Title: Pferd an der Tränke
Date: 1866/68; 1919/1921 (Abguss)
Dimensions: 16,50 cm
Genre: Sculpture
Year of acquisition: 1947
Whereabouts: Wallraf-Richartz-Museum & Fondation Corboud, Köln
Medium: Bronze
Museum director at time of acquisition: Leopold Reidemeister
Alfred Flechtheim and Edgar Degas
The French painter and sculptor Edgar Degas exhibited together with contemporary Impressionist artists. However, his works differ as a result of the delicate use of lines and their precisely structured pictorial composition. His career as an artist after breaking off his studies at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts was primarily marked by trips to Italy and the USA, as well as the intensive study and copying of works by major artists in local museums. During this time he met Eduard Manet and later became acquainted with Paul Cézanne, Pierre-Auguste Renoir and other contemporaries such as Émile Zola. His favourite subject was the portrait that followed a brief period working in the style of history painters. He focused on subjects such as Parisian nightlife, ballet, horse-racing and women, capturing the latter grooming themselves or at work. Apart from oil paintings he also created numerous works in pastel chalk, drawings and, particularly late in life, sculptures, as he found these easier to make in the face of his worsening blindness. Works by Degas were shown at annual exhibitions of works by the Impressionists and at the Paris Salon.
Degas’ works were frequently included in solo and group exhibitions at Flechtheim’s galleries. He was principally backed by the art dealer Paul Durand-Ruel. An exhibition of his sculptures was held in 1926 in Flechtheim’s gallery in Berlin. This was then shown at the Galerie Thannhauser in Munich and the Galerie Arnold in Dresden.
Degas’ open anti-Semitism, that ultimately led to the artist’s isolation when he was old, did not seem to have played a role later, either with regard to the interest Flechtheim showed for his work or the confiscation at a later date of various works by Degas by the National Socialists.
Description
Degas hatte von jeher lebhaftes Interesse für Pferde und den Pferdesport gezeigt. Wenige Jahre vor 1870 begann er, Pferderennen zu besuchen und dabei Skizzen anzufertigen. Bereits zwischen 1866 und 1868 schuf er die recht glatt modellierte Kleinplastik „Pferd an der Tränke“ in rotem Wachs als Modell zum Gemälde „Mademoiselle Fiocre im Ballett“, das unter anderem ein trinkendes Pferd zeigt. Die Kleinplastik konnte Degas in die Hand nehmen und Form- und Schattenwirkungen studieren. Vom Original sind 24 Abgüsse in Bronze gegossen worden.
Bibliography
Edgar Degas, (1834-1917). Pferdebronzen. Galerie Alfred Flechtheim, Düsseldorf, Königsallee, Mai 1927, Nr. 5 (Katalog-Nr. 42.).
Leonard von Matt/John Rewald, Degas. Das plastische Werk, Zürich 1957, Taf. 2, S. 145.
Anne Pingeot, Degas. Sculptures, Paris 1991, Abb. S. 100f., S. 172 Nr. 42.
Jean Sutherland Boggs, Degas at the Races, Washington 1998, S. 33-35, 184, 260 Nr. 111.
Joseph S. Czestochowski/Anne Pingeot, Degas Sculptures. Catalogue raisonné of the bronzes, New York [u.a.] 2002, S. 76f., S. 147, Nr. 13.
Hubertus Gaßner (Hrsg.), Degas. Intimität und Pose, Ausstellung Hamburger Kunsthalle 2009, München 2009, Abb. S. 302f.