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At the Races: The Start

Edgar Degas French

Not on view

Although Degas rarely painted outdoors, beginning in the early 1860s he revealed a keen interest in racetrack scenes. For this early painting, he modeled the anatomical features and poses of the horses on both British prints and the work of the Romantic painter Théodore Géricault. The horse at the far left, positioned with its head and front leg raised high, appears to be performing a dressage exercise rather than preparing for a race, perhaps indicating the artist’s reliance on a published source. Degas’s depiction of horses in motion changed drastically over his career, particularly after the 1887 publication of Eadweard Muybridge’s chronophotographic series recording the locomotion of a galloping horse.

At the Races: The Start, Edgar Degas (French, Paris 1834–1917 Paris), Oil on canvas, French

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