Memories of Degas

Published: Sept. 4, 2019, 8:15 a.m.

Impressionist painter Edgar Degas (1834\u20131917) is well known for his gauzy paintings of dancers, his motion-filled images of horses, and his striking portraits. But the artist also lived a fascinating life\u2014from a privileged upbringing to family bankruptcy, from defending Paris alongside Manet during the Franco-Prussian War to feuding with the same artist over a portrait.\n\nGetty Publications has recently published two biographical essays, both titled \u201cMemories of Degas.\u201d One is by the Irish writer and critic George Moore and the other by the Munich-born, London-based artist and critic Walter Sickert. Both Moore and Sickert were Degas\u2019s contemporaries and write from personal experience with the artist. In this episode, Getty associate curator Emily Beeny discusses the life of Degas as it is revealed in these two essays.