Description: In more than 1500 works of art, Edgar Degas painted, drew, etched, and modeled dancers in wax as they rehearsed, performed, rested, and waited in the wings. In Ballet Scene, Degas captured a performance in all its whirling spectacle of physical action and artificial lighting. The dancer at stage left moves toward the proscenium and completes a demi-plie. Cast in dramatic and somewhat eerie shadow, only the dancers legs, torso and the lower part of her face are illuminated by the stage lights before her. The large oval form in the foreground may be the start of a head in profile. Degas often juxtaposed the smaller form of a dancer on stage with the much nearer faces of audience members or musicians in the orchestra.