The Collector of Prints
Edgar Degas, 1866
About this artwork
In 1866, Edgar Degas captured the quiet intensity of a print collector in this intimate oil-on-canvas portrait, *The Collector of Prints*. just 20⅞ × 15¾ inches, the modest scale draws viewers into the subject's world, where he pores over delicate etchings under soft, diffused light. Degas, then in his early thirties and transitioning from academic training toward modernity, renders the man with precise realism—sharp contours and subtle modeling influenced by his mentor Ingres—highlighting the tactile allure of prints in 19th-century Paris. This work reflects the burgeoning collector culture of Second Empire France, where prints by masters like Rembrandt were prized as both art and investment. Degas, himself a keen observer of urban life and fellow artists, often portrayed intellectuals and connoisseurs, foreshadowing his later Impressionist innovations in composition and everyday subjects. Though tagged simply as a male portrait, it evokes the era's fascination with connoisseurship amid rapid cultural shifts. Now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's European Paintings department, thanks to the H.O. Havemeyer Collection (bequeathed in 1929), this gem offers a window into Degas' evolving genius—poised between tradition and the fleeting moments he would soon immortalize.