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Thursday, 30 July 2015 11:00

An Upcoming Exhibition at MoMA will Explore Edgar Degas’ Lesser Known Monotype Prints

Edgar Degas' 'Landscape with Rocks.' Pastel over monotype, High Museum of Art. Edgar Degas' 'Landscape with Rocks.' Pastel over monotype, High Museum of Art. Wikimedia Commons

He is one of the great draftsmen of the impressionist era, acclaimed for strongly structured compositions and a masterful use of line. But when Edgar Degas discovered the printmaking technique known as monotype, everything changed.

As a major exhibition due to open at the Museum of Modern Art next spring reveals, he became much looser and more improvisational in his working methods. He regularly mixed printmaking with other media, like pastel. And he expanded past the subjects for which he is best known—dancers and scenes of modern life—to include risqué brothel scenes and landscapes verging on abstraction.

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