The Singer in Green
Pastel on light blue laid paper
23 3/4 x 18 1/4 in. (60.3 x 46.4 cm)
Bequest of Stephen C. Clark, 1960 (61.101.7)
The singer's face is upturned as she sings in one of the café-concerts Degas and his
friends enjoyed frequenting. The harsh lights emphasize the contours of her face and
collarbone, and the entire area around her is suffused with light and vibrant color. Degas
has used strident colors for her dress and the picture's background. Yellow, orange, and
turquoise contrast sharply with the young girl's pale skin. The girl's face, arms, and
upper torso seem carefully modeled, compared to the background, which is composed of
freely applied areas of color.
Café-concerts were very popular during the 1870s. They combined a publike atmosphere
with performances by singers and comics. The performers of these concerts were typically
from working-class backgrounds. Degas wrote, in particular, of his admiration for one of
the most popular singers, Emma Aladdin (1837-1913), known as Thérésa. The height of
Thérésa's popularity was during the 1870s and 1880s, and Degas made a point of attending
her concerts.
The model for this pastel, however, is
not Thérésa. The figure's features resemble those of Marie von Goethem, who posed for
the sculpture The Little Fourteen-Year-Old Dancer (1879-81). However, the girl's
physique does look similar to that of Thérésa during the 1860s. Also, the gesture of a
hand raised to the shoulder was one of Thérésa's trademarks. Degas has reworked his
memory of the famous singer through the figure of one of his models.
This work was called The Singer in Green when it was sold at public auction in
Paris in 1898. Although the work does not contain pure green, the title has not changed.