temporary stillness and the taut alertness reflected in their faces.

Degas’ landscape paintings, the least well-known among his output, depict a world in which everything is similarly still: unlike most landscape views by Impression­ist artists, there is no sense of flickering light, of movement of light, shadow or wind across skies, water or fields. A chalk copy of Francesco Francia’s The

Virgin and Child with Two

Saints of about 1510, undertaken early in Degas’ career, is another frozen vignette. Instead, it is his sculptures of dancers that thrill with a tingling sense of animation oh-so fleetingly suspended. Despite the richness and breadth of material on show in Cambridge, a handful of images linger in the mind. Degas repeatedly depicted women who are apparently unaware of the artist’s scrutiny. The museum’s own enigmatic At the Café, painted in the mid 1870s, and three pastels from the collection of Denver Art Museum—the

Dance Examinatio­n (1880), Woman Scratching her Back

(1881) and Three Women at the Races (about 1885)— present an assortment of women entirely oblivious to external considerat­ions. Each is an image of absorption. A determined stoutness notwithsta­nding, the nude figure in Woman Scratching

her Back is tangibly vulnerable: here is a snapshot of nakedness stripped of all eroticism. More than her curled fingers, the soft sag of her breast and roll of tummy, it is her down-turned face that ultimately holds us. Her thoughts remain forever elusive, like the itch she seeks to lessen.

This same sense of something unexplaine­d being captured is what gives the virtually monochrome scene of two women at a table, At the Café, such impact. The subject of their conversati­on is as hard to fathom as that of the trio who comprise Three

Women at the Races. We see none of their faces full on; indeed, the angular geometry of their poses is what links these women to Degas’ dancers—in each case, a passing physical mannerism has been committed to canvas for perpetuity. There is something frieze-like in the compositio­n of the three female race-goers, all dressed in brown. Like an everyday The Three

Graces, they are unaware of, and unconcerne­d by, the immortalit­y the artist bestows upon them. The ballerinas in The

Dance Examinatio­n betray the same ignorance of observatio­n.

‘Nothing should be left to chance,’ Degas wrote of his art. Yet for all his meticulous reflecting on his subjects, his is a powerfully lively vision.

‘Degas: A Passion for Perfection’ is at The Fitzwillia­m Museum, Trumpingto­n Street, Cambridge, until January 14, 2018 (www. fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk) ‘Drawn in Colour; Degas from The Burrell’ is at The National Gallery, Trafalgar Square, London WC2, until May 7, 2018 (www.nationalga­llery.org.uk)

Next week: Joseph Highmore at the Foundling Museum

‘For all Degas’ reflection on his subjects, his is a powerfully lively vision

 ??  ?? Dancers on a Bench (about 1888), a frieze-like compositio­n of typically awkward poses, is in the National Gallery’s show
Dancers on a Bench (about 1888), a frieze-like compositio­n of typically awkward poses, is in the National Gallery’s show
 ??  ?? The Burrell Collection’s Jockeys in the Rain, about 1883–86
The Burrell Collection’s Jockeys in the Rain, about 1883–86
 ??  ?? Female Nude Drying her Neck, in the Fitzwillia­m show
Female Nude Drying her Neck, in the Fitzwillia­m show

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