Writing
Related: About this forumHi. Can you give me some advice?
I am writing my second book on art and artists and have discovered that the great 19th century French artist, Edgar Degas, was an anti-semite. He wasn't in the closet about his anti-semitic views which (to me) just diminished him so greatly I feel I have to mention it. I know he wasn't alone in his views. How is an historical figure dealt with in such an instance? I feel I would leave out part of the story on him if I don't include those views. Degas art, to the best of my knowledge, didn't "paint" his anti-semitism. He painted ballet dancers and those dancers make up the essay.
Ocelot II
(120,858 posts)I guess I'd make only a brief reference to it, though, since it isn't especially relevant to his art. Some great artists, musicians, etc., held reprehensible views, and discussing them can be problematic. The composer Wagner is another example. He was a pretty rabid anti-Semite, even for his time, but there's nothing in his operas that reflects this. He became controversial well after his death, when Hitler and the Nazis lauded his operas for their depiction of Germanic mythological figures, along with the overt anti-Semitism in his writings. Degas doesn't have that kind of association, though.
CTyankee
(65,032 posts)Here is what I wrote:
I cannot end the discussion of Edgar Degas without noting the mans virulent anti-Semitism. Not that Paris didnt have its share of shameful anti-Semites spewing lies and propaganda. I do not consider this just unfortunate. It casts a permanent pall over his entire career and, to me, mars any great talent that he possessed.
Ocelot II
(120,858 posts)actually more than I like Degas' paintings, which have always struck me as a bit insubstantial, at least those of dancers - but then I've never been a big fan of the French impressionists anyhow. I just looked up some info about Degas and learned that he was something of an equal-opportunity bigot in his old age; he even fired one of his models when he learned she was a Protestant. But I try to separate my attitude about an artist's personality or politics from what I think about their works, since a number of them were rather awful people. Talent and virtue do not always go hand in hand.
CTyankee
(65,032 posts)What Degas did with the monotypes in the early days of photography was another area which fascinates me and makes me want to write about it. Daumier was also interested in exploring it and my guess is that Degas knew about his work.
Ocelot II
(120,858 posts)he was an enormously talented composer and there's no evidence of his anti-Semitism in the music itself. If he were still alive I wouldn't go to performances or buy recordings because I wouldn't want to support such a person financially; I won't go to movies featuring prominent (living) right-wing actors for the same reason even if the movies themselves are politically neutral. But there is certainly nothing wrong with admiring the work of the very talented also-dead anti-Semite and evidently somewhat awful person Degas (who was an excellent draftsman even if he was an impressionist).
SeeingEyeRefugee
(36 posts)of his beliefs) quite wonderfully.
cyclonefence
(4,873 posts)that existed in France at that time. Are you familiar with the Dreyfus Affair? The idea that such injustice should be "state-approved" is an indication of how normalized such views were. Maybe it would help if you had a few sentences describing the political atmosphere at the time and how of his time Degas was?
Evil people can create beauty. I don't think Degas was evil, just conventional in his political thought.
CTyankee
(65,032 posts)painting. I didn't wade into it so I stopped doing the essay for a bit.
I had also been shocked at another discovery: if you go to his paintings of ballet dancers you sometimes see well dressed, fat older men present in the rehearsal room and in the wings of the stage watching. These men of means were called abonees, or subscribers, which allowed them to watch the dancers. Some of these dancers were as young as 13. It's pretty shocking when you realize why the men are there. We do know that these girls were from poorer families and their dancing provided an economic lifeline for their families.
Since the artist incorporated these men in the scenes he painted, I do have to mention them. I did not know this beforehand...
cyclonefence
(4,873 posts)I wonder, if the can-can dancers of the same period were "naughty girls" for showing their underpants when they danced, were ballet dancers who sort of showed *their* underwear when they danced, just as naughty? Did they have reputations as, well, prostitutes? I mean, when you think of how covered up regular women of the time were, even in the summertime, the garb of the dancers Degas painted must surely have been shocking. I wonder if the ballet were a high-class entertainment back then the way it is now? I bet it wasn't.
I'm really glad you posed your question--you've given me a project of my own, and that's important in these awful times! Thanks.
Edited to add: https://www.history.com/news/sexual-exploitation-was-the-norm-for-19th-century-ballerinas
CTyankee
(65,032 posts)There is one painting "During dance classes, Madame Cardenal" was the mother of one of the dancers and from this painting you can see her, reading a newspaper and oblivious of the men who were "observing" the rehearsal. I believe Degas was "outing" this woman for her disregard of her own child, by putting her name on the painting and making her infamous forever.
cyclonefence
(4,873 posts)but then, what else is new?
CTyankee
(65,032 posts)Bayard
(24,145 posts)As you said, it didn't affect his art (I've always admired his ballerinas and racehorses).
Would you mention that Michelangelo was thought to be gay? I take the same attitude as i do now--their personal lives are their own (does not apply to terrorists when their beliefs become violently public).
CTyankee
(65,032 posts)something else. I do write about the abonees and also about the girls' parents watching rehearsals...
Gaugamela
(2,658 posts)The sordid truth behind Degas' ballet dancers
The sexual politics that played out in the foyer de la danse was of great interest to Degas. In fact, very few of his depictions of the dance show an actual performance. Instead, the artist hovers behind the wings, backstage, in class or at a rehearsal. In works like "L'Étoile (The Star)," from 1878, he depicts the curtain call at the end of the performance, with the curtsying dancer bathed in the unflattering glare of the lights. Behind her, a man in an elegant black tuxedo lurks in the wings, his face hidden by the goldenrod curtain.
. . .
Life was cruel to French ballet dancers, and they didn't have it much easier at the hands of Degas himself. Although the artist was known to reject the advances of his models, his callousness manifested in other ways. To capture the physicality and discipline of the dancers, Degas demanded his models pose for hours at a time, enduring excruciating discomfort as they held their contorted positions. He wanted to capture his "little monkey girls," as he called them, "cracking their joints" at the barre. "I have perhaps too often considered woman as an animal," he once told the painter Pierre Georges Jeanniot in a moment of revealing honesty.
CTyankee
(65,032 posts)Little Dancer, you see her face referred to a monkey. That sculpture has a history of its own and would require me to write another essay just dealing with that. I had a choice and I chose to not write about it. I was more fascinated with the culture of its time.
Gaugamela
(2,658 posts)Toulouse Lautrec than Monets water lilies.
CTyankee
(65,032 posts)So I am including (somehow, I dunno how) a brief "Meanwhile, Cezanne packed his brushes and departed for a little fishing town, L'Estaque, where he famously declared 'Everything in nature takes its form from the sphere, the cone or the cylinder.' It reportedly sent Renoir into raptures. For Georges Braque, the little rooftops in the town became little cubes.
Yes, I agree that Degas was interested in the vibrant city life in Paris. Lautrec was a co-celebrant of that life.
Gaugamela
(2,658 posts)CTyankee
(65,032 posts)jello, esp. with this shutdown.
Mike 03
(16,808 posts)handled.
It's not exactly the same, but the controversy is about how you handle a historically-highly-regarded artist about whom shocking revelations become known, and how you adjust or deal with the legacy going forward. I don't know if this is helpful, but it might give you some ideas.
Why Is the Art World Divided over Gauguins Legacy?
https://www.artsy.net/article/artsy-editorial-art-divided-gauguins-legacy
Is It Time Gauguin Got Canceled?
Museums are reassessing the legacy of an artist who had sex with teenage girls and called the Polynesian people he painted savages.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/18/arts/design/gauguin-national-gallery-london.html
More than a century after his death, has the time finally come to cancel Gauguin?
From entering sexual relationships with young girls, to using his status as a westerner to exploit, Paul Gauguin is a controversial figure. So why do we keep making excuses, Farah Nayeri asks
https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/paul-gauguin-national-gallery-me-too-art-harassment-assault-a9216801.html
Formal Analysis Cannot Occlude the Real Issues: How Curators Are Addressing Gauguins Dark Side in a New Show at the National Gallery in London
Art museums are grappling with how to display great works by artists who abused their models.
https://news.artnet.com/exhibitions/gauguin-metoo-national-gallery-1672810
Sorry this reply is so late, but I just noticed your post.
Good luck with your book!
CTyankee
(65,032 posts)Gustave Klimt was a sex addict and died of syphilis. Fra Lippo Lippi was a bad monk but painted beautifully and the church looked the other way. He painted a Madonna and child using his mistress and baby son as models. The Pope said "Va bene!"
Thank you for this information! I have spent a whole 2 days trying to get my computer back after a thunderstorm conked it out. All my Word files, particularly my new book essays still in progress, were unavailable to me. And no Internet so no DU.
You are so kind to respond to my query. It is very helpful.
Thank you!