American Monotypes from the Baker/Pisano Collection | Page 32

Edgar Degas (French, 1834–1917) Au Salon, ca. 1878 Monotype, 6 1/2 x 8 1/2 in., Bears artist’s oval red-ink estate stamp (Lugt 657) on support. Baker/Pisano Collection, New York, promised gift to the Chazen Museum of Art The American connection of Edgar Degas stems from his birth to an American mother and was cemented by a five-month visit (1872–1873) to his maternal ancestral home in New Orleans, where he stayed with relatives, including two young brothers. Though he was born in France and his paternal line was French, Degas liked to call himself un fils de Louisiane. Degas began making monotypes in Paris between 1874 and 1875, concurrent with William Merritt Chase and his fellow students at the Munich Academy. Degas, however, used the medium as both works in and of themselves and the basis for many of his pastels. His body of work in the medium includes first impressions from support plates, and second impressions, referred to as cognates. Degas described the process as drawings made with greasy ink put through a press. There are estimated to be about fifty brothel monotypes in existence; in 1958, Pablo Picasso purchased nine of them, describing these provocative monotypes as “the best things [Degas] ever did.”* Included in this purchase was Au Salon (Musée Picasso, Paris) “…an exceptionally complex composition that brings together nine prostitutes with the mistress of the house and a customer in top hat.”** NOTES: For a fuller discussion on Degas’ brothel monotypes, see, Bernheimer, “Degas’ Brothels,” 158–180. Boggs et al., Degas, 297, cat. no. 181, illus. **Clayson, Painted Love, 39, fig. 19. 28 T H E E X H I B I T IO N Janis, Degas Monotypes, cat. no. 82, illus. *Lees, “Picasso Looks at Degas,” 134. Lugt, Marques de Collections de Dessins et d’Estampes.