Seurat and the Avant-Garde

 
 
 
 
 
 
£45.00
 

Georges Seurat, one of the most popular and admired of post Impressionist painters, has been the focus of much attention in recent years.

Seurat and the Avant-Garde by Paul Smith views the painter in a new context and explodes some of the myths that have grown up about him. Challenging the assumption that Seurat's work was scientific or that it expressed a serious commitment to anarchism, Smith instead traces the post Impressionist artist's involvement with the various factions of the avant garde and shows that he was perhaps the earliest exponent of Idealism in modern art.

Smith studies contemporary interpretations of Impressionism and analyzes how the groups surrounding Seurat constructed meaning from his art. From this investigation he creates a portrait of Seurat as one who was willing to accept, even encourage, interpretations of his art that he may not have intended. Smith shows, for example, that the "scientific" account of Seurat's colour first developed by Félix Fénéon actually represents the theory and practice of Pissaro.

He examines Seurat's involvement with anarchist critics and concludes that he merely posed as a painter with left-wing sympathies in order to benefit from the publicity these writers gave him. He explains that Seurat was sympathetic to Symbolism from its very inception and that he and his early Symbolist critics developed a theory of his art that was founded on Schopenhauer and Wagner's ideas on art. He also explores the ways that Seurat focused on the musicality of art and on incorporating certain "musical" features in his work.

Beautifully illustrated and engagingly written, Seurat and the Avant-Garde presents a convincing new interpretation of the work of a major French artist.

 
Product Information
Product Code:
1017010
publisher:
Yale University Press
author:
Paul Smith
published:
Jun 1997
format:
Hardback
pages:
222
B&W illustrations:
100
colour plates:
70

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