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To help rebuild French culture...
He played with other children.
If you mean assistants helping him in his studio, he usually did not. Colleagues in the sense of other artists he knew, there was the whole gang of impressionist painters that he belonged to.
Degas' work is much crisper than that of other impressionists; it seems to have been carried out more slowly. In contrast, impressionists like Monet and Van Gogh used quick, visible brush strokes.
There are two Degas paintings of that name. One from 1890, now in the Orsay Museum, Paris. The other from 1898/99, now in the Pushkin Museum, Moscow.
Edgar Degas, and to some extent the other impressionists. Also Japanese prints.
To help rebuild French culture...
He played with other children.
If you mean assistants helping him in his studio, he usually did not. Colleagues in the sense of other artists he knew, there was the whole gang of impressionist painters that he belonged to.
The technique of monoprinting has been used by many artists throughout history, but it is thought to have been popularized by Edgar Degas in the late 19th century. Degas and other artists, such as Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec and Paul Gauguin, experimented with the technique to create unique, one-of-a-kind prints.
He had an eye condition which prevented him from painting en plein air, like other immpressionist artists. He also painted unusual themes like the circus and ballet. Susan.
Degas' work is much crisper than that of other impressionists; it seems to have been carried out more slowly. In contrast, impressionists like Monet and Van Gogh used quick, visible brush strokes.
There are two Degas paintings of that name. One from 1890, now in the Orsay Museum, Paris. The other from 1898/99, now in the Pushkin Museum, Moscow.
He studied the human body in action. because he had his own dance studio and when the girls ( dancers ) had a break he sketched them. and then when he was all alone , he painted his paintings.
His early work is not. Really no similaritu until he starts making his pastels more like oil paintings from the last part of the 1880s. Click link below and scroll down to see examples!
Renoir was the leading impressionist artist who painted in the same time-period and style as Claude Monet, Edgar Degas, Paul Cezanne, and Edgar Manet. He helped guide the movement painting with a similar focus to other Impressionist artists striving to capturing the light of a scene and their images are universally "blotchy" using small, thin brush strokes taking in large scenes or day to day objects and presenting them at odd angles. (Degas was famous for 'awkwardly cropping')Some of Renoirs most famous works areDance at Le Moulin de la GaletteGirls at the PianoThe Swing (La Balançoire)
He was a successful artist, did not marry, lwas nearly blind during his last few years.