Georges Seurat (1859–1891)
Forfatter af Sunday with Seurat (Mini Masters)
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Værker af Georges Seurat
Seurat 12 eksemplarer
Afternoon at La Grande Jatte [image] 4 eksemplarer
Seurat 1859 - 1891 - Paintings and Drawings - Loan Exhibition for the Benefit of The Home for the Destitute Blind -… 3 eksemplarer
Seurat and His Friends: A loan exhibition...for the benefit of the Scholarship Fund of L'Alliance Française de New… (1953) 2 eksemplarer
Picture Study : Georges-Pierre Seurat 1859-1891 French. 7 x A4 prints, produced by Riverbend Press 1 eksemplar
The Lighthouse at Honfleur [image] 1 eksemplar
Seascape at Port-en-Bessin, Normandy [image] 1 eksemplar
Bathers at Asnieres 1 eksemplar
Les dessins de Georges Seurat (1859-1891) 1 eksemplar
Sunday in the park 1 eksemplar
Seurat (1859-1891) [par] John Rewald 1 eksemplar
Seurat: Grande Jatte 1 eksemplar
Seurat : paintings and drawings 1 eksemplar
The Circus (oil on canvas) 1 eksemplar
Associated Works
Satte nøgleord på
Almen Viden
- Fødselsdato
- 1859-12-02
- Dødsdag
- 1891-03-29
- Køn
- male
- Nationalitet
- France
- Fødested
- Paris, France
- Dødssted
- Paris, France
- Bopæl
- Paris, France
- Uddannelse
- École Municipale de Sculpture et Dessin
École des Beaux-Arts, Paris, France
Brest Military Academy - Erhverv
- painter
draughtsman
Medlemmer
Anmeldelser
Lister
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Associated Authors
Statistikker
- Værker
- 31
- Also by
- 3
- Medlemmer
- 370
- Popularitet
- #65,128
- Vurdering
- 3.7
- Anmeldelser
- 2
- ISBN
- 30
- Sprog
- 3
Seurat had a number of important influences, including the contemporary Impressionists, but perhaps the most significant were not artists but scientists. He absorbed all the latest theories of colour and used them to develop the extraordinary effects of Pointillism - paintings composed entirely of dots of colour - usually of unmixed, single pigment paints, relying on proximity of dots and distance of the observer to create mixed colours in the eye, which the science had demonstrated gave a brighter, less muddy colour effect.
Oddly, his genius was better recognised during his lifetime than in the immediate aftermath: Thirty or so years after his death, The Metropolitan Museum of Art turned down the purchase of one of his greatest works - it was bought instead by the Art Institute of Chicago, where it still hangs. Now, of course, he's considered to have been exceptional and a sad loss, dying young, but leaving a huge impact on the development of Western art - the second step towards Abstract art after the original Impressionists. It's a pity that no sane format of book can ever really do justice to the Pointillist technique when fully reproducing even modestly sized paintings, but this gives you an idea - go see the real things if you ever have opportunity.… (mere)