Lillebil Christensen IV
Ernst Oppler, 1920
About this artwork
Ernst Oppler's *Lillebil Christensen IV (1920) is a delicate etching portraying the Danish dancer Lillebil Christensen, capturing her poised elegance amid the 20th-century danceze. Oppler, a German-Jewish artist active in Berlin's vibrant cultural scene, was renowned for his series of depicting ballerinas and performers, influenced by the Ballets Russ and pioneers like Isadora Duncan. This fourth iteration in his Christensen sequence highlights the artist's eye for feminine grace and theatrical poise, themes central to his oeuvre during the Weimar Republic's artistic ferment. Rendered on a modest plate of 7 1/8 x 5 1/2 inches (18.1 x 14 cm), the etching exemplifies intaglio printmaking's precision. Oppler incised fine lines into a metal plate, allowing acid to etch intricate details of fabric folds, limbs in motion, and subtle shading—techniques that conveyed dynamism and light in multiples, making high art accessible beyond paintings. Now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Drawings and Prints department (gift of M.P. Epstein, 1967), this work reflects dance's rising cultural prominence post-World War I, celebrating women as symbols of liberation and modernity. Visitors will appreciate its intimate scale and lively energy, a window into an era's passion for performance.