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Neo-Impressionism

Neo-Impressionism is a term coined by French art critic Félix Fénéon in 1886 to describe an art movement founded by Georges Seurat. Seurat's most renowned masterpiece, A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte, marked the beginning of this movement when it first made its appearance at an exhibition of the Société des Artistes Indépendants (Salon des Indépendants) in Paris.[1] Around this time, the peak of France's modern era emerged and many painters were in search of new methods. Followers of Neo-Impressionism, in particular, were drawn to modern urban scenes as well as landscapes and seashores. Science-based interpretation of lines and colors influenced Neo-Impressionists' characterization of their own contemporary art.[2] The Pointillist and Divisionist techniques are often mentioned in this context, because they were the dominant techniques in the beginning of the Neo-Impressionist movement.

A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte
ArtistGeorges Seurat
Year1884–1886
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions207.6 cm × 308 cm (81.7 in × 121.3 in)
LocationArt Institute of Chicago, Chicago

Some argue that Neo-Impressionism became the first true avant-garde movement in painting.[3] The Neo-Impressionists were able to create a movement very quickly in the 19th century, partially due to its strong connection to anarchism, which set a pace for later artistic manifestations.[3] The movement and the style were an attempt to drive "harmonious" vision from modern science, anarchist theory, and late 19th-century debate around the value of academic art. The artists of the movement "promised to employ optical and psycho-biological theories in pursuit of a grand synthesis of the ideal and the real, the fugitive and the essential, science and temperament."[1]

Overview edit

Principles of aesthetic: light, color, and form edit

Seurat and his followers tried to give their painting a scientific basis, by painting tiny dabs of primary colors close to each other to intensify the viewer's perception of colors by a process of optical mixing. This created greater apparent luminosity because the optical mixing of colors tends towards white, unlike mixing of paints on the palette which tends towards black and reduces intensity.[4] Neo-impressionists also used more precise and geometric shapes to simplify and reveal the relationships between forms.[5] Seurat's disciple Paul Signac later used what he felt to be a more poetic spontaneous use of divisionist technique.[5]

The development of color theory by Michel Eugène Chevreul and others by the late 19th century played a pivotal role in shaping the Neo-Impressionist style. Ogden Rood's book, Modern Chromatics, with Applications to Art and Industry, acknowledged the different behaviors exhibited by colored light and colored pigment.[6] While the mixture of the former created a white or gray color, that of the latter produced a dark, murky color. As painters, Neo-Impressionists had to deal with colored pigments,[2] so to avoid the dullness, they devised a system of pure-color juxtaposition. Mixing of colors was not necessary. The effective utilization of pointillism facilitated in eliciting a distinct luminous effect, and from a distance, the dots came together as a whole displaying maximum brilliance and conformity to actual light conditions.[7]

Origins of the term edit

There are a number of alternatives to the term "Neo-Impressionism" and each has its own nuance: Chromoluminarism was a term preferred by Georges Seurat.[2] It emphasized the studies of color and light which were central to his artistic style. This term is rarely used today. Divisionism, which is more commonly used, describes an early mode of Neo-Impressionist painting. It refers to the method of applying individual strokes of complementary and contrasting colors.[2] Unlike other designations of this era, the term 'Neo-Impressionism' was not given as a criticism.[2] Instead, it embraces Seurat's and his followers' ideals in their approach to art. Note: Pointillism merely describes a later technique based on divisionism in which dots of color instead of blocks of color are applied; Signac rejected this term's use as synonymous for divisionism.[8]

The group of Neo-Impressionist painters edit

 
Paul Signac, 1890, Portrait of Félix Fénéon (in front of an enamel of a rhythmic background of measures and angles, shades and colors), oil on canvas, 73.7 × 92.5 cm (28.9 × 36.4 in.), Museum of Modern Art, New York

Neo-Impressionism was first presented to the public in 1886 at the Salon des Indépendants. The Indépendants remained their main exhibition space for decades with Signac acting as president of the association. But with the success of Neo-Impressionism, its fame spread quickly. In 1886, Seurat and Signac were invited to exhibit in the 8th and final Impressionist exhibition, later with Les XX and La Libre Esthétique in Brussels.

In 1892, a group of Neo-Impressionist painters united to show their works in Paris, in the Salons of the Hôtel Brébant, 32, boulevard Poissonnière. The following year they exhibited at 20, rue Laffitte. The exhibitions were accompanied by catalogues, the first with reference to the printer: Imp. Vve Monnom, Brussels; the second refers to M. Moline, secretary. Pissarro and Seurat met at Durand-Ruel's in the fall of 1885 and began to experiment with a technique using tiny dots of juxtaposing colors. This technique was developed from readings of popular art history and aesthetics (the French administrator, Charles Blanc, and Swiss aesthetician, David Sutter), and manuals for the industrial and decorative arts, science of optics and perception. At this time Pissarro began to be involved with the coterie that helped found the Société des Artistes Independants in 1884. Some members of the group attended gatherings for naturalist and symbolist authors at the home of Robert Caze who was an ex-communard and radical Republican journalist. It was here that the painters got to know each other, and many showed their work at independents' shows for all their lives.[3] Pissarro asked Seurat and Signac to participate in the eighth impressionist exhibit in May 1886. This is where A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte was shown. They had a separate room at the show. The Republicans' liberalization of press laws in 1881 also aided this avant-garde movement. It made it easier for people to begin their own newspapers, thus allowing more art critics to get published.

 
Henri-Edmond Cross, The Evening Air (l'Air du soir), c. 1893, oil on canvas, 116 × 164 cm, Musée d'Orsay, Paris

The idea of the "modern primitive" drew this group and began with Signac.[3] After Seurat displayed La Grande Jatte, the critic Fénéon coined the term Neo-Impressionism. Pissarro, his son Lucien, and Signac also showed work at the same time. Soon other artists began to join the movement including Charles Angrand, Henri-Edmond Cross, Albert Dubois-Pillet, Léo Gausson, Louis Hayet, and Maximilien Luce.[9] The allure of the scientific and new techniques captivated the young artists of this movement. The movement then spread abroad when Seurat and Pissarro were invited to Les Vingt, an avant-garde society in Brussels. This style became the dominant form in Belgium by 1889 and even artists like Van Gogh tried their hand at this style.

Seurat's mission as an artist was to celebrate the power of pure color, the expressive power of line, color and value, the reform of Impressionism and of the Beaux-Arts tradition.[9] Seurat "wanted to be perceived as a technician of art, and so he borrowed from science some of the signs of its authority, including the regularity and clarity of pattern."[9] This can be compared to how Signac "saw and emphasized a connection between anarchism, the Neo-Impressionist technique, the Mediterranean location, and the classical tradition in painting".[10] Signac also viewed the Mediterranean as the place for anarchist avant-garde art. The Mediterranean was rarely depicted by avant-garde painters partially because of the association between the south of France and academic classicism as well as cultural and political conservatism.[10] By setting his pastorals in the south, Signac followed the literary examples of Stendhal and Guy de Maupassant, who linked the region with liberty. Stendhal "described the south as a place of freedom where the worst faults of capitalist society were less entrenched than in the north." Stendhal also saw the South as a connection to other "Latin" countries who are "outside the civilized societies' concern for money."

Evolution edit

This movement's peak years lasted about five years (1886–1891), but did not end with Georges Seurat's death in 1891.[7] Impressionism continued to evolve and expand over the next decade with even more distinctive characteristics. Incorporation of political and social ideas, especially anarchism, started showing prominence.[1] After Seurat's death by diphtheria and his friend Albert Dubois-Pillet's by smallpox in the previous year, the Neo-impressionists began to change and strengthen their image through social and political alliances. They forged links to the anarcho-communists movement[11] and through this, many more young artists were attracted to this "blend of social and artistic theory".[1] In the later 1890s Signac went back to his earlier belief in the visual harmony of the Neo-impressionist style, and the belief that it signified his ideals. He also emphasized that Neo-Impressionists were not seeking realism. They did not want to imitate, but instead have "the will to create the beautiful…. We are false, false like Corot, like Carrière, false, false! But we also have our ideal—to which it is necessary to sacrifice everything".[10] This return to an earlier style was alienating and caused fissures and tensions within the previously tight-knit community of neo-impressionists.

Criticism edit

At the start of the movement, Neo-Impressionism was not welcomed by the art world and the general public. In 1886, Seurat's first exhibition of his now most famous work, A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte, inspired torrents of negative criticism. The commotion evoked by this artwork could only be described with words like "bedlam" and "scandal".[2]

Neo-Impressionists' use of small segments of color to compose a whole picture was considered even more controversial than its preceding movement; Impressionism had been notorious for its spontaneous representation of fleeting moments and roughness in brushwork.[6] Neo-Impressionism provoked similar responses for opposite reasons. The meticulously calculated regularity of brush strokes was deemed to be too mechanical[12] and antithetical to the commonly accepted notions of creative processes set for the 19th century.

According to modern sources, much of the critique of the Neo-Impressionists at the time is just out of focus. In December 1894, the independent socialist daily La Petite République featured a front-page column by critic Adolphe Tabarant. He remarked on the new Neo-Impressionist cooperative gallery in the Rue Laffitte, focusing on Luce and Signac, also known as the young masters: "The art has, perhaps, a tendency toward an ill-tempered synthesis, toward a scientific observation that is too dry. But how it vibrates, and how it rings with truth! What an expenditure of coloring, what a profusion of agitated notions, in which one senses the noble and sincere passions of those young men who, after lamented Seurat, strive to capture all the secrets of light from the sun!"[1]

The Neo-Impressionists were supported from the beginning in 1884 by the Journal des Artistes. Other papers also discussed the future Neo-Impressionists together, thus showing that they had formed as a group through tier creation of a democratic exhibit space, not their movement or artistic style.[3]

After the turn of the century, the critic Félix Fénéon critiqued Signac’s idealism in his later work. He compared Signac to Claude and Poussin by saying that Claude Lorrain knew all the details of the real world, and that he was able to express the world contained it by his beautiful spirit. He relates Signac to an "inheritor of landscape tradition that envisioned the realm of harmony".[10]

Divisionism edit

Divisionism (also called Chromo-luminarism) was the characteristic style in Neo-Impressionist painting defined by the separation of contrasting or complementing colors into individual patches which interacted optically to create shadow and dimension.[13][14] By requiring the viewer to combine the colors optically instead of physically mixing pigments, Divisionists believed they were achieving the maximum luminosity that was scientifically possible. They also believed that it philosophically represented harmony as unanticipated colors work together equally to form a single image. Georges Seurat founded the style around 1884 as chromo-luminarism, drawing from his understanding of the scientific theories of Michel Eugène Chevreul, Ogden Rood and Charles Blanc, among others. Divisionism developed alongside Pointillism, which is defined specifically by the use of dots of paint but does not primarily focus on the separation of colors.[13][15]

Theoretical foundations and development edit

Divisionism developed in nineteenth-century painting as artists discovered scientific theories of vision which encouraged a departure from the tenets of Impressionism. Most notably as science surrounding the vibration of light and the effect on retinas developed, color palettes changed. Neo-Impressionists began to place complementary colors side-by-side to create dimension and shadows instead of working in a range of hues. This dividing up of the canvas into individual sections of complementary and contrasting colors led to the name "divisionism", a term coined by Signac.[16]

Impressionism was a movement that originated in France in the 1870s, characterized by the use of quick, short, broken brushstrokes to accurately capture the momentary effects of light and atmosphere in a scene, usually outdoors. The Impressionists sought to create an "impression" of a momentary scene as perceived by the viewer, rather than a mechanically precise replication of a scene.  Divisionism, also known as Pointillism, developed from Impressionism in the 1880s. The Divisionists used a technique of placing small, distinct dots of color next to one another on the canvas, rather than mixing the colors on the palette. This created a more vibrant and dynamic effect, but also required a higher level of skill and precision.  Neo-Impressionism emerged in the late 19th century, used more precise and geometric shapes to build compositions, and was strongly influenced by the scientific study of color theory and optical color effects, to create a more harmonious and luminous painting.[17][18][19][20]

Georges Seurat edit

 
Georges Seurat, Le Cirque, 1891, oil on canvas, 185 x 152 cm, Musée d'Orsay, Paris

Divisionism, along with the Neo-Impressionism movement as a whole, found its beginnings in Georges Seurat's masterpiece, A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte. Seurat was classically trained in the École des Beaux-Arts, and, as such, his initial works reflected the Barbizon style. Studying under Pierre Puvis de Chavannes, Seurat intensely pursued interests in line and color, color theory, and optical effects, all of which formed the basis of Divisionism. In 1883, Seurat and some of his colleagues began exploring ways to express as much light as possible on the canvas.[21] By 1884, with the exhibition of his first major work, Bathing at Asnières, as well as croquetons of the island of La Grande Jatte, Seurat's style began taking form with an awareness of Impressionism, but it was not until he finished La Grande Jatte in 1886 that he established his theory of chromo-luminarism. Although this painting was originally rejected by the official salon it attracted the Salon des Indépendants where Paul Signac was engaged.[22]

Following the controversial success of La Grande Jatte, Camille Pissarro and Paul Signac converted to Neo-Impressionism and, along with Pissarro's son Lucien, formed the basis of the Neo-Impressionist and Divisionist movements. Later promoted by Symbolist artists and critics, Divisionism became the avant-garde style of post-Impressionism. The support Seurat initially received slowly dissipated as he became increasingly hostile towards other artists, believing that they were corrupting his style and technique. By the end of his life few works of his received the attention they used to. Circus, an unfinished work exhibited after his death, was barely noticed by critics or the general public.[22]

Camille Pissarro edit

Camille Pissarro, born in 1830, is a notable radical artist and the only painter to exhibit in all eight Impressionist shows from 1874 to 1886. During Pissarro's long career he remained at the foreground of French avant-garde art, although his Neo-Impressionist phase is among his most popular and most studied. Pissarro studied under Fritz Melbye, spending the first 15 years of his career painting rural landscapes, market scenes and ports, all of which make subject returns throughout his later career.[22]

During his Impressionist phase, Pissarro switched to a lighter brush stroke and a brighter color palette, frequently applied in sections of unmixed color. This style of Impressionism gave way to joining Seurat in Neo-Impressionism in 1885. He was the first convert to what is now called Divisionism. Pissarro developed what he called "scientific Impressionism" and later left the movement as a whole, finding the compositional rules too strict.[22]

Paul Signac edit

 
Paul Signac, 1893, Femme à l'ombrelle, oil on canvas, 81 x 65 cm, Musée d'Orsay, Paris

Paul Signac, born in 1863, was Seurat's closest friend and the face of the Neo-Impressionist movement. He had no formal art training but was able to refine his skills through travel and replication as he was born into a family of financial stability. Signac was encouraged to remove earth tones from his palette by Seurat, and in turn introduced Seurat to Symbolism, jointly creating the Neo-Impressionist movement. He is also noted for initiating Vincent van Gogh, Théo van Rysselberghe and Henry Van de Velde to the movement.[22]

In 1891, the year after Seurat's death, Signac began to introduce abstract visual rhythms and subjectivity into his works and by transit into Neo-Impressionism. Signac's creative experimentation inspired artists such as Matisse and Henri-Edmond Cross to further define Neo-Impressionism in the 20th century. His knowledge of the movement lead to illustrating Charles Henry's Cerle Chromatique et Rapporteur Esthétique, a widely influential book on color theory and later to his authoring the manifesto of Neo-Impressionism, D’Eugène Delacroix au Néo-Impressionisme in 1899.[22]

Color theory edit

 
Georges Seurat, 1889-90, Le Chahut, oil on canvas, 170 x 141 cm, Kröller-Müller Museum

Charles Blanc's Grammaire des arts du dessin introduced Seurat to the theories of color and vision that would inspire chromo-luminarism. Blanc's work, drawing from the theories of Michel Eugène Chevreul and Eugène Delacroix, stated that optical mixing would produce more vibrant and pure colors than the traditional process of mixing pigments.[21] Mixing pigments physically is a subtractive process with cyan, magenta, and yellow being the primary colors. On the other hand, if colored light is mixed together, an additive mixture results, a process in which the primary colors are red, green and blue. The optical mixture which characterized Divisionism—the process of mixing color by juxtaposing pigments—is different from either additive or subtractive mixture, although combining colors in optical mixture functions the same way as additive mixture, i.e. the primary colors are the same.[14] In reality, Seurat's paintings did not actually achieve true optical mixing; for him, the theory was more useful for causing vibrations of color to the viewer, where contrasting colors placed near each other would intensify the relationship between the colors while preserving their singular separate identity.[21][23]

In Divisionist color theory, artists interpreted the scientific literature through making light operate in one of the following contexts:[21]

  • Local color: As the dominant element of the painting, local color refers to the true color of subjects, e.g. green grass or blue sky.
  • Direct sunlight: As appropriate, yellow-orange colors representing the sun's action would be interspersed with the natural colors to emulate the effect of direct sunlight.
  • Shadow: If lighting is only indirect, various other colors, such as blues, reds and purples, can be used to simulate the darkness and shadows.
  • Reflected light: An object which is adjacent to another in a painting could cast reflected colors onto it.
  • Contrast: To take advantage of Chevreul's theory of simultaneous contrast, contrasting colors might be placed in close proximity.

Seurat's theories intrigued many of his contemporaries, as other artists seeking a reaction against Impressionism joined the Neo-Impressionist movement. Paul Signac, in particular, became one of the main proponents of divisionist theory, especially after Seurat's death in 1891. In fact, Signac's book, D’Eugène Delacroix au Néo-Impressionnisme, published in 1899, coined the term Divisionism and became widely recognized as the manifesto of Neo-Impressionism.[15][23]

Divisionism in France and northern Europe edit

In addition to Signac, other French artists, largely through associations in the Société des Artistes Indépendants, adopted some Divisionist techniques, including Camille and Lucien Pissarro, Albert Dubois-Pillet, Charles Angrand, Maximilien Luce, Henri-Edmond Cross and Hippolyte Petitjean. Additionally, through Paul Signac's advocacy of Divisionism, an influence can be seen in some of the works of Vincent van Gogh, Henri Matisse, Jean Metzinger, Robert Delaunay and Pablo Picasso.[24]

Following the revolutions of 1848, a strong undercurrent of radical anarchism ran throughout the artistic community of France. The combination of social art and artistic freedom and the departure from traditional color painting techniques attracted radicals to the movement of Neo-Impressionism. However these radicals were often criticized for depicting a peaceful and thoughtful approach to social revolution, combining science and moral harmony.

In 1907 Metzinger and Delaunay were singled out by the critic Louis Vauxcelles as Divisionists who used large, mosaic-like 'cubes' to construct small but highly symbolic compositions.[25] Both artists had developed a new sub-style that had great significance shortly thereafter within the context of their Cubist works. Piet Mondrian and Nico van Rijn, in the Netherlands, developed a similar mosaic-like Divisionist technique circa 1909. The Futurists later (1909–1916) would adapt the style, in part influenced by Gino Severini's Parisian experience (from 1907), into their dynamic paintings and sculpture.[26]

Divisionism in Italy edit

 
Giuseppe Pellizza da Volpedo, The Fourth Estate, 1899-1901.

The influence of Seurat and Signac on some Italian painters became evident in the First Triennale in 1891 in Milan. Spearheaded by Grubicy de Dragon, and codified later by Gaetano Previati in his Principi scientifici del divisionismo of 1906, a number of painters mainly in Northern Italy experimented to various degrees with these techniques. These Italian artists merged Neo-impressionism with Symbolism creating allegorical paintings using a divisionist method. For example, Pellizza da Volpedo applied the technique to social (and political) subjects; in this he was joined by Angelo Morbelli and Emilio Longoni. Among Pellizza's Divisionist works were Speranze deluse (1894) and Il sole nascente (1904).[27] It was, however, in the subject of landscapes that Divisionism found strong advocates, including Segantini, Previati, Morbelli, and Carlo Fornara. Further adherents in painting genre subjects were Plinio Nomellini, Rubaldo Merello, Giuseppe Cominetti, Angelo Barabino, Camillo Innocenti, Enrico Lionne, and Arturo Noci. Divisionism was also an important influence in the work of Futurists Gino Severini (Souvenirs de Voyage, 1911); Giacomo Balla (Arc Lamp, 1909);[28] Carlo Carrà (Leaving the scene, 1910); and Umberto Boccioni (The City Rises, 1910).[13][29][30]

Criticism and controversy edit

Divisionism quickly received both negative and positive attention from art critics, who generally either embraced or condemned the incorporation of scientific theories in the Neo-Impressionist techniques. For example, Joris-Karl Huysmans spoke negatively of Seurat's paintings, saying "Strip his figures of the colored fleas that cover them, underneath there is nothing, no thought, no soul, nothing".[31] Leaders of Impressionism, such as Monet and Renoir, refused to exhibit with Seurat, and even Camille Pissarro, who initially supported Divisionism, later spoke negatively of the technique.[23]

While most Divisionists did not receive much critical approval, some critics were loyal to the movement, including notably Félix Fénéon, Arsène Alexandre, and Antoine de la Rochefoucauld.[24] Furthermore, Divisionists were often criticized for being too peaceful and logical in revolution. Because their color choices were often planned and scientifically constructed, they lacked the radical freedom that anarchists embodied. French anarchy, particularly after Haussmannization, placed an emphasis on a classless society but Divisionists, and all artists, reinforced classes through middle-class consumerism of their works. These conflicting ideals put Divisionism under the critical lens of radical anarchists.[23]

Scientific misconceptions edit

Although Divisionist artists strongly believed their style was founded in scientific principles, some people believe that there is evidence that Divisionists misinterpreted some basic elements of optical theory.[32] For example, one of these misconceptions can be seen in the general belief that the Divisionist method of painting allowed for greater luminosity than previous techniques. Additive luminosity is only applicable in the case of colored light, not juxtaposed pigments; in reality, the luminosity of two pigments next to each other is just the average of their individual luminosities.[32] Furthermore, it is not possible to create a color using optical mixture which could not also be created by physical mixture. Logical inconsistencies can also be found with the Divisionist exclusion of darker colors and their interpretation of simultaneous contrast.[32]

Neo-Impressionist paintings edit

Notable artists edit

Timeline: Lives of the Neo-Impressionists edit

The Neo-Impressionists

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Hutton, John G. (2004). Neo-Impressionism and the Search for Solid Ground: Art, Science, and Anarchism in Fin-de-siecle France. Baton Rouge, Louisiana: Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 0-8071-1823-0.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Lee, Ellen W.; Smith, Tracy E. (1983). Edelstein, Debra (ed.). The Aura of Neo-Impressionism: The W. J. Holliday Collection. Indianapolis, Indiana: Indianapolis Museum of Art, [dist. by] Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-936260-04-1.
  3. ^ a b c d e Ward, Martha (1996). Pissarro, Neo-Impressionism, and the Spaces of the Avant-Garde. The University of Chicago Press. p. 1. ISBN 0-226-87324-2.
  4. ^ Tate. "Neo-impressionism". Tate. Retrieved 2023-03-26.
  5. ^ a b "Neo-Impressionism | painting | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2023-03-26.
  6. ^ a b Kleiner, Fred S.; Mamiya, Christin J. (2001). Gardner's Art through the Ages (11th ed.). Thomson Learning, Inc. ISBN 0-15-507086-X.
  7. ^ a b Fraquelli, Simonetta; Ginex, Giovanna; Greene, Vivien; Tosini, Aurora (2008). Radical Light: Italy's Divisionist painters, 1891–1910. London: National Gallery, [dist. by] Yale University Press. ISBN 978-1-85709-409-1.
  8. ^ Tate. "Neo-impressionism". Tate. Retrieved 2023-03-26.
  9. ^ a b c Herbert, Robert (2001). Seurat Drawings and Paintings. Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-07131-0.
  10. ^ a b c d Dymond, Anne (June 2003). "A Politicized Pastoral: Signac and the Cultural Geography of Mediterranean France". The Art Bulletin. 85 (2). College Art Association: 365. doi:10.2307/3177348. JSTOR 3177348.
  11. ^ Roslak 1991, p. 383.
  12. ^ Davies, Penelope J. E.; Walter B., Denny; Hofrichter, Frima F.; Jacobs, Joseph F.; Roberts, Ann M.; Simon, David L. (2006). Jansen's History of Art: The Western Tradition. Prentice Hall. ISBN 0-13-193455-4.
  13. ^ a b c Tosini, Aurora Scotti, "Divisionism", Grove Art Online, Oxford Art Online.
  14. ^ a b Homer, William I. Seurat and the Science of Painting. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 1964.
  15. ^ a b Ratliff, Floyd. Paul Signac and Color in Neo-Impressionism. New York: Rockefeller UP, 1992. ISBN 0-87470-050-7.
  16. ^ Dorra, Henri (1994). Symbolist Art Theories. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  17. ^ "Divisionism | art | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2023-01-27.
  18. ^ Tate. "Impressionism". Tate. Retrieved 2023-01-27.
  19. ^ Kemp, Martin (May 2008). "The Impressionists' bible". Nature. 453 (7191): 37. doi:10.1038/453037a. ISSN 1476-4687. S2CID 34142687.
  20. ^ "Impressionism | Definition, History, Art, & Facts | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2023-01-27.
  21. ^ a b c d Sutter, Jean. The Neo Impressionists. Greenwich, CT: New York Graphic Society, 1970. ISBN 0-8212-0224-3.
  22. ^ a b c d e f Clement, Russell (1999). Neo-Impressionist Painters A Source Book on Georges Seurat, Camille Pissarro, Paul Signac, Théo van Rysselberghe, Henri Edward Cross, Charles Angrand, Maximilien Luco, and Albert Dubois-Pillet. Greenwood Press. pp. 63–235.
  23. ^ a b c d Roslak, Robyn (2007). Neo-Impressionism and Anarchism in Fin-de-Siècle France. Burlington: Ashgate Publishing Company. pp. 15–36.
  24. ^ a b Rapetti Rodolphe Signac, Paul Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online
  25. ^ Art of the 20th Century
  26. ^ Robert Herbert, Neo-Impressionism, The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, New York, 1968
  27. ^ Il Sole Nascente is in the Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Moderna, Rome.
  28. ^ Arc Lamp is in the Museum of Modern Art, New York
  29. ^ The City Rises is also in the MoMA
  30. ^ Derived from paragraph in Associazione Pellizza da Volpedo 2013-11-09 at the Wayback Machine, which cites Enciclopedia dell'arte, Milano (Garzanti) 2002, and also see Voci del Divisionismo italiano in Bollettino Anisa, N. 12 Anno XIX, n. 1, May 2000.
  31. ^ Rewald, John. Seurat: a biography. New York: H.N. Abrams, 1990. ISBN 0-8109-3814-6.
  32. ^ a b c Lee, Alan. "Seurat and Science." Art History 10 (June 1987): 203-24.

Other sources edit

  • Ferretti-Bocquillon, Marina; et al. (2001). Signac, 1863-1935. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. ISBN 0870999982.
  • Floyd, Ratliff (1992). Paul Signac and Color in Neo-Impressionism. New York, New York: Rockefeller University Press. ISBN 0-87470-050-7.
  • Herbert, Robert. Georges Seurat, 1859–1891, New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1991. ISBN 9780870996184.
  • Herbert, Robert, Neo-Impressionism, The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, New York, 1968, Library of Congress Card Catalogue Number: 68-16803
  • Herbert, Robert. Georges Seurat, 1859-1891, New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1991. ISBN 9780870996184.
  • Hutton, John G. (2004). Neo-Impressionism and the Search for Solid Ground: Art, Science, and Anarchism in Fin-de-siecle France. Baton Rouge, Louisiana: Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 0-8071-1823-0.
  • Ward, Martha (1996). Pissarro, Neo-impressionism and the Spaces of the Avant-Garde Chicago, Illinois: Chicago University Press. ISBN 0-226-87324-2.
  • Haslett, Carrie (2002). Neo-Impressionism: Artists on the Edge. Portland, Oregon: Portland Museum of Art. ISBN 0-916857-30-1.*Blanc, Charles. The Grammar of Painting and Engraving. Chicago: S.C. Griggs and Company, 1891. [1].
  • Block, Jane. "Neo-Impressionism." Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online. [2].
  • Block, Jane. "Pointillism." Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online. [3].
  • Broude, Norma, ed. Seurat in Perspective. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1978. ISBN 0-13-807115-2.
  • Cachin, Françoise. Paul Signac. Greenwich, CT: New York Graphic Society, 1971. ISBN 0-8212-0482-3.
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  • Chevreul, Michel Eugène. The Principles of Harmony and Contrast of Colors. London: Henry G. Bohn, York Street, Covent Garden, 1860
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impressionism, term, coined, french, critic, félix, fénéon, 1886, describe, movement, founded, georges, seurat, seurat, most, renowned, masterpiece, sunday, afternoon, island, grande, jatte, marked, beginning, this, movement, when, first, made, appearance, exh. Neo Impressionism is a term coined by French art critic Felix Feneon in 1886 to describe an art movement founded by Georges Seurat Seurat s most renowned masterpiece A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte marked the beginning of this movement when it first made its appearance at an exhibition of the Societe des Artistes Independants Salon des Independants in Paris 1 Around this time the peak of France s modern era emerged and many painters were in search of new methods Followers of Neo Impressionism in particular were drawn to modern urban scenes as well as landscapes and seashores Science based interpretation of lines and colors influenced Neo Impressionists characterization of their own contemporary art 2 The Pointillist and Divisionist techniques are often mentioned in this context because they were the dominant techniques in the beginning of the Neo Impressionist movement A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande JatteArtistGeorges SeuratYear1884 1886MediumOil on canvasDimensions207 6 cm 308 cm 81 7 in 121 3 in LocationArt Institute of Chicago Chicago Some argue that Neo Impressionism became the first true avant garde movement in painting 3 The Neo Impressionists were able to create a movement very quickly in the 19th century partially due to its strong connection to anarchism which set a pace for later artistic manifestations 3 The movement and the style were an attempt to drive harmonious vision from modern science anarchist theory and late 19th century debate around the value of academic art The artists of the movement promised to employ optical and psycho biological theories in pursuit of a grand synthesis of the ideal and the real the fugitive and the essential science and temperament 1 Contents 1 Overview 1 1 Principles of aesthetic light color and form 1 2 Origins of the term 1 3 The group of Neo Impressionist painters 1 4 Evolution 1 5 Criticism 2 Divisionism 2 1 Theoretical foundations and development 2 2 Georges Seurat 2 3 Camille Pissarro 2 4 Paul Signac 2 5 Color theory 2 6 Divisionism in France and northern Europe 2 7 Divisionism in Italy 2 8 Criticism and controversy 2 9 Scientific misconceptions 3 Neo Impressionist paintings 4 Notable artists 4 1 Timeline Lives of the Neo Impressionists 5 See also 6 References 7 Other sourcesOverview editPrinciples of aesthetic light color and form edit Seurat and his followers tried to give their painting a scientific basis by painting tiny dabs of primary colors close to each other to intensify the viewer s perception of colors by a process of optical mixing This created greater apparent luminosity because the optical mixing of colors tends towards white unlike mixing of paints on the palette which tends towards black and reduces intensity 4 Neo impressionists also used more precise and geometric shapes to simplify and reveal the relationships between forms 5 Seurat s disciple Paul Signac later used what he felt to be a more poetic spontaneous use of divisionist technique 5 The development of color theory by Michel Eugene Chevreul and others by the late 19th century played a pivotal role in shaping the Neo Impressionist style Ogden Rood s book Modern Chromatics with Applications to Art and Industry acknowledged the different behaviors exhibited by colored light and colored pigment 6 While the mixture of the former created a white or gray color that of the latter produced a dark murky color As painters Neo Impressionists had to deal with colored pigments 2 so to avoid the dullness they devised a system of pure color juxtaposition Mixing of colors was not necessary The effective utilization of pointillism facilitated in eliciting a distinct luminous effect and from a distance the dots came together as a whole displaying maximum brilliance and conformity to actual light conditions 7 Origins of the term edit There are a number of alternatives to the term Neo Impressionism and each has its own nuance Chromoluminarism was a term preferred by Georges Seurat 2 It emphasized the studies of color and light which were central to his artistic style This term is rarely used today Divisionism which is more commonly used describes an early mode of Neo Impressionist painting It refers to the method of applying individual strokes of complementary and contrasting colors 2 Unlike other designations of this era the term Neo Impressionism was not given as a criticism 2 Instead it embraces Seurat s and his followers ideals in their approach to art Note Pointillism merely describes a later technique based on divisionism in which dots of color instead of blocks of color are applied Signac rejected this term s use as synonymous for divisionism 8 The group of Neo Impressionist painters edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Neo Impressionism news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Paul Signac 1890 Portrait of Felix Feneon in front of an enamel of a rhythmic background of measures and angles shades and colors oil on canvas 73 7 92 5 cm 28 9 36 4 in Museum of Modern Art New York Neo Impressionism was first presented to the public in 1886 at the Salon des Independants The Independants remained their main exhibition space for decades with Signac acting as president of the association But with the success of Neo Impressionism its fame spread quickly In 1886 Seurat and Signac were invited to exhibit in the 8th and final Impressionist exhibition later with Les XX and La Libre Esthetique in Brussels In 1892 a group of Neo Impressionist painters united to show their works in Paris in the Salons of the Hotel Brebant 32 boulevard Poissonniere The following year they exhibited at 20 rue Laffitte The exhibitions were accompanied by catalogues the first with reference to the printer Imp Vve Monnom Brussels the second refers to M Moline secretary Pissarro and Seurat met at Durand Ruel s in the fall of 1885 and began to experiment with a technique using tiny dots of juxtaposing colors This technique was developed from readings of popular art history and aesthetics the French administrator Charles Blanc and Swiss aesthetician David Sutter and manuals for the industrial and decorative arts science of optics and perception At this time Pissarro began to be involved with the coterie that helped found the Societe des Artistes Independants in 1884 Some members of the group attended gatherings for naturalist and symbolist authors at the home of Robert Caze who was an ex communard and radical Republican journalist It was here that the painters got to know each other and many showed their work at independents shows for all their lives 3 Pissarro asked Seurat and Signac to participate in the eighth impressionist exhibit in May 1886 This is where A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte was shown They had a separate room at the show The Republicans liberalization of press laws in 1881 also aided this avant garde movement It made it easier for people to begin their own newspapers thus allowing more art critics to get published nbsp Henri Edmond Cross The Evening Air l Air du soir c 1893 oil on canvas 116 164 cm Musee d Orsay Paris The idea of the modern primitive drew this group and began with Signac 3 After Seurat displayed La Grande Jatte the critic Feneon coined the term Neo Impressionism Pissarro his son Lucien and Signac also showed work at the same time Soon other artists began to join the movement including Charles Angrand Henri Edmond Cross Albert Dubois Pillet Leo Gausson Louis Hayet and Maximilien Luce 9 The allure of the scientific and new techniques captivated the young artists of this movement The movement then spread abroad when Seurat and Pissarro were invited to Les Vingt an avant garde society in Brussels This style became the dominant form in Belgium by 1889 and even artists like Van Gogh tried their hand at this style Seurat s mission as an artist was to celebrate the power of pure color the expressive power of line color and value the reform of Impressionism and of the Beaux Arts tradition 9 Seurat wanted to be perceived as a technician of art and so he borrowed from science some of the signs of its authority including the regularity and clarity of pattern 9 This can be compared to how Signac saw and emphasized a connection between anarchism the Neo Impressionist technique the Mediterranean location and the classical tradition in painting 10 Signac also viewed the Mediterranean as the place for anarchist avant garde art The Mediterranean was rarely depicted by avant garde painters partially because of the association between the south of France and academic classicism as well as cultural and political conservatism 10 By setting his pastorals in the south Signac followed the literary examples of Stendhal and Guy de Maupassant who linked the region with liberty Stendhal described the south as a place of freedom where the worst faults of capitalist society were less entrenched than in the north Stendhal also saw the South as a connection to other Latin countries who are outside the civilized societies concern for money Evolution edit This movement s peak years lasted about five years 1886 1891 but did not end with Georges Seurat s death in 1891 7 Impressionism continued to evolve and expand over the next decade with even more distinctive characteristics Incorporation of political and social ideas especially anarchism started showing prominence 1 After Seurat s death by diphtheria and his friend Albert Dubois Pillet s by smallpox in the previous year the Neo impressionists began to change and strengthen their image through social and political alliances They forged links to the anarcho communists movement 11 and through this many more young artists were attracted to this blend of social and artistic theory 1 In the later 1890s Signac went back to his earlier belief in the visual harmony of the Neo impressionist style and the belief that it signified his ideals He also emphasized that Neo Impressionists were not seeking realism They did not want to imitate but instead have the will to create the beautiful We are false false like Corot like Carriere false false But we also have our ideal to which it is necessary to sacrifice everything 10 This return to an earlier style was alienating and caused fissures and tensions within the previously tight knit community of neo impressionists Criticism edit At the start of the movement Neo Impressionism was not welcomed by the art world and the general public In 1886 Seurat s first exhibition of his now most famous work A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte inspired torrents of negative criticism The commotion evoked by this artwork could only be described with words like bedlam and scandal 2 Neo Impressionists use of small segments of color to compose a whole picture was considered even more controversial than its preceding movement Impressionism had been notorious for its spontaneous representation of fleeting moments and roughness in brushwork 6 Neo Impressionism provoked similar responses for opposite reasons The meticulously calculated regularity of brush strokes was deemed to be too mechanical 12 and antithetical to the commonly accepted notions of creative processes set for the 19th century According to modern sources much of the critique of the Neo Impressionists at the time is just out of focus In December 1894 the independent socialist daily La Petite Republique featured a front page column by critic Adolphe Tabarant He remarked on the new Neo Impressionist cooperative gallery in the Rue Laffitte focusing on Luce and Signac also known as the young masters The art has perhaps a tendency toward an ill tempered synthesis toward a scientific observation that is too dry But how it vibrates and how it rings with truth What an expenditure of coloring what a profusion of agitated notions in which one senses the noble and sincere passions of those young men who after lamented Seurat strive to capture all the secrets of light from the sun 1 The Neo Impressionists were supported from the beginning in 1884 by the Journal des Artistes Other papers also discussed the future Neo Impressionists together thus showing that they had formed as a group through tier creation of a democratic exhibit space not their movement or artistic style 3 After the turn of the century the critic Felix Feneon critiqued Signac s idealism in his later work He compared Signac to Claude and Poussin by saying that Claude Lorrain knew all the details of the real world and that he was able to express the world contained it by his beautiful spirit He relates Signac to an inheritor of landscape tradition that envisioned the realm of harmony 10 Divisionism editMain article Divisionism Divisionism also called Chromo luminarism was the characteristic style in Neo Impressionist painting defined by the separation of contrasting or complementing colors into individual patches which interacted optically to create shadow and dimension 13 14 By requiring the viewer to combine the colors optically instead of physically mixing pigments Divisionists believed they were achieving the maximum luminosity that was scientifically possible They also believed that it philosophically represented harmony as unanticipated colors work together equally to form a single image Georges Seurat founded the style around 1884 as chromo luminarism drawing from his understanding of the scientific theories of Michel Eugene Chevreul Ogden Rood and Charles Blanc among others Divisionism developed alongside Pointillism which is defined specifically by the use of dots of paint but does not primarily focus on the separation of colors 13 15 Theoretical foundations and development edit Divisionism developed in nineteenth century painting as artists discovered scientific theories of vision which encouraged a departure from the tenets of Impressionism Most notably as science surrounding the vibration of light and the effect on retinas developed color palettes changed Neo Impressionists began to place complementary colors side by side to create dimension and shadows instead of working in a range of hues This dividing up of the canvas into individual sections of complementary and contrasting colors led to the name divisionism a term coined by Signac 16 Impressionism was a movement that originated in France in the 1870s characterized by the use of quick short broken brushstrokes to accurately capture the momentary effects of light and atmosphere in a scene usually outdoors The Impressionists sought to create an impression of a momentary scene as perceived by the viewer rather than a mechanically precise replication of a scene Divisionism also known as Pointillism developed from Impressionism in the 1880s The Divisionists used a technique of placing small distinct dots of color next to one another on the canvas rather than mixing the colors on the palette This created a more vibrant and dynamic effect but also required a higher level of skill and precision Neo Impressionism emerged in the late 19th century used more precise and geometric shapes to build compositions and was strongly influenced by the scientific study of color theory and optical color effects to create a more harmonious and luminous painting 17 18 19 20 Georges Seurat edit nbsp Georges Seurat Le Cirque 1891 oil on canvas 185 x 152 cm Musee d Orsay Paris Divisionism along with the Neo Impressionism movement as a whole found its beginnings in Georges Seurat s masterpiece A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte Seurat was classically trained in the Ecole des Beaux Arts and as such his initial works reflected the Barbizon style Studying under Pierre Puvis de Chavannes Seurat intensely pursued interests in line and color color theory and optical effects all of which formed the basis of Divisionism In 1883 Seurat and some of his colleagues began exploring ways to express as much light as possible on the canvas 21 By 1884 with the exhibition of his first major work Bathing at Asnieres as well as croquetons of the island of La Grande Jatte Seurat s style began taking form with an awareness of Impressionism but it was not until he finished La Grande Jatte in 1886 that he established his theory of chromo luminarism Although this painting was originally rejected by the official salon it attracted the Salon des Independants where Paul Signac was engaged 22 Following the controversial success of La Grande Jatte Camille Pissarro and Paul Signac converted to Neo Impressionism and along with Pissarro s son Lucien formed the basis of the Neo Impressionist and Divisionist movements Later promoted by Symbolist artists and critics Divisionism became the avant garde style of post Impressionism The support Seurat initially received slowly dissipated as he became increasingly hostile towards other artists believing that they were corrupting his style and technique By the end of his life few works of his received the attention they used to Circus an unfinished work exhibited after his death was barely noticed by critics or the general public 22 Camille Pissarro edit Camille Pissarro born in 1830 is a notable radical artist and the only painter to exhibit in all eight Impressionist shows from 1874 to 1886 During Pissarro s long career he remained at the foreground of French avant garde art although his Neo Impressionist phase is among his most popular and most studied Pissarro studied under Fritz Melbye spending the first 15 years of his career painting rural landscapes market scenes and ports all of which make subject returns throughout his later career 22 During his Impressionist phase Pissarro switched to a lighter brush stroke and a brighter color palette frequently applied in sections of unmixed color This style of Impressionism gave way to joining Seurat in Neo Impressionism in 1885 He was the first convert to what is now called Divisionism Pissarro developed what he called scientific Impressionism and later left the movement as a whole finding the compositional rules too strict 22 Paul Signac edit nbsp Paul Signac 1893 Femme a l ombrelle oil on canvas 81 x 65 cm Musee d Orsay Paris Paul Signac born in 1863 was Seurat s closest friend and the face of the Neo Impressionist movement He had no formal art training but was able to refine his skills through travel and replication as he was born into a family of financial stability Signac was encouraged to remove earth tones from his palette by Seurat and in turn introduced Seurat to Symbolism jointly creating the Neo Impressionist movement He is also noted for initiating Vincent van Gogh Theo van Rysselberghe and Henry Van de Velde to the movement 22 In 1891 the year after Seurat s death Signac began to introduce abstract visual rhythms and subjectivity into his works and by transit into Neo Impressionism Signac s creative experimentation inspired artists such as Matisse and Henri Edmond Cross to further define Neo Impressionism in the 20th century His knowledge of the movement lead to illustrating Charles Henry s Cerle Chromatique et Rapporteur Esthetique a widely influential book on color theory and later to his authoring the manifesto of Neo Impressionism D Eugene Delacroix au Neo Impressionisme in 1899 22 Color theory edit nbsp Georges Seurat 1889 90 Le Chahut oil on canvas 170 x 141 cm Kroller Muller Museum Charles Blanc s Grammaire des arts du dessin introduced Seurat to the theories of color and vision that would inspire chromo luminarism Blanc s work drawing from the theories of Michel Eugene Chevreul and Eugene Delacroix stated that optical mixing would produce more vibrant and pure colors than the traditional process of mixing pigments 21 Mixing pigments physically is a subtractive process with cyan magenta and yellow being the primary colors On the other hand if colored light is mixed together an additive mixture results a process in which the primary colors are red green and blue The optical mixture which characterized Divisionism the process of mixing color by juxtaposing pigments is different from either additive or subtractive mixture although combining colors in optical mixture functions the same way as additive mixture i e the primary colors are the same 14 In reality Seurat s paintings did not actually achieve true optical mixing for him the theory was more useful for causing vibrations of color to the viewer where contrasting colors placed near each other would intensify the relationship between the colors while preserving their singular separate identity 21 23 In Divisionist color theory artists interpreted the scientific literature through making light operate in one of the following contexts 21 Local color As the dominant element of the painting local color refers to the true color of subjects e g green grass or blue sky Direct sunlight As appropriate yellow orange colors representing the sun s action would be interspersed with the natural colors to emulate the effect of direct sunlight Shadow If lighting is only indirect various other colors such as blues reds and purples can be used to simulate the darkness and shadows Reflected light An object which is adjacent to another in a painting could cast reflected colors onto it Contrast To take advantage of Chevreul s theory of simultaneous contrast contrasting colors might be placed in close proximity Seurat s theories intrigued many of his contemporaries as other artists seeking a reaction against Impressionism joined the Neo Impressionist movement Paul Signac in particular became one of the main proponents of divisionist theory especially after Seurat s death in 1891 In fact Signac s book D Eugene Delacroix au Neo Impressionnisme published in 1899 coined the term Divisionism and became widely recognized as the manifesto of Neo Impressionism 15 23 Divisionism in France and northern Europe edit In addition to Signac other French artists largely through associations in the Societe des Artistes Independants adopted some Divisionist techniques including Camille and Lucien Pissarro Albert Dubois Pillet Charles Angrand Maximilien Luce Henri Edmond Cross and Hippolyte Petitjean Additionally through Paul Signac s advocacy of Divisionism an influence can be seen in some of the works of Vincent van Gogh Henri Matisse Jean Metzinger Robert Delaunay and Pablo Picasso 24 Following the revolutions of 1848 a strong undercurrent of radical anarchism ran throughout the artistic community of France The combination of social art and artistic freedom and the departure from traditional color painting techniques attracted radicals to the movement of Neo Impressionism However these radicals were often criticized for depicting a peaceful and thoughtful approach to social revolution combining science and moral harmony In 1907 Metzinger and Delaunay were singled out by the critic Louis Vauxcelles as Divisionists who used large mosaic like cubes to construct small but highly symbolic compositions 25 Both artists had developed a new sub style that had great significance shortly thereafter within the context of their Cubist works Piet Mondrian and Nico van Rijn in the Netherlands developed a similar mosaic like Divisionist technique circa 1909 The Futurists later 1909 1916 would adapt the style in part influenced by Gino Severini s Parisian experience from 1907 into their dynamic paintings and sculpture 26 Divisionism in Italy edit nbsp Giuseppe Pellizza da Volpedo The Fourth Estate 1899 1901 The influence of Seurat and Signac on some Italian painters became evident in the First Triennale in 1891 in Milan Spearheaded by Grubicy de Dragon and codified later by Gaetano Previati in his Principi scientifici del divisionismo of 1906 a number of painters mainly in Northern Italy experimented to various degrees with these techniques These Italian artists merged Neo impressionism with Symbolism creating allegorical paintings using a divisionist method For example Pellizza da Volpedo applied the technique to social and political subjects in this he was joined by Angelo Morbelli and Emilio Longoni Among Pellizza s Divisionist works were Speranze deluse 1894 and Il sole nascente 1904 27 It was however in the subject of landscapes that Divisionism found strong advocates including Segantini Previati Morbelli and Carlo Fornara Further adherents in painting genre subjects were Plinio Nomellini Rubaldo Merello Giuseppe Cominetti Angelo Barabino Camillo Innocenti Enrico Lionne and Arturo Noci Divisionism was also an important influence in the work of Futurists Gino Severini Souvenirs de Voyage 1911 Giacomo Balla Arc Lamp 1909 28 Carlo Carra Leaving the scene 1910 and Umberto Boccioni The City Rises 1910 13 29 30 Criticism and controversy edit Divisionism quickly received both negative and positive attention from art critics who generally either embraced or condemned the incorporation of scientific theories in the Neo Impressionist techniques For example Joris Karl Huysmans spoke negatively of Seurat s paintings saying Strip his figures of the colored fleas that cover them underneath there is nothing no thought no soul nothing 31 Leaders of Impressionism such as Monet and Renoir refused to exhibit with Seurat and even Camille Pissarro who initially supported Divisionism later spoke negatively of the technique 23 While most Divisionists did not receive much critical approval some critics were loyal to the movement including notably Felix Feneon Arsene Alexandre and Antoine de la Rochefoucauld 24 Furthermore Divisionists were often criticized for being too peaceful and logical in revolution Because their color choices were often planned and scientifically constructed they lacked the radical freedom that anarchists embodied French anarchy particularly after Haussmannization placed an emphasis on a classless society but Divisionists and all artists reinforced classes through middle class consumerism of their works These conflicting ideals put Divisionism under the critical lens of radical anarchists 23 Scientific misconceptions edit Although Divisionist artists strongly believed their style was founded in scientific principles some people believe that there is evidence that Divisionists misinterpreted some basic elements of optical theory 32 For example one of these misconceptions can be seen in the general belief that the Divisionist method of painting allowed for greater luminosity than previous techniques Additive luminosity is only applicable in the case of colored light not juxtaposed pigments in reality the luminosity of two pigments next to each other is just the average of their individual luminosities 32 Furthermore it is not possible to create a color using optical mixture which could not also be created by physical mixture Logical inconsistencies can also be found with the Divisionist exclusion of darker colors and their interpretation of simultaneous contrast 32 Neo Impressionist paintings edit nbsp Charles Angrand Couple dans la rue 1887 oil on canvas 38 5 x 33 cm Musee d Orsay Paris nbsp Theo van Rysselberghe Portrait of Alice Sethe 1888 Musee departemental Maurice Denis The Priory Saint Germain en Laye nbsp Camille Pissarro Hay harvest at Eragny sur Epte 1889 oil on canvas 73 60 cm private collection nbsp Georges Lemmen The Beach at Heist 1891 oil on panel 37 5 x 45 7 cm Musee d Orsay Paris nbsp Henri Edmond Cross Les cypres a Cagnes 1908 oil on canvas 81 x 100 cm Musee d Orsay Paris nbsp Henri Matisse Luxe Calme et Volupte 1904 oil on canvas 98 x 118 5 cm Musee d Orsay Paris nbsp Robert Antoine Pinchon La Seine a Rouen au crepuscule 1905 oil on paperboard 65 x 54 cm private collection nbsp Jean Metzinger Femme au Chapeau c 1906 oil on canvas 44 8 x 36 8 cm Korban Art Foundation nbsp Robert Delaunay Portrait de Metzinger 1906 oil on canvas 55 x 43 cmNotable artists editCharles Angrand Anna Boch Henri Edmond Cross Robert Delaunay Albert Dubois Pillet Willy Finch Leo Gausson Georges Lemmen Maximilien Luce Henri Matisse Jean Metzinger Hippolyte Petitjean Robert Antoine Pinchon Camille Pissarro Lucien Pissarro Theo van Rysselberghe Georges Seurat Paul Signac Jan Toorop Henry van de Velde Timeline Lives of the Neo Impressionists edit The Neo ImpressionistsSee also editPost Impressionism Stippling Pointillism Micromontage similar technique in musicReferences edit a b c d e Hutton John G 2004 Neo Impressionism and the Search for Solid Ground Art Science and Anarchism in Fin de siecle France Baton Rouge Louisiana Louisiana State University Press ISBN 0 8071 1823 0 a b c d e f Lee Ellen W Smith Tracy E 1983 Edelstein Debra ed The Aura of Neo Impressionism The W J Holliday Collection Indianapolis Indiana Indianapolis Museum of Art dist by Indiana University Press ISBN 0 936260 04 1 a b c d e Ward Martha 1996 Pissarro Neo Impressionism and the Spaces of the Avant Garde The University of Chicago Press p 1 ISBN 0 226 87324 2 Tate Neo impressionism Tate Retrieved 2023 03 26 a b Neo Impressionism painting Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 2023 03 26 a b Kleiner Fred S Mamiya Christin J 2001 Gardner s Art through the Ages 11th ed Thomson Learning Inc ISBN 0 15 507086 X a b Fraquelli Simonetta Ginex Giovanna Greene Vivien Tosini Aurora 2008 Radical Light Italy s Divisionist painters 1891 1910 London National Gallery dist by Yale University Press ISBN 978 1 85709 409 1 Tate Neo impressionism Tate Retrieved 2023 03 26 a b c Herbert Robert 2001 Seurat Drawings and Paintings Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 07131 0 a b c d Dymond Anne June 2003 A Politicized Pastoral Signac and the Cultural Geography of Mediterranean France The Art Bulletin 85 2 College Art Association 365 doi 10 2307 3177348 JSTOR 3177348 Roslak 1991 p 383 Davies Penelope J E Walter B Denny Hofrichter Frima F Jacobs Joseph F Roberts Ann M Simon David L 2006 Jansen s History of Art The Western Tradition Prentice Hall ISBN 0 13 193455 4 a b c Tosini Aurora Scotti Divisionism Grove Art Online Oxford Art Online a b Homer William I Seurat and the Science of Painting Cambridge MA The MIT Press 1964 a b Ratliff Floyd Paul Signac and Color in Neo Impressionism New York Rockefeller UP 1992 ISBN 0 87470 050 7 Dorra Henri 1994 Symbolist Art Theories Berkeley University of California Press Divisionism art Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 2023 01 27 Tate Impressionism Tate Retrieved 2023 01 27 Kemp Martin May 2008 The Impressionists bible Nature 453 7191 37 doi 10 1038 453037a ISSN 1476 4687 S2CID 34142687 Impressionism Definition History Art amp Facts Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 2023 01 27 a b c d Sutter Jean The Neo Impressionists Greenwich CT New York Graphic Society 1970 ISBN 0 8212 0224 3 a b c d e f Clement Russell 1999 Neo Impressionist Painters A Source Book on Georges Seurat Camille Pissarro Paul Signac Theo van Rysselberghe Henri Edward Cross Charles Angrand Maximilien Luco and Albert Dubois Pillet Greenwood Press pp 63 235 a b c d Roslak Robyn 2007 Neo Impressionism and Anarchism in Fin de Siecle France Burlington Ashgate Publishing Company pp 15 36 a b Rapetti Rodolphe Signac Paul Grove Art Online Oxford Art Online Art of the 20th Century Robert Herbert Neo Impressionism The Solomon R Guggenheim Foundation New York 1968 Il Sole Nascente is in the Galleria Nazionale d Arte Moderna Rome Arc Lamp is in the Museum of Modern Art New York The City Rises is also in the MoMA Derived from paragraph in Associazione Pellizza da Volpedo Archived 2013 11 09 at the Wayback Machine which cites Enciclopedia dell arte Milano Garzanti 2002 and also see Voci del Divisionismo italiano in Bollettino Anisa N 12 Anno XIX n 1 May 2000 Rewald John Seurat a biography New York H N Abrams 1990 ISBN 0 8109 3814 6 a b c Lee Alan Seurat and Science Art History 10 June 1987 203 24 Other sources editFerretti Bocquillon Marina et al 2001 Signac 1863 1935 New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 0870999982 Floyd Ratliff 1992 Paul Signac and Color in Neo Impressionism New York New York Rockefeller University Press ISBN 0 87470 050 7 Herbert Robert Georges Seurat 1859 1891 New York Metropolitan Museum of Art 1991 ISBN 9780870996184 Herbert Robert Neo Impressionism The Solomon R Guggenheim Foundation New York 1968 Library of Congress Card Catalogue Number 68 16803 Herbert Robert Georges Seurat 1859 1891 New York Metropolitan Museum of Art 1991 ISBN 9780870996184 Hutton John G 2004 Neo Impressionism and the Search for Solid Ground Art Science and Anarchism in Fin de siecle France Baton Rouge Louisiana Louisiana State University Press ISBN 0 8071 1823 0 Ward Martha 1996 Pissarro Neo impressionism and the Spaces of the Avant Garde Chicago Illinois Chicago University Press ISBN 0 226 87324 2 Haslett Carrie 2002 Neo Impressionism Artists on the Edge Portland Oregon Portland Museum of Art ISBN 0 916857 30 1 Blanc Charles The Grammar of Painting and Engraving Chicago S C Griggs and Company 1891 1 Block Jane Neo Impressionism Grove Art Online Oxford Art Online 2 Block Jane Pointillism Grove Art Online Oxford Art Online 3 Broude Norma ed Seurat in Perspective Englewood Cliffs NJ Prentice Hall 1978 ISBN 0 13 807115 2 Cachin Francoise Paul Signac Greenwich CT New York Graphic Society 1971 ISBN 0 8212 0482 3 Clement Russell T and Annick Houze Neo impressionist painters a sourcebook on Georges Seurat Camille Pissarro Paul Signac Theo van Rysselberghe Henri Edmond Cross Charles Angrand Maximilien Luce and Albert Dubois Pillet Westport CT Greenwood P 1999 ISBN 0 313 30382 7 Chevreul Michel Eugene The Principles of Harmony and Contrast of Colors London Henry G Bohn York Street Covent Garden 1860 Dorra Henri Symbolist Art Theories A Critical Anthology Berkeley U of California 1994 Gage John The Technique of Seurat A Reappraisal The Art Bulletin 69 Sep 1987 448 54 JSTOR 4 Hutton John G Neo impressionism and the search for solid ground art science and anarchism in fin de siecle France Baton Rouge LA Louisiana State UP 1994 ISBN 0 8071 1823 0 Puppo Dario del Il Quarto Stato Science and Society Vol 58 No 2 pp 13 1994 Meighan Judith In Praise of Motherhood The Promise and Failure of Painting for Social Reform in Late Nineteenth Century Italy Nineteenth Century Art Worldwide Vol 1 No 1 2002 Radical Light Italy s Divisionist Painters History Today August 2008 Rewald John Georges Seurat New York Wittenborn amp Co 1946 Roslak Robyn Neo Impressionism and Anarchism in Fin de Siecle France Painting Politics and Landscape N p 2007 Roslak Robyn S 1991 The Politics of Aesthetic Harmony Neo Impressionism Science and Anarchism The Art Bulletin 73 3 JSTOR 381 390 doi 10 2307 3045811 ISSN 0004 3079 JSTOR 3045811 Signac Paul D Eugene Delacroix au Neo Impressionnisme 1899 5 Winkfield Trevor The Signac Syndrome Modern Painters Autumn 2001 66 70 Tim Parks on divisionist movement of painters in Italy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Neo Impressionism amp oldid 1219381929, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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