Georges-Pierre
Seurat[p] (2 December
1859 – 29 March 1891) was a French
painter and draftsman. His large work
A Sunday
Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte (1884-1886),
his most famous painting, altered the direction of
modern art by initiating
Neo-impressionism, and is one of the icons
of 19th century
painting.
Life
Seurat was
born into a wealthy family in Paris
. His
father, Antoine Chrysostom Seurat, was a legal official and a
native of
Champagne; his mother,
Ernestine Faivre, was Parisian. Georges Seurat first studied art
with
Justin Lequiene, a
sculptor. Seurat attended the
École des Beaux-Arts in 1878 and
1879. After a year of service at
Brest Military Academy, he returned
to Paris in 1880. He shared a small studio on the
Left Bank with two student friends before moving
to a
studio of his own. For the next two
years he devoted himself to mastering the art of black and white
drawing. He spent 1883 on his first major painting — a huge canvas
titled
Bathers at
Asnières.
After his painting was rejected by the
Paris Salon, Seurat turned away from such
establishments, instead allying himself with the independent
artists of Paris. In 1884 he and other artists (including
Maximilien Luce) formed the
Société des
Artistes Indépendants. There he met and befriended fellow
artist
Paul Signac. Seurat shared his
new ideas about
pointillism with Signac,
who subsequently painted in the same idiom. In the summer of 1884
Seurat began work on his masterpiece,
Sunday
Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte, which took him
two years to complete.
Later he moved from the Boulevard de Clichy to a quieter studio
nearby, where he lived secretly with a young model,
Madeleine Knobloch, whom he portrayed in
his painting "Jeune femme se poudrant". In February 1890 she gave
birth to his son, who was given the first name of Pierre Georges.
It was not until two days before his death that he introduced his
young family to his parents . Shortly after his death, Madeleine
gave birth to his second son, whose name is unknown, and who died
at birth or soon after.
The cause of Seurat's death is uncertain, and has been attributed
to a form of meningitis, pneumonia, infectious angina, and/or (most
probably)
diphtheria. His elder son died
two weeks later from the same disease. His last ambitious work,
The Circus, was left unfinished at the time of his death.

Detail from
La Parade (1889)
showing pointillism
Scientific background and influences
During the 19th century,
scientist-writers
such as
Michel Eugène
Chevreul,
Ogden Rood and
David Sutter wrote treatises on
color,
optical effects and
perception. They were able to translate
the scientific research of
Helmholtz and
Newton into a written form that was
understandable by non-scientists. Chevreul was perhaps the most
important influence on artists at the time; his great contribution
was producing a color wheel of primary and intermediary hues.
Chevreul was a French
chemist who restored
old
tapestries. During his restorations of
tapestries he noticed that the only way to restore a section
properly was to take into account the influence of the colors
around the missing
wool; he could not produce
the right hue unless he recognized the surrounding
dyes. Chevreul discovered that two colors juxtaposed,
slightly overlapping or very close together, would have the effect
of another color when seen from a distance. The discovery of this
phenomenon became the basis for the Pointillist technique of the
Neoimpressionist painters.
Chevreul also realized that the 'halo' that one sees after looking
at a color is actually the opposing, or complementary, color. For
example: After looking at a red object, one may see a cyan
echo/halo of the original object. This complementary color (as an
example, cyan for red) is due to retinal persistence.
Neoimpressionist painters interested in the interplay of colors
made extensive use of complementary colors in their paintings. In
his works Chevreul advised artists that they should not just paint
the color of the object being depicted, but rather they should add
colors and make appropriate adjustments to achieve a harmony. It
seems that the harmony Chevreul wrote about is what Seurat came to
call 'emotion'.
According
to Professor Anne Beauchemin from McGill University
, most Neoimpressionist painters probably did not
read Chevreul's books, but instead they read Grammaire des arts
du dessin, written in 1867 by Charles
Blanc, who cited Chevreul's works. Blanc's book was
targeted at artists and art connoisseurs. color had an emotional
significance for him, and he made explicit recommendations to
artists which were close to the theories later adopted by the
Neoimpressionists. He said that color should not be based on the
'judgment of taste', but rather it should be close to what we
experience in reality. Blanc did not want artists to use equal
intensities of color, but rather to consciously plan and understand
the role of each hue.
Another important influence on the Neoimpressionists was Ogden
Rood, who also studied color and optical effects. Whereas the
theories of Chevreul are based on Newton's thoughts on the mixing
of light, Rood's writings are based on the work of
Helmholtz, and as such he analyzed the effects of
mixing together and juxtaposing material pigments. For Rood, the
primary colors were red, green, and blue-violet. Like Chevreul, he
stated that if two colors are placed next to each other, from a
distance they look like a third distinctive color. Rood also
pointed out that the juxtaposition of primary hues next to each
other would create a far more intense and pleasing color when
perceived by the eye and mind than the corresponding color made by
mixing paint. Rood advised that artists be aware of the difference
between additive and subtractive qualities of color, since material
pigments and optical pigments (light) do not mix together in the
same way:
- Material pigments: Red + Yellow + Blue = Black
- Optical / Light : Red + Green + Blue = White
Other
influences on Seurat included Sutter's Phenomena of Vision
(1880) in which he wrote that "the laws of harmony can be learned
as one learns the laws of harmony and music", as well as
mathematician Charles
Henry who in the 1880s delivered monologues at the Sorbonne
about the emotional
properties and symbolic meaning of lines and color. Henry's
ideas were quickly adopted by the founder of Neoimpressionism.
Seurat's melding of science and emotion
Seurat took to heart the color theorists' notion of a scientific
approach to painting. Seurat believed that a painter could use
color to create harmony and emotion in art in the same way that a
musician uses
counterpoint and
variation to create harmony in music. Seurat theorized that the
scientific application of color was like any other natural law, and
he was driven to prove this conjecture. He thought that the
knowledge of perception and optical laws could be used to create a
new language of art based on its own set of
heuristics and he set out to show this language
using lines, color intensity and color schema. Seurat called this
language
Chromoluminarism.
His letter to Maurice Beaubourg in 1890 captures his feelings about
the scientific approach to emotion and harmony. He says "Art is
Harmony. Harmony is the analogy of the contrary and of similar
elements of tone, of color and of line, considered according to
their dominance and under the influence of light, in gay, calm or
sad combinations".
Seurat's theories can be summarized as follows: The emotion of
gaiety can be achieved by the domination of luminous hues, by the
predominance of warm colors, and by the use of lines directed
upward. Calm is achieved through an equivalence/balance of the use
of the light and the dark, by the balance of warm and cold colors,
and by lines that are horizontal. Sadness is achieved by using dark
and cold colors and by lines pointing downward.
A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande
Jatte
A Sunday
Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte shows members
of each of the social classes participating in various park
activities. The tiny juxtaposed dots of multi-colored paint allow
the viewer's eye to blend colors optically, rather than having the
colors blended on the canvas or pre-blended as a material pigment.
It took Seurat two years to complete this ten foot wide painting,
much of which he spent in the park sketching in preparation for the
work (there are about 60 studies).
It is now in the permanent collection of
the Art Institute of
Chicago
.
Gallery
Image:Seurat_bathers.png|Bathers at Asnières, 1884,
National
Gallery
, London
Image:Georges Seurat - Les
Poseuses.jpg|The Models, 1888, Barnes
Foundation
, Merion,
PAImage:Seurat.jatte.jpg|Gray weather,
Grande Jatte, 1888, Philadelphia Museum of Art
Image:Georges Seurat 019.jpg|The
Circus, 1891, Musée d'Orsay
Paris
See also
Notes
- [p] - The name Georges Seurat is
pronounced as "Zhorzh Soo-rah".
References
Further reading
- Cachin, Françoise, Seurat: Le rêve de l’art-science,
Paris: Gallimard/Réunion des musées nationaux, 1991
- Fénéon, Félix, Oeuvres-plus-que-complètes, ed., J. U.
Halperin, 2v, Geneva: Droz, 1970
- Gage, John T., “The Technique of Seurat: A Reappraisal,”
Art Bulletin 69:3 (87 September)
- Halperin, Joan Ungersma, Félix Fénéon: Aesthete and
Anarchist in Fin-de-Siècle Paris, New Haven, CT: Yale U.P.,
1988
- Homer, William Innes, Seurat and the Science of
Painting, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1964
- Lövgren, Sven, The Genesis of Modernism: Seurat, Gauguin,
Van Gogh & French Symbolism in the 1880s, 2nd ed.,
Bloomington, IN: Indiana U.P., 1971
- Rewald, John, Cézanne, new ed., NY: Abrams, 1986
- Rewald, Seurat, NY: Abrams, 1990
- Rewald, Studies in Impressionism, NY: Harry N. Abrams,
1986
- Rewald, Post-Impressionism, 3rd ed., revised, NY:
Museum of Modern Art, 1978
- Rewald, Studies in Post-Impressionism, NY: Harry N.
Abrams, 1986
- Rich, Daniel Catton, Seurat and the Evolution of La Grande
Jatte (U. of Chicago Press, 1935), NY: Greenwood Press,
1969
- Russell, John, Seurat, (1965) London: Thames &
Hudson, 1985
- Seurat, Georges, Seurat: Correspondences, témoignages,
notes inédites, critiques, ed., Hélène Seyrès, Paris:
Acropole, 1991 (NYU ND 553.S5A3)
- Seurat, ed., Norma Broude, Seurat in Perspective,
Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1978
External links