Georges Seurat
Georges Seurat (1859–1891) was a trailblazing French painter who fundamentally changed the course of modern art by blending rigorous science with visual expression. As the pioneer of Neo-Impressionism, he rejected the spontaneous, intuitive brushwork of the Impressionists in favor of a highly disciplined, calculated approach. Seurat developed Pointillism—a revolutionary technique where distinct, tiny dots of pure color are meticulously applied to the canvas side by side. Instead of physically mixing paints on a palette, he relied on optical mixing, allowing the viewer's eye to blend the individual dots into vibrant, luminous hues from a distance. Though his life was cut short at just 31, his monumental masterpiece, A Sunday on La Grande Jatte, remains a definitive icon of art history, demonstrating how structural precision and scientific color theory could capture the brilliant texture of light and modern life.
Georges Seurat: A collection of 135 works
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