L'Absinthe
L'Absinthe, originally titled Dans un café, is an oil on canvas painting by French artist Edgar Degas, executed between 1875 and 1876, portraying a man and a woman seated side by side in silent isolation at a café table, each with a glass of the eponymous liquor before them, their expressions conveying desolation and detachment.[1][2] The models were actress and artist's model Ellen Andrée as the woman and engraver Marcellin Desboutin as the man, posed in Degas's studio to evoke the atmosphere of the Nouvelle Athènes café in Paris's Pigalle district, a gathering place for artists and intellectuals.[1] First exhibited at the second Impressionist exhibition in 1876 under its original title, the work drew criticism for its unflattering realism, with reviewers labeling the subject repulsive and the figures as embodiments of moral decay.[3][2] Retitled L'Absinthe for its 1893 display at London's Grafton Gallery, it provoked even greater outrage among Victorian audiences, who viewed the depiction of apparent alcoholism and social alienation as shockingly degraded and uncouth, prompting public hisses and debates over artistic propriety.[4][3] While some interpretations frame the painting as a denunciation of absinthe's harms—a potent spirit later banned in France—Degas himself rebutted accusations that the sitters were alcoholics, emphasizing the posed nature of the scene amid contemporary literary parallels like Émile Zola's L'Assommoir.[1] Now housed in the Musée d'Orsay, it exemplifies Degas's mastery in off-center composition and shadow play to underscore urban ennui, bridging realism and Impressionism through its snapshot-like framing inspired by Japanese prints.[1]