

2488
5
by
Edgar Degas
After the Bath (Woman Drying Herself)
1896
Oil on canvas, 35 1/4 x 46inches (89.5 x 116.8cm)
Philadelphia Museum of Art
Purchased with funds from the estate of George D. Widener, 1980
Description:
This is one of three paintings that Edgar Degas executed around 1896 of a woman seen from the rear as she reclines awkwardly on the back of a chaise longue. Anticipated by both a photograph (The J. Paul Getty Museum, Malibu) and a drawing (private collection), the paintings have elicited wide-ranging interpretations from critics attempting to understand the woman's contorted pose and the strange fusion of eroticism and anguish it suggests. Of the three paintings, this is the simplest, the most thinly painted, and the most monochromatic, characteristics that have indicated to some that the work is unfinished. More likely, the fiery red canvas is evidence of Degas's increasing interest in pictorial abstraction in his later years, and his daring play with viewers' expectations of compositional completeness. Even in its simplicity and spareness, this is a fully resolved composition, and brilliant evidence of Degas's ability to innovate throughout his long artistic career. [Christopher Riopelle, from Philadelphia Museum of Art: Handbook of the Collections (1995), p. 204.]
Philadelphia Museum of Art
Purchased with funds from the estate of George D. Widener, 1980
Description:
This is one of three paintings that Edgar Degas executed around 1896 of a woman seen from the rear as she reclines awkwardly on the back of a chaise longue. Anticipated by both a photograph (The J. Paul Getty Museum, Malibu) and a drawing (private collection), the paintings have elicited wide-ranging interpretations from critics attempting to understand the woman's contorted pose and the strange fusion of eroticism and anguish it suggests. Of the three paintings, this is the simplest, the most thinly painted, and the most monochromatic, characteristics that have indicated to some that the work is unfinished. More likely, the fiery red canvas is evidence of Degas's increasing interest in pictorial abstraction in his later years, and his daring play with viewers' expectations of compositional completeness. Even in its simplicity and spareness, this is a fully resolved composition, and brilliant evidence of Degas's ability to innovate throughout his long artistic career. [Christopher Riopelle, from Philadelphia Museum of Art: Handbook of the Collections (1995), p. 204.]
- License:
- Courtesy of the Philadelphia Museum of Art
- For more:
- http://www.philamuseum.org/collections/permanent/74314.html
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