Paul Signac's Art Analysis

528 Words2 Pages

The art piece I have chosen is a pointillist style of an oil on canvas painting by Paul Signac: Comblat-le-Chateau, the Meadow (Le pre), Opus 161. Signac would only be the age of twenty-four by the time he created this elegant artwork. The method and media in this piece were not the first he had used in his paintings, nor would they be the last. Before Signac's fascination of becoming a painter, he was running the family business and while doing so was enrolled at a college to study mathematics and architecture. It was not until the death of his father and family business following short after in the year 1880 that would spark his aspirations to become a painter. Two years later Signac would embark upon his trips away from paris to the country line and sea to paint, which lead to his attraction of sail boats and sailing. Utmost of his paintings during that time were persuaded by impressionist painters mainly Claude Monet with his subjects mainly encompassing landscapes and still lives and the occasional cityscape. Signac's first works fashioned such media as oil on panel …show more content…

Signac would quickly be enlightened by Seurat’s presupposition of colors and methodical way and become his steadfast patron. Seurat’s influence on Signac would lead him to forsake his impressionist style for divisionism and pointillism. Not long after Signac and Seurat met a couple others and themselves formed the Societe des Artistes Independents. After the groups first exhibition Signac's career began to flourish first by getting invited to impressionists exhibits in 1886 and persuading them to adopt Seurat’s method of pointillism. Although he didn't sell any paintings in the first appearance he would began to shape a name for his style of painting. The title Neo-Impressionist was used by a journalist by the name of Felix Feneon in Signac's appearance in the eighth

Open Document