Figure in Space
Georges Seurat: Impressionist exhibition at the Kunsthaus Zürich
Under the heading 'Figure in Space', the Kunsthaus Zürich presents work by
one of the fathers of modern art, Georges Seurat, from 2 October 2009 until
17 January 2010. A colleague of Paul Cézanne and Vincent van Gogh's, Seurat
brought a scientific precision to bear on Impressionist painting. Where there
was nothing but light and atmosphere he introduced rational dialogues
between figures and the space surrounding them, as attested by the over 60
high-quality paintings and drawings the Kunsthaus Zürich has assembled
from important public and private collections in London, Paris, New York and
Washington.
FATHER OF POINTILLISM
Together with Cézanne, van Gogh and Paul Gauguin, Georges Seurat (1859-1891)
is considered one of the 'fathers' of modern art. He was also the most original of
France's avant-garde artists in the late 19th century. Seurat was born in 1859 in
Paris, and when he died an untimely death at the age of 31 he had provided
Impressionism with a theoretical underpinning. Stimulated by the key
discoveries of contemporary colour theories Seurat began to cover canvases
with contiguous, schematically positioned dabs of pure colour. He was satisfied
to allow these dots to take on form only in the eye of the beholder. This process,
which would come to be known as 'Pointillism', soon inspired other artists, who
recognized the merits of a technique that replaced individual brushstrokes with
systematically painted dots, painstakingly applied to the canvas until it
resembled a web of juxtaposed points. Artistic expression thus ceded its decisive
place in the painting process to the eye, which in turn required agility and
schooling to produce the optical effects desired.
FIGURE IN SPACE
Unlike van Gogh, Seurat was a recognized master during his own lifetime, with
contemporary colleagues such as the Dutch painter and Gauguin fascinated by
his choice of colours and his technique. Later generations, foremost among
them the artists of the Bauhaus, raved about his unusual compositions and his
imposition of geometry on figures and landscapes alike. His way with a figure in
space played a key role in the French artist's career, and is the central theme of
a show that comprises both drawn and painted works. Although Seurat claimed
that the subject of his pieces was of only secondary importance to him, viewers
and art historians alike have sensed the keen interest in his figures of an artist
who created works with titles like 'Reclining Man' (1883-84), from the Fondation
Beyeler, and 'Woman with Bouquet, seen from behind' (1882-83), from another
private Swiss collection. Seurat immortalized contemporary society with a cold
eye in severely calculated compositions. While he may now and then have varied
a particular figure, zooming in on it or combining it with a wide range of other
human forms, yet he was always content to give his subjects an individual,
isolated appearance, on occasion to the point of parody. His palette shows an
elegant reserve. The effect on the viewer is of pleasing harmony – of an art bent
on imposing calm even as it stimulates and challenges the sense of sight. The
eye registers a faint vibration as it traces the scenery of such key oil studies as
'Final Study for 'A Sunday on La Grande Jatte' (1884), from the Metropolitan
Museum of Art, New York; 'The Morning Walk: Study for 'The Seine at
Courbevoie' (1885), from the National Gallery in London; or 'Shade and Sunlight:
Study for 'A Sunday on la Grande Jatte' (1884-85), on loan from the Foundation
E.G. Bührle Collection, Zurich.
CIRCUS, LANDSCAPES AND THE EIFFEL TOWER
Seurat began his career with drawing, and he never abandoned the medium. The
intensive encounter with the human form that would become so characteristic of
the mature artist was already visible in his attempts as a student, while in later
drawings he was to achieve a remarkable balance between figurative
contingency and technical autonomy. Pencil lines woven densely across the
paper cause the subject to emerge as something vague and floating, or perhaps
to vanish entirely. Striking chiaroscuro effects play about his figures,
accentuating them and lending them an otherworldly aura, as in 'At the Concert
Européen' (1886-88), from New York's Museum of Modern Art. In Seurat's
paintings, too, the representation of people in space is of central importance.
Another spectacular masterpiece on show at the Kunsthaus is 'Circus' (1890-
91), on loan from the Musée d'Orsay in Paris.
Works such as 'The Gardener' (c. 1882), from the Kunsthaus Zürich collection,
and 'Stone Breaker and Wheelbarrow, Le Raincy' (1882-83), from The Phillips
Collection, Washington, can be adduced to indicate a caesura in Seurat's
creative career. While he had initially oriented his work to the thinking of groups
like the École de Barbizon, to periods such as the Renaissance, or to fellow
artists like Puvis de Chavannes, in these pieces Seurat suddenly began painting
his subjects with a new technique and setting them in innovative compositions.
This avant-garde rebellion would be lent further impetus in later works in which
he repeated or varied forms and subjects within the same painting. Seurat
transformed his pictorial space and the figures placed within it into a
geometrical phenomenon, and thus followed his invention of Pointillism with
further proof of his avant-garde mettle, as evinced in the brilliant 'Eiffel Tower'
(1889), on loan to Zurich from the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. Artists
such as the Italian Futurists, Fernand Léger and Le Corbusier were enthusiastic
about their debt to Seurat, and helped continue his scientifically informed work
in the 20th century.
EXHIBITION IN ZURICH AND FRANKFURT
Kunsthaus Director Christoph Becker, curator and organizer of such popular
and successful exhibitions as 'Monet's Garden', 'Rodin' and 'Félix Vallotton: Idyll
on the Edge', has together with Julia Burckhardt Bild assembled the
retrospective for the Kunsthaus Zürich. It is to be hosted next by Frankfurt's
Schirn (4 February to 9 May 2010).
ART EDUCATION
The exhibition is accompanied by a free audioguide as well as a talking book
(CHF 29.-) and a catalogue, all in English, German and French. The publication
(152 pages, 111 colour images, available for CHF 45.- at the Kunsthaus shop), by
Hatje Cantz Verlag, contains essays by Christoph Becker, Julia Burckhardt Bild,
Gottfried Boehm (University of Basel), the author Wilhelm Genazino (Frankfurt a.
M.) and Michelle Foa (Tulane University).
From 27 October until 24 November 2009 the Volkshochschule Zürich presents a
series of lectures entitled 'Georges Seurat – Figur im Raum'. The programme is
available on http://www.volkshochschule-zuerich.ch
A contribution to culture by Credit Suisse – Partner of the Kunsthaus Zürich.
Image: La Tour Eiffel, ca. 1889. Oil on wood, 24,1 x 15,2 cm Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, Museum purchase, William H. Noble Bequest Fund
Press Contact:
Kristin Steiner kristin.steiner@kunsthaus.ch Tel. +41 (0)44 2538413
Kunsthaus Zürich
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Admission CHF 14 / concessions CHF 10