2013-01-07





In my last Imprint Friday post, I featured Cathy M. Buchanan's The Painted Girls.
I couldn't stop reading this fact-based novel about one of Edgar
Degas's ballerina models and her efforts to help her family rise out of
poverty.

Marie was a young teenager when she entered
the Paris ballet school and began supplementing her income by modeling
for Degas. The artist used her image in several of his works, including
one of his most famous sculptures. I can't help but wonder what Marie
would have thought if she realized she would become so well recognized
around the world.

Please welcome author Cathy Buchanan,
who was kind enough to stop by today to tell us a little bit more about
the famous Degas bronze. I'll never look at that sculpture the same way
again.

Five Things You Never Knew about Degas's Little Dancer Aged Fourteen (unless you've read The Painted Girls)

1. Marie Van Goethem modeled for the sculpture:
Fourteen-year-old Marie van Goethem posed both naked and clothed for
Edgar Degas. Between 1878 and 1881, he drew, painted, and sculpted her
in numerous artworks, most famously in Little Dancer Aged Fourteen. She was from a poverty-stricken family and was trained at the Paris Opéra dance school to enter the famous Paris Opéra Ballet.

2. Marie's meager circumstances were not unusual at the dance school:
A position with the Ballet was the dream of many a poor Parisian girl.
The ballet offered a chance to escape the gutter, to find fame and
fortune if she had talent and ambition and if she was able to attract
the attentions of a wealthy admirer.



3. Ballet girls like Marie were often preyed upon by male season's ticket holders:
Along with their own private boxes at the Opéra, male season's ticket
holders had purchased entrance to the Foyer de Dance, a space built to
encourage encounters with the young ballet girls. It was a sort of
gentleman's club, a place where highlife met lowlife, where mistresses
were sought by industrialists and noblemen with clout enough to advance a
girl's career.

4. With Little Dancer Degas may have been hinting at the corruption of Marie:
"Scientific" findings of the day supported notions of innate
criminality and particular facial features—low forehead, broad
cheekbones, forward-thrusting jaw—that indicated a tendency toward
crime. It appears Degas bought into the idea and sought to incorporate
it into his artwork. The telltale features are apparent in the criminal
portrait he exhibited alongside Little Dancer in 1881, and he, in fact, titled the portrait Criminal Physiognomies. With the same features marking Little Dancer's face, art historians hypothesize Degas was suggesting the corruption of young Marie.

5. Little Dancer shocked the city of Paris: When Degas unveiled Little Dancer
in 1881, it was to reveal something very curious—a highly realistic wax
sculpture of a ballet girl, wearing a real skirt, bodice and pair of
slippers and a wig of human hair. She was called a "flower of precocious
depravity." Her face, they said, was "imprinted with the detestable
promise of every vice." The public, it would seem, had linked Little Dancer with a life of corruption and young girls for sale.

__________

Thanks
so much, Cathy. I was fascinated not only with Degas and his work but
also with the details of the ballet school and life in the less-romantic
areas of Paris. In addition, The Painted Girls brought back many
fond memories of own years at various dance studios. (Click the image
of the bronze to enlarge it; as far as I can tell it's in the public
domain.)

Riverhead Books is a featured imprint on Beth Fish Reads. For more information about the imprint, visit the Riverhead website.
While there, explore their terrific book list, check out authors in
the news, and view some fun videos. Stay in the know by following them
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Buy The Painted Girls at an indie or at a bookstore near you. (Link leads to an affiliate program.)

Published by Penguin USA / Riverhead, January 8, 2013

ISBN-13: 9781250013972

Copyright © cbl for Beth Fish Reads, all rights reserved (see review policy).

Comments

I had NO idea! Now I need to read this book. by Vasillyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08463689838763126048noreply@blogger.com

That is crazy. Who knew? Obviously I need to rea... by Sandy Nawrothttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00564390728106776030noreply@blogger.com

I really loved learning about the background for t... by Serenahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04745809545249574387noreply@blogger.com

I found facts 4 and 5 to be really remarkable and ... by Zibileehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07443338685890187334noreply@blogger.com

This interview and little known facts has me so ex... by Anitahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11129662082248482002noreply@blogger.com

Plus 3 more...

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