Place de la Concorde (painting)

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Place de la Concorde
Edgar Degas, 1875
oil on canvas
78.4 × 117.5 cm
Hermitage Museum

Place de la Concorde or Viscount Lepic and his Daughters Crossing the Place de la Concorde is an 1875 oil by Edgar Degas. It depicts the cigar smoking Vicomte Ludovic-Napoléon Lepic, his daughters, and his dog, and a solitary man on the left in Place de la Concorde in Paris. Tuileries Gardens can be seen in the background behind a stone wall. The Vicomte Lepic was an aristocrat, artist, and flâneur. Many art historians believe that the large amount of negative space, the cropping and the way in which the figures are facing in random directions as being influenced by photography. Housed in the Hermitage Museum, it was acquired from the German collector Otto Gerstenberg, before World War II.

[edit] References

Hermitage's interactive page about the painting

Olga's Gallery bio of Degas

D Lord - The Burlington Magazine for Connoisseurs