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Chronology of the Artist's Life 1834 Hilaire-Germain-Edgar De Gas is born on July 19, 1834, at 8 rue Saint-Georges in Paris. His father, Auguste, a banker, was French, and his mother, Célestine, an American from New Orleans. The family name "Degas" had been changed to "De Gas" by some family members in Naples and France in order to sound more aristocratic; the preposition indicated a name derived from land holdings. Degas went back to using the original spelling sometime after 1870, and that is how we spell his name today. Degas's friends Ludovic Halévy and Paul Valpinçon are both born the same year. 1853 At age eighteen and a half Degas receives permission to copy at the Louvre in Paris. In order to develop their own skills, nineteenth-century artists copied paintings by the old masters, studying their drawing and painting techniques. 1854 Copies Raphael paintings at the Louvre. 1855 Degas is taken by Édouard Valpinçon, the father of his friend Paul and an art collector, to visit the painter Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres (1780-1867). Degas admired Ingres's work and believed, as the great master did, in the primary importance of drawing in the creation of a work of art. During the eighteenth century, much was made of the rivalry between Ingres the draftsman and Eugène Delacroix (1798-1863), who placed greater emphasis on the role of color in painting. Degas was enamored of both artists and acquired their works for his own art collection. Degas is admitted to the École des Beaux-Arts. 1856 Lives and travels in Italy. 1859 Returns to Paris. 1860 Travels to Italy for a brief stay. 1862 Meets Édouard Manet in the Louvre while copying Velázquez's painting The Infanta Margarita directly onto a copper plate. 1864 Visits Ingres. 1865 Paints A Woman Seated Beside a Vase of Flowers (Madame Paul Valpinçon?).
1865 through 1870 1866 Paints The Collector of Prints. 1868 Degas begins getting recognition as an artist. He is a frequent visitor and prominent member of the group who visit the Café Guerbois located at 11 grande rue des Batignolles (today 9 avenue de Clichy). There he gathers with other avant-garde artists such as Édouard Manet, Paul Cézanne, Henri Fantin-Latour, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Claude Monet, Alfred Sisley, Frédéric Bazille, and Camille Pissarro. Registers for the last time as a copyist at the Louvre. 1870 Degas writes a letter to the Salon jury that is published in the Paris Journal on April 12, 1870; the letter offers suggestions on ways to improve the exhibition of works of art. July 19 The Franco-Prussian War begins after Napoleon III of France and Otto von Bismarck of Prussia order their respective troops to arms. Degas enters the National Guard as a volunteer.
September
March 18, 1871 1873 The art dealer Durand-Ruel buys Degas's Woman Ironing.
December 27
April 15, 1874 The Société Anonyme des Artistes dissolves due to poor attendance and a general lack of interest on the part of the public.
March 30, 1876 By this time, Degas has befriended Edmond Duranty (1833-1880), the critic and author of The New Painting: Concerning the Group of Artists Exhibiting at the Durand-Ruel Galleries. Duranty publishes this text as a thirty-eight-page pamphlet in which he discusses the problems of academic painting and the role of avant-garde artists in revitalizing painting. Duranty does not mention the names of the Impressionists, but his examples include references to specific subjects painted by Degas. It was clear to his readers that Duranty considered Degas the most important member of the group as evident in passages about the importance of the setting or background of a picture, the significance of using subjects from modern life, and the need for adopting new artistic practices and stylistic devices in order to accomplish these goals.
April 4, 1877
April 10, 1879
April 1, 1880
September
April 2, 1881 Durand-Ruel is Degas's principal art dealer during the 1880s.
March 1, 1882 1886 Twenty-three works by Degas are exhibited in New York at the exhibition "Works in Oil and Pastel by the Impressionists of Paris," shown at the American Art Galleries and the National Academy of Design.
May 15, 1886 Gauguin establishes a rapport with Degas. 1892 An exhibition of Degas landscapes is held at Durand-Ruel, the first of only two solo exhibitions held during the artist's lifetime.
December 22, 1894
March 1896
November 25, 1897
February 1905
July 12, 1906 1908 Ludovic Halévy dies. Degas visits the family.
June 1911
September 27, 1917 This chronology is adapted from Jean Sutherland Boggs, Henri Loyrette, Michael Pantazzi, and Gary Tinterow, Degas (New York and Ottawa: The Metropolitan Museum of Art and National Gallery of Canada, 1988) and has been modified for the purposes of this Web site. Degas Home
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