EDGAR DEGAS

Mary Cassatt at the Louvre: The Paintings Gallery (Au Louvre: La Peinture (Mary Cassatt)) (D. 29; A. and C. 54; R. and S. 52)

Details
EDGAR DEGAS
Mary Cassatt at the Louvre: The Paintings Gallery (Au Louvre: La Peinture (Mary Cassatt)) (D. 29; A. and C. 54; R. and S. 52)
etching, softground, aquatint and drypoint, 1879-80, on creamy fibrous Japan, a rich, carefully inked and wiped impression with sensitively directed tone and good contrasts, tenth state (of twenty), (Reed and Shapiro record 2 impressions in this state and 32 impressions in all states), with full (?) margins, minor surface soiling, a few inky fingerprints at the margin edges, otherwise in very good condition
P. 12 x 5in. (305 x 128mm.)
S. 15 1/4 x 11in. (387 x 280mm.)
Provenance
Atelier Degas (L. 657), part of lot 37 in the Fifth Atelier sale, 22nd November 1918
Knoedler and Co. by 1934
Acquired by Elsie Holmes Warrington
By descent to John Wesley Warrington

Lot Essay

The most famous of all Degas' prints, Mary Cassatt at the Louvre: The Paintings Gallery is regarded as a high point of the mid-nineteenth century etching revival in France. Unlike the very similar Mary Cassatt at the Louvre: The Etruscan Gallery which was probably intended for publication, Mary Cassatt at the Louvre: The Paintings Gallery exists only in proof impressions which show the artist's fascination with printmaking techniques. Thirty-two impressions were included in the Atelier sale of 1918 including the current example.

As with The Etruscan Gallery, The Paintings Gallery relates closely to the pastel At the Louvre: Miss Cassatt (Lemoisne 581). This original consists of various joined sheets revealing Degas' preoccupation with the placement of figures. From a photograph and subsequent tracings of the figures, Degas arrived at the conjoined composite of Mary Cassatt and her sister Lydia, which are reused in The Paintings Gallery. The striking element in the composition is not, however, just the placement of the figures but their relationship to the door-jamb to our left and the consequent overall patterning of the plate. This Japanese element of design adds strongly to the originality of the composition and the modernity of style which it conveys.

Of the 32 impressions recorded by Reed and Shapiro, 27 are in museums.