The Tub by Hilaire-Germain-Edgar Degas
The Tub (1886) is part of
Impressionist Hilaire-Germain-Edgar
Degas's series of
women bathing and dressing, in which he pioneered a
new approach to the nude. The academic formulation of the nude was
based on beauty, and the figure was composed in a way that celebrated
the regularity of proportion and the grace of movement. Degas preferred
to portray the accidental gesture, as if the figure was caught
unawares. Hilaire-Germain-Edgar Degas heightened this sense of
voyeurism with a high point of view, looking down at the figure and
into the tub.
 The Tub by Hilaire-Germain-Edgar Degas is a pastel (23-5/8 x 32-5/8 inches), which is on display at Musée d'Orsay, Paris, France. |
Asymmetric compositions and acute lines of vision were other techniques that Degas used to engage the viewer, as seen in the Impressionist painting At the Milliner's on the following page.
For more on Impressionist paintings, artists, and art history, see: