Ways of Pointillism - Composition and Colour - a podcast by CastYourArt.com

from 2016-12-05T13:30

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Ways of Pointillism - Composition and Color
After the French Revolution, towards the end of the 18th century, the new republican ideas prevailed in academic painting, with historical narrative topics, conservative color ranges and carefully balanced compositions.

Impressionism left these grandiose allegories aside and tried to capture the atmosphere of nature or of the cities, painting out in the open, preferring swift brushstrokes and vibrant color patches, and giving priority to optical effects rather than meticulous care for details. In this first generation of artists, Monet, Renoir and Manet stand out as protagonists.

While Impressionism soon reached its epistemiological limit, scientists were doing research on the nature of color on a more fundamental level, inspiring a number of artists to a more analytical approach. Findings by Ogden Rood, Hermann von Helmholtz and Chevreul about optics and color perception had a great influence on the arts.

Around 1840, the chemist Michel Eugène Chevreul described the concept of simultaneous contrast: When a light color dot was placed next to a dark one, it would be perceived as lighter than it is in reality and vice versa.

Early on in his career, Seurat showed a special interest for landscapes and their colors, Delacroix being on of his greatest influences, he shared a preference for lively and earthy colors with him. The challenge for Seurat was quite complex: Combining the scientific findings of optics with the emotions that a painting should be able to convey. Without mixing the primary colors on the canvas and by carefully placing dots into his compositions, he managed to achieve spectacular calmness and harmony in his images. Seurat was a great admirer of Piero della Francesca, Ingres and Poussin.
As evident in the Albertina exhibition, Pointillism was an era of pioneers that prepared the ground for modernism – Pissarro, Van Gogh, Picasso and Delauney were influenced by this movement, at least at some stage of their career. (written by Cem Angeli)

Museum Albertina | www.albertina.at
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