
ジョルジュ・スーラ
1859–1891 · フランス · 点描主義
ストーリー
Georges Seurat approached painting like a scientist. Trained at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris and influenced by contemporary theories of color and optics, he developed a technique of applying thousands of small, distinct dots of pure pigment that the eye, not the brush, would blend at a distance, a method he called Divisionism and that critics nicknamed Pointillism. His 1884-86 canvas A Sunday on La Grande Jatte, a nearly seven-by-ten-foot scene of Parisians relaxing on an island in the Seine, took two years of preparatory sketching and remains the technique's defining showpiece.
He worked this way for barely a decade and kept much of his private life hidden even from close friends. Only in the last two days before his death did he introduce his parents to his common-law wife, the artist's model Madeleine Knobloch, and their young son, Pierre-Georges.
Seurat fell suddenly ill and died in Paris on 29 March 1891, at thirty-one; doctors could not agree whether the cause was meningitis, diphtheria, or infectious angina. His infant son died of the same illness two weeks later and was buried beside him in Père-Lachaise cemetery.
作品
43点の作品
岩の上のアンジェリカ(アングルによる)ジョルジュ・スーラ, 1878
グラヴリーヌの浜辺ジョルジュ・スーラ, 1890
草の上の衣服ジョルジュ・スーラ, 1883
オンフルールの桟橋の突端ジョルジュ・スーラ, 1886
オンフルールの夕暮れジョルジュ・スーラ, 1886
バルビゾンの木々のある野原ジョルジュ・スーラ, 1883
《グランド・ジャット島》のための最終習作ジョルジュ・スーラ, 1884
グランカンの夕暮れジョルジュ・スーラ, 1885
ポール=タン=ベッサン:外港(干潮)ジョルジュ・スーラ, 1888
グランカンの廃墟ジョルジュ・スーラ, 1885
正面向きの立ちポーズ、『ポーズをとる女たち』のための習作ジョルジュ・スーラ, 1886
サーカス(習作)ジョルジュ・スーラ, 1891
庭師ジョルジュ・スーラ, 1882
庭師 Iジョルジュ・スーラ, 1882
女たらしジョルジュ・スーラ, 1889
オンフルールの灯台ジョルジュ・スーラ, 1886
ヴィル=ダヴレー、白い家々ジョルジュ・スーラ, 1882
冬ジョルジュ・スーラ, 1883