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  • Dance at the League by Peggy Bacon

Dance at the League by Peggy Bacon

Catherine Burns Fine Art

Drypoint

1919

Sheet Size: 17.5 x 25.1 cm

Reference: Flint 25.

Signed

Condition: Good

Details — Click to read

Flint 25. Drypoint on wove paper. Signed, titled, and inscribed “For Sandy,” in pencil. Stamped on verso: “OCT 15 1931 The Downtown Gallery OCT 1-1935.”

6 ⅞ x 9 ⅞ inches  |  17.5 x 25.1 cm

Peggy Bacon’s Dance at the League captures the lively spirit of the Art Students League, where she studied from 1915-1920. Known for her sharp wit and keen eye for caricature, Bacon often depicted the artistic bohemia of New York with humor and satire. The scene likely references the Bad News Ball, a playful, irreverent event held at the League, named after Bad News, a satirical publication Bacon and her artist friends created. This dance was a gathering of students and instructors, often featuring elaborate costumes. Bacon’s characteristic use of elongated limbs, exaggerated gestures, and expressive movement adds to the humor and dynamism of the composition.

Bacon includes caricatures of notable figures in the art world:

  • Anne Rector – A painter and illustrator associated with the League.
  • Lloyd Goodrich – A respected art historian and critic, later director of the Whitney Museum.
  • Edmund Duffy – A Pulitzer Prize-winning political cartoonist.

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The Artist

Peggy Bacon

Bacon studied at the New York School of Applied Design for Women in 1913 and at the Art Students League in with George Bellows, John Sloan, and Kenneth Hayes Miller from 1915 to 1920. Although based in New York City she spent extended periods in Woodstock, NY, and Cape Cod, Massachusetts. Over the years her prints and drawings ranged from charming to shrewd to caustic.

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