{{painting | image_file = At The Stock Exchange.jpg | title = At the Stock Exchange | artist = Edgar Degas | type = oil on canvas | year = c. 1879 | height = 100 | width = 82 | museum = Musée d'Orsay }} '''''Portraits, At the Stock Exchange''''' is a painting by French artist Edgar_Degas. Completed circa 1879, this painting is interpreted as an anti-Semitic depiction of Jews in Paris. In Europe during the late 19th century there were fears of a financial conspiracy, in which Jewish financiers were thought to manipulate business for their gain. In fact, Degas's ant-Semitism may have been fueled by the bankruptcy of his own family's banking business, leaving Degas with some degree of resentment toward banking and those who symbolized it. ''Portraits, At the Stock Exchange'' also falls under the Impressionism movement of painting. Evidence for this can be seen in the painting's quick, somewhat abstract brushstrokes. The psychological perspective of the painting is one of detachment, a common viewpoint in Impressionist paintings. This painting currently resides in the Musée_d'Orsay in Paris, France. Category:Impressionist_paintings Category:1879_paintings Category:Collections_of_the_Musée_d'Orsay {{painting-stub}}