Skip to main content
Woman Stretching (Femme s'étirant)
Woman Stretching (Femme s'étirant)
Woman Stretching (Femme s'étirant)

Woman Stretching (Femme s'étirant)

Maker (French, 1834-1917)
Date1896 - 1917 (wax model), 1919 - 1921 (edition cast)
MediumCast bronze
DimensionsHeight: 14 3/8 in. (36.5 cm)
Credit LineThe Joel Starrels, Jr. Memorial Collection
Object number1974.147
Status
On view
Description

Woman Stretching belongs to the final portion of Edgar Degas’s career, and two features connect it with the artist’s concerns of the period. First, there is the work’s generic, anonymous subject. Despite Degas’s long habit of making sculptures of dancers and schoolgirls, this figure cannot be identified as either one. She is simply a woman engaged in a universal activity, stretching. Second, her pose is an elaborate array of curves and straight lines. In a complex interplay of muscular exertion and skeletal structure, the woman’s motions have culminated in an ephemeral moment of dynamic equipoise. Thus the relatively common nature of both the figure and her activity, combined with the artist’s precise depiction of the human form, accentuate a pursuit that can be found throughout Degas’s works: to uncover the myriad complexities of everyday existence.

 

Resource: The David and Alfred Smart Museum of Art: A Guide to the Collection, Sue Taylor and Richard Born, eds. New York: Hudson Hills Press, 1990, p. 97.

Smart Publications:
At The Smart
The David and Alfred Smart Museum of Art
The Infant Hercules Subduing the Serpent
Alessandro Algardi
after circa 1635
Sonja's Head
Giacomo Manzù
1955
Seated Faun
Jean Baptiste Clésinger
after 1862
Seated Faun
Jean Baptiste Clésinger
after 1862
Joan of Arc
Princess Marie-Christine D'Orléans
after 1835
Farnese Reliquary
Antonio Gentili (also called Antonio Gentili da Faenza)
circa 1550, with 17th - century and later? reworkings