Neha Patil (Editor)

At the Moulin Rouge, The Dance

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Year
  
1890

Artist
  
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec

Created
  
1890

Period
  
Post-Impressionism

Medium
  
Oil on canvas

Dimensions
  
1.16 m x 1.5 m

Media
  
Oil paint

At the Moulin Rouge, The Dance totallyhistorycomwpcontentuploads201212att

Location
  
Philadelphia Museum of Art

Genres
  
Genre art, History painting

Similar
  
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec artwork, Oil paintings

At the Moulin Rouge, the Dance is an oil-on-canvas painted by French artist Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec. It was painted in 1890, and is the second of a number of graphic paintings by Toulouse-Lautrec depicting the Moulin Rouge cabaret built in Paris in 1889. It portrays two dancers dancing the can-can in the middle of the crowded dance hall. A recently discovered inscription by Toulouse-Lautrec on the back of the painting reads: "The instruction of the new ones by Valentine the Boneless." This means that the man to the left of the woman dancing, is Valentin le désossé, a well-known dancer at the Moulin Rouge, and he is teaching the newest addition to the cabaret. To the right, is a mysterious aristocratic women in pink. The background also features many aristocratic people such as poet Edward Yeats, the club owner and even Toulouse-Lautrec's father. The work is currently displayed at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

References

At the Moulin Rouge, The Dance Wikipedia