Life, Degas style
Marisa O’Neil
Art imitated life in the late 19th century for Andersen Elementary
School students Monday.
Sixth-graders gathered on the curved steps inside the school’s
sweeping library to see a presentation about French artist Edgar
Degas, famous for his depictions of ballet dancers as well as
everyday people. Along with analyzing the artistic merits of each
Degas work in the slide show, Poli Rizco from the Art Masters program
gave students a lesson on life during that era.
As she flashed a Degas painting of a woman ironing, she told them
that people in Paris at the time didn’t bathe every day, didn’t use
deodorant and often used cologne to mask the inevitable aroma of
wearing the same clothes day after day.
“What do you think those clothes smelled like?” Rizco asked.
“Lots of cologne,” 12-year-old Jack Cooper replied.
“Laundries smelled pretty bad” Rizco explained. “They were not
nice places to work. It’s not like they could just set up the ironing
board and watch ‘Oprah’ while they worked.”
Sixth-grader Nick Tripi had another concern about French women at
the turn of the last century.
“Didn’t some women also have beards and hairy legs?” he asked,
eliciting giggles from his classmates.
Turning the corner from personal hygiene, Rizco showed slides of
Degas’ famous pictures of dancers. The artist, she explained, had
unlimited access and did sketches during performances, backstage and
during rehearsals, giving people today a behind-the-scenes glimpse.
She explained the composition of the pictures, how Degas did his
sketches and what critics at the time thought of his art. The
students also learned that live musicians played music for rehearsals
-- no boom boxes back then -- and that dancers spread resin on floors
for better footing.
Through the Art Masters program, sponsored by Andersen’s PTA,
students follow up their lessons with a hands-on art class the
following day, applying techniques and concepts they learned in the
lecture. Instructors come to the school six times a year, focusing on
a different artist each time.
* IN THE CLASSROOM is a weekly feature in which Daily Pilot
education writer Marisa O’Neil visits a campus in the Newport-Mesa
area and writes about her experience.
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