Saturday, January 10, 2026

Dance Indications

Daniel Lindtmayer
Two Dancing Couples
(man at right is vomiting)
before 1606
engraving
British Museum


Thomas Stothard
Dancers in a Landscape
ca. 1785
watercolor and ink on paper
Ashmolean Museum, Oxford

François-Joseph Duret
Jeune pêcheur dansant la tarentelle
1832
bronze statue
Musée du Louvre

Théo van Rysselberghe
Le Café-Concert (dancer Lizzie Aubrey)
1896
etching
British Museum

Ludovico Rodolphe Pissarro
Dancers in Pink
1907
oil on canvas
Ashmolean Museum, Oxford

Léon Bakst
Isadora Duncan dancing
ca. 1907-1908
drawing
Ashmolean Museum, Oxford

Alexandre Benois
Ballet Costume for Sword Dancer in Le Rossignol
1914
watercolor and gouache on paper
Ashmolean Museum, Oxford

Wyndham Lewis
Dancers
ca. 1920-22
drawing (ink on paper)
Loeb Art Center, Vassar College,
Poughkeepsie, New York

Max Beckmann
Dancers
1923
lithograph
Loeb Art Center, Vassar College,
Poughkeepsie, New York

Hilda Belcher
Blue Dancer
1925
watercolor on paper
Loeb Art Center, Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, New York

Laura Knight
Changing
1926
drypoint
Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney

Pavel Tchelitchew
Design for Ballets-Russes Program Cover
1928

drawing (charcoal and wash on paper)
Victoria & Albert Museum, London

Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
Dancing Couple in Snow
1928-29
oil on canvas
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

Pavel Tchelitchew
Les Ballets 1933
Théâtre des Champs-Élysées

1933
lithograph (poster)
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Albert Renger-Patzsch
Dance School of Mary Wigman
ca. 1935
gelatin silver print
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York 

George Platt Lynes
Orpheus and Eurydice
1936
gelatin silver print
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

John Gutmann
Jitterbug
1937
gelatin silver print
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Barbara Morgan
Martha Graham in American Document Trio
1938
gelatin silver print
Loeb Art Center, Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, New York

    As I ride south, if I look to my right up into the tall trees with bare branches that line the water here – but the only bare-branched trees are, since it is June, the dead trees – I may see a raptor.  Just as I form these words in my head, looking out the window of the train in search of one, I see a bare-branched tree and a bald eagle clutching a branch near the top.  Farther down the tree is a second bald eagle – a bonus.  Then the eagles are gone from sight, behind me upriver, and I look away, to write this down.  In doing so, of course, I miss a piece of the passing landscape and other trees with perhaps other raptors. 

– Lydia Davis, from Into the Weeds (Yale University Press, 2025)