Lack of finish or modern art ?
"What do you do with the rules? Nothing worthwhile. What is needed are new, personal sensations, where to learn this? There are obviously some simple concepts that are easily accessible to everyone. They were known in the last century and applied...with a nice artistic feeling because in those days life was easy."
Berth Morisot in 1891, on XVIII century art and pastels
Young Girl Playing Ball; Portrait of a Red-Haired Woman, 1886
Berthe Morisot (1841-1895)
58 x 41 cm, pastel on paper
Morisot pastel Musée Marmottan
The question discussed increasingly in the XIX century was: when is an artwork finished? The French Academy set up rules, critics made sure rules were applied, and the French government bought art accordingly. They all required the canvas to be fully primed and covered, the brush moves to be invisible, and the subject matter to be dignified. But, louder and louder, artists started challenging those restrictive rules, fighting for more freedom and power, stating - their art is finished when they say it is.
I am skipping here the standard art history narrative of pastels in France in the XIX century, which consists of Salon's sweethearts - Emile Levy, Jacques-Emile Blanche, and Loise Breslou and important symbolists like Levy-Dhurmer, Odilon Redon, and Jozsef Rippl-Ronai.
But we need to stop at Eugène Delacroix, who used pastels extensively (60 of them presented in the book Delacroix Pastels by Lee Johnson). He was called "the last Romantic," "the last Old Master," and I am adding here - the last great painter who wouldn't exhibit his pastel drawings and paintings.
Sunset, 1850
Eugene Delacroix (1798-1863)
20.4 x 25.9 cm, pastel on blue laid paper
Delacroix pastel Met Museum
Woman Combing her Hair, 1880-90
Edgar Degas (1834-1917)
61.3 x 46 cm, pastel on paper
Degas pastel the Met
The King of Pastels in the XIX century is for sure Edgar Degas. At a younger age, his idols were Ingres and Delacroix. He started by using pastels traditionally but later mixed them with water, oil paint, and aquarelle paints. Brave and innovative, he stressed different types of paper and cardboard glued on wood or canvas and used their textures for the effect that he was aiming for.
After Bath, the Naked Woman Wiping her Neck, 1898
Edgar Degas (1834-1917)
62.2 x 65 cm, pastel on paper glued to cardboard
Degas pastel Orsay Museum
He worked with pastel sticks, his fingers and sometimes rubbed multiple layers of color with closed fists to achieve shiny and smooth surfaces. The vibrancy of his work often comes through the juxtaposition of the orange and green tones (both used in depicting the hair and skin of his models). Although his use of colors is frequently expressionistic he preferred to be called a Realist rather than Impressionist. We can still enjoy his strong palette as he was the first to use a fixing medium over his pastels to protect them and make them durable.
Ballet, 1876/77
Edgar Degas (1834-1917)
58.4 x 42 cm, pastel on monotype
Degas pastel Ballet Orsay
Under the broad umbrella of Impressionism, Degas' favorite theme was - exploring movement under artificial light in interiors. His compositions and angles are the most radical among the Impressionists, as it was easy for him to modify them quickly with pastels. His subjects (most famously ballet dancers and women doing their toilettes) were portrayed in their intimate, relaxed moments when seemingly no one was watching.
Two Dancers Resting, 1898
Edgar Degas (1834-1917)
92 x 103 cm, pastel
Degas Two Dancers Orsay Museum
Dog Woman, 1994
Paula Rego (1935-2022)
120 x 160 cm, pastel on canvas
Paula Rego pastel Victoria Miro Gallery London
Louise Catherine Breslau — Wikipédia
Pastel paintings of Eugène Delacroix – The Eclectic Light Company
Delacroix pastel - "A Garden Path at Augerville" - How to Pastel
The Aesthetic of the Sketch in Nineteenth-Century France | Essay | The Metropolitan Museum of Art | Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History
Mère et enfant sur fond vert - Mary Cassatt | Musée d'Orsay
Degas The Pastel Artist | Musée d'Orsay
prog salle_ManetDegas_ANG.pdf
The Surprising History of Pastels - Streamline Publishing
Pastel | The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Around the exhibition Pastels paintings from Millet to Redon | Musée d'Orsay