Estérel Village, Edgar Degas, 1885

Estérel Village, Edgar Degas, 1885

Spontaneously executed because the media dries quickly, monotypes reflect the artist’s first impulse. Printing also presents an element of chance, as the pressure of transferring the design blurs it, creating softened edges. Degas utilized the technique to construct forms with shadow and light by building broad tonal areas without relying on line. Inspired by a trip through the burgundy countryside in 1890, he produced a group of relatively large monotypes using colored inks for the first time. Manipulating oil color with a rag, he fabricated vague landscape designs from his imagination, letting colored masses represent earth, vegetation, and sky, creating an almost abstract visionary and evocative scene like in estérel village. Date: 1885. Place of creation: France, 19th century. Dimensions: Sheet: 29.9 x 39.9 cm (11 3/4 x 15 11/16 in.); Image: 29.9 x 39.9 cm (11 3/4 x 15 11/16 in.). Medium: monotype. Collection: Cleveland Museum of Art. Clevelandart 1966.177
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Author: Edgar DegasSource: https://commons.wikimedia.org/

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