The Ballet Class, oil painting created between 1873 and 1876 by French artist Edgar Degas. This painting, one of two of the same scene, shows dancers waiting to be assessed by ballet master Jules Perrot.
The first part of the 1870s saw Degas defining his style, and the dance pictures he painted at this time—often “through-the-keyhole” glimpses of backstage life—were radical for the times. Sharing the Impressionists’ passion for contemporary subject matter, Degas’s depiction of the dramatic world of ballet and theater added a certain titillation. But he was also an outstanding draftsman with great admiration for the Old Masters and the work of Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres. This helped to foster the fascination with human forms that is so clearly present in this work.
Degas prepared assiduously by making numerous drawings of dancers posing for him in his studio. His lively brushwork and light, bright colors were typical of the Impressionists. Their use of color was partly influenced by Japanese prints, which also made dramatic use of the “cut-off” composition—where the subject is chopped off at the frame—that Degas deploys so cleverly here and throughout his work.
Degas was heavily influenced by photography and by overturning traditional compositional rules. This work looks almost like a snapshot but it is meticulously planned, with the eye drawn instantly to the arresting foreground group of two dancers before being taken into the picture by the receding floor planks. Degas admired the Dutch school and here shows the same ability to combine both traditional and modern approaches to give a new status to everyday life.