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Pointillism
What
is Pointillism?
Pointillism is a technique of painting in which a lot of tiny
dots are combined to form a picture. The reason for doing pointillism instead
of a picture with physical mixing is that, supposedly, physically mixing colors
dulls them. Most of the painters of Seurat's time blended the colors to make a
picture with a smoother feeling than Seurat's bright, dotty works.
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Seurat |
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Student work |
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Student Work |
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Student work |
When two colors are right next to each other your eye mixes
them in a process called, "optical mixing." Using optical mixing
rather than physical mixing can create a brighter picture. Painting a
pointillist piece is a slow and painstaking process. Seurat's famous "A
Sunday in the Park on the Island of La Grande Jatte" (more commonly known
as "Sunday in the Park"), which covered a wall (81 inches by 120
inches), took him two years to complete. He was known for amazing devotion and
concentration. The dots in a pointillist painting can be as small as 1/16 of an
inch in diameter! Based on these measurements, "Sunday in the Park"
has approximately 3,456,000 dots!
From
Wikipedia: Pointillism is a technique of painting in which
small distinct dots of color create the impression of a wide selection of other
colors and optical blending. Aside from color "mixing" phenomena,
there is the simpler graphic phenomenon of depicted imagery emerging from
disparate points. Historically, Pointillism has been a figurative mode of
executing a painting, as opposed to an abstract modality of
expression.
The technique relies on the perceptive ability of the eye and mind of the
viewer to mix the color spots into a fuller range of tones and is related
closely to divisionism, a more
technical variant of the method. It is a technique with few serious practitioners
and is notably seen in the works of Seurat, Signac and Cross. The term Pointillism was first coined by art critics in the late
1880s to ridicule the works of these artists and is now used without its
earlier mocking connotation.
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