Blue Dancers
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Blue Dancers
Summary
Blue Dancers is a pastel painting[1]. It draws 85 Wikipedia views per month (pastel_painting category, ranking #1 of 7).[2]
Key Facts
- Blue Dancers is the creator of Edgar Degas[3].
- Blue Dancers's image is recorded as Edgar Germain Hilaire Degas 076.jpg[4].
- Blue Dancers's instance of is recorded as pastel painting[5].
- Blue Dancers's genre is recorded as genre art[6].
- Blue Dancers's depicts is recorded as woman[7].
- Blue Dancers's depicts is recorded as ballet dancer[8].
- Blue Dancers's depicts is recorded as group of humans[9].
- Blue Dancers's depicts is recorded as tutu[10].
- Blue Dancers's depicts is recorded as décolletage[11].
- Blue Dancers's depicts is recorded as chignon[12].
- Blue Dancers's depicts is recorded as high-angle shot[13].
- Blue Dancers's depicts is recorded as scenery flat[14].
- Blue Dancers's depicts is recorded as brown hair[15].
- Blue Dancers's depicts is recorded as chestnut hair[16].
- Blue Dancers's made from material is recorded as pastel[17].
- Blue Dancers's collection is recorded as Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts[18].
- Blue Dancers's inventory number is recorded as Ж-3273[19].
- Blue Dancers's location is recorded as Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts[20].
- Blue Dancers's Commons category is recorded as Blue Dancers by Edgar Degas (Pushkin Museum)[21].
- Blue Dancers's country of origin is recorded as France[22].
- Blue Dancers's catalog code is recorded as 1095[23].
- Blue Dancers's catalog code is recorded as MS-343[24].
- Blue Dancers's catalog code is recorded as 1274[25].
- +1897-01-01T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Blue Dancers[26].
- Blue Dancers's described at URL is recorded as http://www.arts-museum.ru/data/fonds/europe_and_america/j/2001_3000/6177_Golubye_tancovschicy/index.php[27].
Body
Works and Contributions
Blue Dancers is the creator of Edgar Degas[3].
Why It Matters
Blue Dancers draws 85 Wikipedia views per month (pastel_painting category, ranking #1 of 7).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 10 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]