Sketches of Figures at a Funeral (95.GD.35.4)

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Sketches of Figures at a Funeral (95.GD.35.4)

Creator

Edgar Degas

French Photographer · 1834–1917

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Artist

> No art was ever less spontaneous than mine. What I do is the result of reflection and study of the great masters; of inspiration, spontaneity, temperament . . . I know nothing. > > --Edgar Germaine Hilaire Degas From a wealthy Parisian family, Degas devoted himself exclusively to painting without needing to sell a canvas. His training was conventional: he spent five years in Italy, studied the O

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Date
about 1877
Medium
Graphite
Culture
French
Department
Drawings
Institution
Getty Museum

Watching a procession through Paris's Left Bank in June 1877, Edgar Degas quickly sketched the various characters he saw that day. At the upper left, a hatless priest bends over to the right, while an elderly man with a turned-up collar looks down. Below them a young girl with a wreath in her hair holds a flag, and a man carries a bouquet of flowers. At the right, on a larger scale, a stout woman wearing a mobcap and a fringed shawl faces left. Various overlapping faces fill the corner behind her. In the center floats a man's head topped with a priest's hat--perhaps a self-portrait of the artist. Once when another artist invited him to go to a café, Degas objected to traveling by horse-drawn cab, saying, "Personally, I don't like cabs. You don't see anyone. That's why I love to ride on the omnibus--you can look at people. We were created to look at one another, weren't we?" For Degas, it was in the simple realities of everyday life that art could be found, not in dramatic tales from history and mythology.

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