Women at work provided inspiration for Degas.
In addition to ballet dancers and cabaret singers, he also painted milliners and dressmakers, laundresses and ironers-such as the young woman here.
Writer Edmond de Goncourt described a visit to Degas' studio when the artist showed him "washerwomen and still more washerwomen...."
Degas was interested in their movements and postures, the patterns and rhythms of their work.
Degas, de Goncourt continued, had gone about "speaking their language, explaining to us technically the downward pressing and circular strokes of the iron, etc...."
Edgar Degas | Woman Ironing, 1876-1887 | National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC