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Georges Seurat: 1859 - 1891 Georges-Pierre Seurat was born in Paris on 2 December 1859, the son of comfortably-off parents. His father, a legal official, was a solitary man with a taciturn and withdrawn manner which his son also inherited. At every available opportunity, Antoine-Chrisostome took leave of his family and disappeared to his villa in the suburbs to grow flowers and say mass in the company of his gardener; he was only at home on Tuesdays. Seurat's mother was quiet and unassuming, but it was she who gave some warmth and continuity to his childhood. The family apartment was on the Boulevard de Magenta, close to the landscaped pleasure garden the Parc des Buttes-Chaumont, where young Georges and his mother spent much of their spare time. Such places, and the people who frequented them, were to become the subject of some of his greatest paintings. |
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THE HANDSOME STUDENT As a young man Seurat was tall and handsome with "velvety eyes" and a quiet, gentle voice. Reserved and dignified in dress as well as manner, he was always neatly and correctly turned out: one friend described him as looking like a floor-walker in a department store, while the sophisticated and sharp-tongued Edgar Degas nicknamed him "the notary". He was serious and intense - preferring to spend his money on books rather than on food or drink - but his most pronounced characteristic was his secretiveness. Despite many of the qualities of the perfect student, Seurat did not particularly shine at school or at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, the official Paris art school, which he entered in 1878. But thanks to a regular allowance, he never had any need to sell his work for a living - nor to produce work that was saleable. In 1879, a year of military service broke into his artistic studies. Seurat was sent to the great military port of Brest on the western coast of Brittany, where he fitted in easily to barracks discipline and used his spare time to begin sketching figures and ships. |
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In 1884, the Salon jury rejected
it and Seurat changed the direction of his career. From this
year on, he scorned the academic art of the Salon and allied
himself with the young independent painters. An instinctively
gifted painter, Seurat also had extraordinary powers of concentration
and perseverance, and took a dogged and single-minded approach
to his work. He was convinced of the rightness of his own opinions,
and of the importance of the "pointillist" method he
was developing. Although other painters turned to him as a leader,
he seems to have inspired admiration rather than affection. He,
in turn, looked upon this admiration as naturally befitting his
superior intellect, hard work and achievement. MEMBER OF THE COMMITTEE In May and June 1884, Seurat's Bathing at Asnieres hung at the first exhibition of the new group of Artistes Independants, mounted in a temporary hut near the ruined Tuileries Palace. The show ended in financial muddle, but out of the ensuing arguments a properly constituted Societe des Artistes Independants emerged, committed to holding an annual show with no jury. Seurat attended its committee meetings regularly, always sitting in the same seat, quietly smoking his pipe. At one such meeting, Seurat struck up a friendship with Paul Signac. Signac was four years younger, a largely self-taught painter who was influenced by the Impressionists and very receptive to Seurat's theoretical ideas. The extrovert and enthusiastic Signac provided Seurat with contact and moral support as he set about making his mark within the avant-garde. |
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Felix Feneon, a sensitive and sympathetic
young critic, was particularly impressed. He christened Seurat
and his associates the Neo-Impressionists, and became an enthusiastic
spokesman for them. In a series of articles on contemporary art
in the newly-launched Vogue magazine, Feneon paid special
attention to Seurat's work, and expounded his new method in scientific
detail. CENTER OF CONTROVERSY Suddenly, Seurat found that he was the most controversial figure on the artistic scene in Paris. He was now occupying a studio next to Signac's on the Boulevard de Clichy in Montmartre. Here he was surrounded by artists ranging from the conservative decorator Puvis de Chavannes, whom he greatly admired, to more progressive contemporaries - including Degas, Gauguin, Van Gogh and Toulouse-Lautrec. He was at the center of artistic debates, but he kept aloof from them. Seurat's relative financial ease meant that he was unused to dealing with potential clients, and his demands remained modest despite his new fame. Once, when pressed to name his price for the painting he was showing at "The Twenty" exhibition in Brussels, Seurat replied, "I compute my expenses on the basis of one year at seven francs a day". His attitude to his work was similarly down-to-earth and unromantic - he had no pretensions to the status of genius. When some critics tried to describe his work as poetic he contradicted them: "No, I apply my method and that is all". He was, however, very concerned not to lose any credit for the originality of his technique and guarded the details obsessively. Seurat's life had begun to assume a regular pattern. During the winter months, he would lock himself away in his studio working on a big figure picture to exhibit in the spring, then he would spend the summer months in one of the Normandy ports such as Honfleur, working on smaller, less complex, marine paintings. Whether in Paris or at the coast, Seurat was never a great socializer and in the last year of his life he virtually cut himself off from friends. He could warm up in a one-on-one situation, but by all accounts his conversation centered on his own artistic concerns. |