August 1 to November 27, the Harvard University Art Museums will  present “Degas at Harvard,” an exhibition examining the  university’s comprehensive holdings by Edgar Degas, one of the  most important collections of the artist’s work in the United  States.   The exhibition will draw together more than 60 works from the  Fogg’s own collection, together with promised gifts and  significant works from The Dumbarton Oaks and Research Library  and Collection in Washington, D.C., and the Houghton Library at  Harvard. The exhibition, which is organized by the Fogg Art  Museum, will include paintings, sculpture, drawings, prints and  photographs, and will be on view at the Arthur M. Sackler Museum. In 1911, the Fogg was the first museum to mount an exhibitionof works by Degas and was the only museum to do so during theartist’s lifetime. This exhibition explores the range and depth ofDegas’s artistic innovation, and Harvard’s pivotal role infostering understanding and scholarship of his works through thecommitment of its curators, collectors and the generations ofscholars who have worked with the collection at the Fogg.   Among the works featured in the exhibition will be the bronze  sculpture “Little Dancer, Fourteen Years Old,” 1880, the pastel  “Chanteuse de Café,” circa 1878, “After the Bath, Woman Drying  Herself,” 1893–98, which will be shown for the first time in 40  years due to its extreme fragility, and the photograph “United  (Self-Portrait in his Library),” circa 1895, a gelatin silver  print that shows Degas’s fascination with portraits and his skill  as a photographer. “Degas at Harvard” is curated by Edward Saywell, Charles C.Cunningham Sr Curatorial Associate in Drawings, and StephenWolohojian, curator, department of paintings, sculpture anddecorative arts. It will be accompanied by a catalog with essays byHarvard curator Marjorie Benedict Cohn and Jean Sutherland Boggs,an independent scholar and former pupil of former Fogg directorPaul Sachs, and a Leventritt lecture series involving many oftoday’s leading Degas scholars.   The Arthur M. Sackler Museum is at 485 Broadway. Hours are Monday  through Saturday, 10 to 5 pm, Sunday 1 to 5 pm. Admission is  $6.50.   For information, 617-495-9400 or artmuseums.Harvard.edu.          
 
    



 
						