Lot Essay
When this work was exhibited for the first time, in 1921 at Galerie Hébrard, it was incorrectly titled "Dancer Rubbing Her Knee". Presumably the generic title was invented because the founder who edited the bronzes, Hébrard, was unaware of the relationship of the original wax to Degas's series of seven pastels depicting scenes from [the ballet] "Les Jumeaux de Bergame"... Here Degas has captured the moment in which a nimble female dancer in the male role of Harlequin Senior, poised with her feet planted in an exaggerated fourth position, if about to pantomime "her" discovery that the lout "she" has just attacked with a baton is Harlequin Junior, "her" brother. The contrapposto for the figure and the expectant lean forward are somehow sufficient to convery the high drama of the moment... Notwithstanding the lack of detail in the face, the large eye sockets, big cheeks, and smile confer upon it an uncanny resemblance to that of Mlle Marie Sanlaville, the première danseuse who danced the role of Harlequin Senior in the 1886 production of the ballet "Les Jumeaux de Bergame". (G. Tinterow, Degas, New York, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, exhibition catalogue, 1988, pp. 433 and 434)