The Dancer: Degas Forain Toulouse-Lautrec
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About this book
Artists in late 19th-century France produced some of Europes most celebrated and revolutionary works of art. Among those innovators are Edgar Degas Jean-Louis Forain and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec who captured the renowned dancers of Paris in paintings pastels drawings prints and sculptures creating potent icons of a unique time place and culture. Each sought to portray rapidly changing urban life concentrating on the human figure in its social context. The dancer proved to be a fruitful subject for their investigations of modernity. Degas focused on the artifice of the performance and the harsh daily life of the dancer. Drawing on his background as a newspaper illustrator Forains vignettes focus on backstage flirtations between social unequals especially their exploitative aspects. By contrast Lautrecs paintings prints and posters of celebrity dancers reveal his uncritical acceptance of the sexual commerce that was part of the popular entertainment scene of Montmartre.
