In Vaudeville: Acrobatic Male Dancer With Top Hat

Technique: Giclée quality print
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More about this artwork

The painting portrays a male dancer in a dynamic acrobatic pose, dressed in a black tuxedo with a white waistcoat and bow tie. His right leg kicks dramatically high as he balances on his left. The dancer holds a top hat elegantly in his right hand, tilted off his harmoniously coiffed blond hair. His expression conveys intense focus or emotion which accents the theatricality of his posture.

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Charles Demuth (1883-1935) was one of the leading artists during the American Modernism era. He was distinguished for intimate watercolors and cubic architectural paintings. Demuth studied art at Académie Julian in Paris, where he was welcomed into the avant-garde art scene and met other American Cubism artists like Marsden Hartley. His watercolor figures have a weightless and surrealistic character with a sensitive linear style, in which he illustrated plays and novels such as Émile Zola's Nana. He also depicted an evolving gay scene of encounters at bath houses through watercolors for his close friends, like the "Turkish Bath", works that now are of great historical significance. Demuth later employed a cubist technique by painting industrial factories with complex structural planes, leading him to becoming a pioneer for the precisionist movement.