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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Edgar Degas, Danseuse, arabesque ouverte sur la jambe droite, bras droit à terre, c. 1885-90

Edgar Degas

Danseuse, arabesque ouverte sur la jambe droite, bras droit à terre, c. 1885-90
Bronze
Conceived circa 1885-90 and cast between 1919 and 1973 as number 2 AP aside from the authorised edition of 20 numbered A to T plus a cast reserved for the Degas heirs marked HER.D by the A. A. Hébrard Foundry, Paris
10 7/8 x 16 5/8 x 7 7/8 in, 27.5 x 42.2 x 20 cm
Stamped ‘Degas’ (Lugt 658), the foundry mark ‘Cire Perdue A. A. Hébrard’ and monogram of Albino Palazzolo ‘AP’
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Degas first turned his attention to the Paris Opéra in the 1860s, and here was able to study the unguarded gestures of dancers at rest alongside the highly prescribed positions...
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Degas first turned his attention to the Paris Opéra in the 1860s, and here was able to study the unguarded gestures of dancers at rest alongside the highly prescribed positions of the classical ballet. His preoccupation with the subject of dancers took form across all mediums, and are amongst the most iconic images in his oeuvre.

In the privacy of his studio Degas produced numerous sculptures only one of which he ever exhibited – ‘Little Fourteen-Year-Old Dancer’. Upon Degas’s death in 1917, his studio was discovered to have many original wax, clay and plastiline models in varying degrees of completeness and deterioration.

Degas’s heirs authorised seventy-four of the statuettes salvaged from the studio to be cast in bronze. For this important and very delicate process they felt the only foundry capable of affecting this transformation to bronze was that of Adrien Hébrard and his master founder Albino Palazzolo. Of the 22 casts of each sculpture produced, one additional set was kept by Degas’s heirs and another by Hébrard. Palazzolo was also granted permission by Hébrard to cast a limited number of examples for his own private collection. Palazzolo chose only the most prized of Degas’s models, one of which being ‘Danseuse, arabesque ouverte sur la jambe droite, bras droit à terre’.

The arabesque is amongst the hardest of positions for a dancer to perform. Balancing on the singular, slender vertical of the leg, the dancer’s body hinges forward, creating a pose at once graceful and precarious. Degas was so captivated by the arabesque, it appeared in eight of the models found in his studio as well as many drawings and paintings between 1870 and 1890.

A number of bronze casts of ‘Danseuse, arabesque ouverte sur la jambe droite, bras droit à terre’ are now in international museums, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and Musée d’Orsay in Paris.
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Provenance

Albino Palazzolo, Paris
Yvon Palazzolo, Chiavari, Italy
Palazzolo Estate
Sotheby's, London, 28 March 1973, lot 35
Yvon Palazzolo
Hôtel Drouot, Paris, Me Loudmer, 21 June 1993, lot 10
Private Collection, Paris
Hôtel Drouot, Paris, Me Loudmer, 17 June 1996, lot 14
Gallery Danese/Corey, New York
Private Collection, Michigan
Private Collection (by descent from above)

Literature

P. Vitry, Catalogues des sculpture du Moyen-Age, de la Renaisance et des temps modernes, Paris, Musée Nationaux, 1993, no.1720 (another cast illus.)
J. Rewald, Degas: Works in Sculpture, A Complete Catalogue, New York, Pantheon Books, 1944, pl. no.XLI, p.96 (another cast illus.)
P. Borel, Les sculptures inédites de Degas, Geneva, 1949, p.7 (wax version illus.)
J. Rewald, Degas Sculptures, London, 1957, fig.17, p.150 (another cast illus)

F. Russoli and F. Minervino, L'opera completa di Degas, Milan 1970, no.S2, p.140 (another cast illus.)
Catalogue sommaire illustré des sculptures, Paris, Musée d'Orsay, Réunion des Musées nationaux, 1986, p.126 (another cast illus.)
P. Failing, Cast in Bronze: The Degas Dilemma, Art News, January 1988, p.140 (another cast illus.)
F. Minervo and S. de Naurois, Tout l'oeuvre peint de Degas, Paris, 1988, p.140 (another cast illus.)

J. Rewald, Degas's Complete Sculpture: Catalogue Raisonné, San Francisco 1990, no.XLI, pp.120-21 (other casts illus.)
Art for the Nation: Gifts in Honor of the 50th Anniversary of the National Gallery of Art, Washington National Gallery, March - June, 1991, p.196-199 (wax version)
A. Pingeot and F. Horvat, Degas Sculpture, Paris, Réunion des Musées Nationaux, 1991, fig.3, p.154 (another cast illus.)
S. Campbell, Degas: The Sculptures, A Catalogue Raisonné, in Apollo, Vol. CXLII, no.402, August 1995, no.2, fig. 2, p.12 (another cast illus.)
J. S. Czestochowski and A. Pingeot, Degas Sculptures: Catalogue Raisonné of the Bronzes, Memphis, 2002, no.2, p.124-25 (another cast illus. and noted under AP)

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