Neo-impressionist painters: a sourcebook on Georges Seurat, Camille Pissarro ... Maximilien Luce, and Albert Dubois-Pillet

2000 ◽  
Vol 37 (09) ◽  
pp. 37-4892-37-4892
Author(s):  
Lynn M. Somers

Neo-Impressionism (1886–1906) comprised a group of avant-garde painters in France who explored a systematic approach to painting that revived Classical ideals while critiquing Impressionism’s prevailing aesthetic of spontaneity and improvisation. Led by the young, Parisian-born Georges Seurat, a rebellious École des Beaux-Arts-trained painter and anarchist, the Neo-Impressionists first gained attention at the eighth and final Impressionist exhibition in Paris in 1886. There, Seurat and his student Paul Signac, accompanied by the older Camille Pissarro, and his son Lucien, staged their bold new work. Its centerpiece was Seurat’s monumental Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte (1884–1886), a visual manifesto to Neo-Impressionist precepts. In his review, art critic and activist Félix Fénéon coined the label néo-impressionisme to describe compositions that forcefully advanced Impressionism’s vibrant coloristic experiments. He detailed Seurat’s method of juxtaposing small, regularized touches of adjacent and complementary colors as ‘optical painting." Termed "divisionism," unblended pigments would theoretically "recombine on the retina" of the observer, resulting in a brilliant synthesis of hue and light on the painted surface. The methodical application of dots was termed "pointillism."


1982 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 2
Author(s):  
Christopher Lloyd
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  

Humans live in spaces - from the caves of the Stone Age to built architectures and the digital worlds of the present. This always leads to states of being in between. How and where do these manifest themselves in architectural space? How do people deal with the in-between spaces in which they find themselves? And how do artists implement their ideas about this in the image? The authors of this volume deal with various forms of in-between spaces: with the strategies of Nigerian migrants on their way to Europe, with spatial structures in parish churches in southeastern England in the 15th and 16th centuries, or the suburban in works by Camille Pissarro, and much more.


Max Emden ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 31-52
Author(s):  
Ulrich Brömmling
Keyword(s):  

Art Journal ◽  
1970 ◽  
Vol 29 (4) ◽  
pp. 472
Author(s):  
Alfred Werner ◽  
Pierre Courthion
Keyword(s):  

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