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AzizArt March 2019

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Aziz Art<br />

<strong>March</strong> <strong>2019</strong><br />

Norooz<br />

Georges Seurat


1-Norooz<br />

11-Georges-Pierre Seurat<br />

Director: Aziz Anzabi<br />

Editor : Nafiseh Yaghoubi<br />

Translator : Asra Yaghoubi<br />

Research: Zohreh Nazari<br />

http://www.aziz-anzabi.com


Norooz


Norooz<br />

( "New Day") is the name of the<br />

Iranian New Year,<br />

also known as the Persian and<br />

Kurdish New Year, is celebrated by<br />

Iranian peoples worldwide as the<br />

beginning of the new year. It has<br />

been celebrated for over 3,000<br />

years in the Balkans, the Black Sea<br />

Basin, the Caucasus, Central Asia,<br />

and the Middle East.It marks the<br />

first day of the month of Farvardin<br />

in the Iranian calendar.<br />

Nowruz is the day of the<br />

astronomical vernal equinox (or<br />

northward equinox), which marks<br />

the beginning of the spring in the<br />

northern hemisphere and usually<br />

occurs on <strong>March</strong> 21 or the<br />

previous/following day depending<br />

on where it is observed. The<br />

moment the sun crosses the<br />

celestial equator and equalizes<br />

night and day is calculated exactly<br />

every year and families gather<br />

together to observe the rituals.<br />

Although having Persian and<br />

religious Zoroastrian origins,<br />

Nowruz has been celebrated by<br />

people from diverse ethnic<br />

communities and religious<br />

backgrounds for thousands of<br />

years. It is a secular holiday for<br />

most celebrants that is enjoyed by<br />

people of several different faiths,<br />

but remains a holy day for<br />

Zoroastrians.<br />

Origin<br />

Nowruz is partly rooted in the<br />

religious tradition of Iranian<br />

religions such as Zoroastrianism or<br />

even older in tradition of Mitraism<br />

because in Mitraism festivals had a<br />

deep linkage with the sun light. The<br />

Persian festivals of Yalda (longest<br />

night) and Mehregan (autumnal<br />

equinox) and Tiregān (longest day)<br />

also had an origin in the Sun god<br />

(Surya). Among other ideas,<br />

Zoroastrianism is the first<br />

monotheistic religion that<br />

emphasizes broad concepts such as<br />

the corresponding work of good<br />

and evil in the world, and the<br />

connection of humans to nature.<br />

Zoroastrian practices were<br />

dominant for much of the history of<br />

ancient Persia (modern day Iran &<br />

Western Afghanistan<br />

1


Nowruz is believed to have been Ancient Iran. Due to its antiquity,<br />

invented by Zoroaster himself in there exist various foundation<br />

Balkh (modern-day Afghanistan), myths for Nowruz in Iranian<br />

although there is no clear date of mythology. In the Zoroastrian<br />

origin. Since the Achaemenid era tradition, the seven most important<br />

the official year has begun with the Zoroastrian festivals are the<br />

New Day when the Sun leaves the Gahambars and Nowruz, which<br />

zodiac of Pisces and enters the occurs at the spring equinox.<br />

zodiacal sign of Aries, signifying the According to Mary Boyce,<br />

Spring Equinox. Nowruz is also a “It seems a reasonable surmise that<br />

holy day for Sufi Muslims, Nowruz, the holiest of them all,<br />

Bektashis, Ismailis, Alawites,Alevis, with deep doctrinal significance,<br />

Babis and adherents of the Bahá'í was founded by Zoroaster<br />

Faith.<br />

himself.Between sunset on the day<br />

The term Nowruz in writing first of the 6th Gahanbar and sunrise of<br />

appeared in historical Persian Nowruz, Hamaspathmaedaya (later<br />

records in the 2nd century CE, but known, in its extended form, as<br />

it was also an important day during Frawardinegan) was celebrated.<br />

the time of the Achaemenids (c. This and the Gahanbar are the only<br />

550–330 BCE), where kings from festivals named in the surviving text<br />

different nations under the Persian of the Avesta.<br />

Empire used to bring gifts to the The Shahnameh dates Nowruz as<br />

Emperor, also called King of Kings far back to the reign of Jamshid,<br />

(Shahanshah), of Persia on Nowruz. who in Zoroastrian texts saved<br />

The significance of Nowruz in the mankind from a killer winter that<br />

Achaemenid Empire was such that was destined to kill every living<br />

the great Persian king<br />

creature. The mythical Persian King<br />

Cambyses II's appointment as the Jamshid (Yima or Yama of the Indoking<br />

of Babylon was legitimized Iranian lore) perhaps symbolizes<br />

only after his participation in the the transition of the Indo-Iranians<br />

New Year festival<br />

from animal hunting to animal<br />

History and tradition<br />

husbandry and a more settled life<br />

The celebration has its roots in in human history


In the Shahnameh and Iranian<br />

mythology, he is credited with the<br />

foundation of Nowruz. In the<br />

Shahnama, Jamshid constructed a<br />

throne studded with gems. He had<br />

demons raise him above the earth<br />

into the heavens; there he sat on<br />

his throne like the sun shining in<br />

the sky. The world's creatures<br />

gathered in wonder about him<br />

and scattered jewels around him,<br />

and called this day the New Day or<br />

No/Now-Ruz.<br />

This was the first day of the month<br />

of Farvardin (the first month of the<br />

Persian calendar).<br />

The Persian scholar Abu Rayhan<br />

Biruni of the 10th century CE,<br />

in his Persian work<br />

"Kitab al-Tafhim li Awa'il Sina'at al-<br />

Tanjim" provides a description of<br />

the calendar of various nations.<br />

Besides<br />

the Persian calendar, various<br />

festivals of Arabs, Jews, Sabians,<br />

Greeks and other nations are<br />

mentioned in this book. In the<br />

section on the Persian calendar ,<br />

he mentions Nowruz, Sadeh,<br />

Tiregan, Mehregan, the six<br />

Gahanbar, Parvardegaan,<br />

Bahmanja, Isfandarmazh and<br />

several other festivals.<br />

According to him: It is the belief of<br />

the Persians that Nowruz marks the<br />

first day when the universe started<br />

its motion.The Persian historian<br />

Abu Saʿīd Gardēzī in his work titled<br />

Zayn al-Akhbār under the section of<br />

the Zoroastrians festivals mentions<br />

Nowruz (among other festivals) and<br />

specifically points out that<br />

Zoroaster highly emphasized the<br />

celebration of Nowruz and<br />

Mehregan.<br />

History<br />

Nowruz in Persia<br />

Persepolis all nations staircase.<br />

Notice the people from across the<br />

Achaemenid Persian Empire<br />

bringing gifts. Some scholars have<br />

associated the occasion to be<br />

either Mehregan or Nowruz.<br />

Shah Tahmasp I and Humayun<br />

celebrating Nowvruz festival, 16th<br />

century, Isfahan, Persia<br />

Although it is not clear whether<br />

proto-Indo-Iranians celebrated a<br />

feast as the first day of the<br />

calendar, there are indications that<br />

both Iranians and Indians may have<br />

observed the beginning of both<br />

autumn and spring, related to the<br />

harvest and the sowing of seeds,<br />

respectively, for the celebration of<br />

new year.


Boyce and Grenet explain the Hall,<br />

traditions for seasonal festivals were built for the specific purpose<br />

and comment: "It is possible that of celebrating Nowruz. Although<br />

the splendor of the Babylonian there may be no mention of<br />

festivities at this season led the Nowruz in recorded Achaemenid<br />

Persians to develop their own inscriptions (see picture),there is a<br />

spring festival into an established detailed account by Xenophon of a<br />

new year feast, with the name Nowruz celebration taking place in<br />

Navasarda 'New Year' (a name Persepolis and the continuity of this<br />

which, though first attested festival in the Achaemenid<br />

through Middle Persian<br />

tradition.in 539 BC the Jews came<br />

derivatives, is attributed to the under Persian rule thus exposing<br />

Achaemenian period). Since the both groups to each other's<br />

communal observations of the customs. According to<br />

ancient Iranians appear in general Encyclopædia Britannica, the story<br />

to have been a seasonal ones, and of Purim as told in the Book of<br />

related to agriculture, it is Esther is adapted from a Persian<br />

probable, that they traditionally novella about the shrewdness of<br />

held festivals in both autumn and harem queens suggesting that<br />

spring, to mark the major turning Purim may be a transformation of<br />

points of the natural year". the Persian New Year. A specific<br />

We have reasons to believe that novella is not identified and<br />

the celebration is much older than Encyclopædia Britannica itself<br />

that date and was surely<br />

notes that "no Jewish texts of this<br />

celebrated by the people and genre from the Persian period are<br />

royalty during the Achaemenid extant, so these new elements can<br />

times (555–330 BC). It was, be recognized only inferentially".<br />

therefore, a highly auspicious The Encyclopaedia of Religion and<br />

occasion for the ancient Iranian Ethics notes that the Purim holiday<br />

peoples. It has been suggested is based on a lunar calendar while<br />

that the famous Persepolis Nowruz occurs at the spring<br />

complex, or at least the palace of equinox (solar calendar).<br />

Apadana and the Hundred Columns


The two holidays are therefore<br />

celebrated on different dates but<br />

within a few weeks of each other,<br />

depending on the year. Both<br />

holidays are joyous celebrations.<br />

Given their temporal associations,<br />

it is possible that the Jews and<br />

Persians of the time may have<br />

shared or adopted similar customs<br />

for these holidays. The story of<br />

Purim as told in the Book of Esther<br />

has been dated anywhere from<br />

625–465 BC (although the story<br />

takes place with the Jews under<br />

the rule of the Achaemenid<br />

Empire and the Jews had come<br />

under Persian rule in 539 BC),<br />

while Nowruz is thought to have<br />

first been celebrated between<br />

555–330 BC. It remains unclear<br />

which holiday was established<br />

first.<br />

Nowruz was the holiday of<br />

Arsacid/Parthian dynastic Empires<br />

who ruled Iran (248 BC-224 CE)<br />

and the other areas ruled by the<br />

Arsacid dynasties outside Parthia<br />

(such as the Arsacid dynasty of<br />

Armenia and Iberia). There are<br />

specific references to the<br />

celebration of Nowruz during the<br />

reign of Vologases I (51–78 CE), but<br />

these include no details.Before<br />

Sassanids established their power<br />

in West Asia around 300 CE,<br />

Parthians celebrated Nowruz in<br />

Autumn and 1st of Farvardin began<br />

at the Autumn Equinox. During<br />

Parthian dynasty the Spring Festival<br />

was Mehragan, a Zoroastrian and<br />

Iranian festival celebrated in honor<br />

of Mithra.<br />

Extensive records on the<br />

celebration of Nowruz appear<br />

following the accession of Ardashir<br />

I of Persia, the founder of the<br />

Sassanid dynasty (224–651 CE).<br />

Under the Sassanid Emperors,<br />

Nowruz was celebrated as the most<br />

important day of the year. Most<br />

royal traditions of Nowruz such as<br />

royal audiences with the public,<br />

cash gifts, and the pardoning of<br />

prisoners, were established during<br />

the Sassanian era and persisted<br />

unchanged until modern times.<br />

Nowruz, along with Sadeh<br />

(celebrated in mid-winter), survived<br />

in society following the<br />

introduction of Islam in 650 CE.<br />

Other celebrations such Gahanbar<br />

and Mehragan were eventually<br />

side-lined or were only followed by<br />

the Zoroastrians, who carried them.<br />

It was adopted as the main royal<br />

holiday during the Abbasid period.


In the book Nowruznama drink immortality from the Cup of<br />

("Book of the New Year", which is Jamshid; and keep in solemn trust<br />

attributed to Omar Khayyam, the customs of our ancestors, their<br />

a well known Persian poet and noble aspirations, fair gestures and<br />

mathematician),<br />

the exercise of justice and<br />

a vivid description of the<br />

righteousness. May thy soul<br />

celebration in the courts of the flourish; may thy youth be as the<br />

Kings of Persia is provided: new-grown grain; may thy horse be<br />

“From the era of Kai Khusraw till puissant, victorious; thy sword<br />

the days of Yazdegard, last of the bright and deadly against foes; thy<br />

pre-Islamic kings of Persia, the hawk swift against its prey; thy<br />

royal custom was thus: on the every act straight as the arrow's<br />

first day of the New Year, shaft. Go forth from thy rich<br />

Now Ruz, the King's first visitor throne, conquer new lands. Honor<br />

was the High Mobad of the the craftsman and the sage in equal<br />

Zoroastrians, who brought with degree; disdain the acquisition of<br />

him as gifts a golden goblet full of wealth. May thy house prosper and<br />

wine, a ring, some gold coins, a thy life be long!"<br />

fistful of green sprigs of wheat, a Following the demise of the<br />

sword, and a bow. In the language Caliphate and the subsequent reemergence<br />

of Persian dynasties<br />

of Persia he would then glorify God<br />

and praise the monarch. This was such as the Samanids and Buyids,<br />

the address of the High Mobad to Nowruz was elevated to an even<br />

the king : "O Majesty, on this feast more important event. The Buyids<br />

of the Equinox, first day of the first revived the ancient traditions of<br />

month of the year, seeing that thou Sassanian times and restored many<br />

hast freely chosen God and the smaller celebrations that had been<br />

Faith of the Ancient ones; may eliminated by the Caliphate.<br />

Surush, the Angel-messenger, According to the Syrian historian<br />

grant thee wisdom and insight Yaqut al-Hamawi, the Iranian Buyid<br />

and sagacity in thy affairs. ruler ʿAżod-od-Dawla (r. 949-83)<br />

Live long in praise, be happy and customarily welcomed Nowruz in a<br />

fortunate upon thy golden throne, majestic hall,


wherein servants had placed gold and silver plates and vases full of fruit<br />

and colorful flowers.The King would sit on the royal throne (masnad),<br />

and the court astronomer came forward, kissed the ground, and<br />

congratulated him on the arrival of the New Year. The king would then<br />

summon<br />

musicians and singers, and invited his boon companions. They would<br />

gather in their assigned places and enjoy a great festive occasion.<br />

Even the Turkic and Mongol invaders did not attempt to abolish Nowruz<br />

in favor of any other celebration. Thus, Nowruz remained as the main<br />

celebration in the Persian lands by both the officials and the people.


Georges-Pierre Seurat<br />

11


Georges-Pierre Seurat<br />

2 December 1859 – 29 <strong>March</strong> 1891<br />

was a French post-Impressionist<br />

artist. He is best known for<br />

devising the painting techniques<br />

known as chromoluminarism and<br />

pointillism. While less famous<br />

than his paintings, his<br />

conté crayon drawings have also<br />

garnered a great deal of critical<br />

appreciation. Seurat's artistic<br />

personality was compounded of<br />

qualities which are usually<br />

supposed to be opposed and<br />

incompatible: on the one hand,<br />

his extreme and delicate<br />

sensibility; on the other, a passion<br />

for logical abstraction and an<br />

almost mathematical precision of<br />

mind. His large-scale work, A<br />

Sunday Afternoon on the Island of<br />

La Grande Jatte (1884–1886),<br />

altered the direction of modern<br />

art by initiating<br />

Neo-impressionism, and is one of<br />

the icons of late 19th-century<br />

painting.<br />

Family and education<br />

Seurat was born on the 2<br />

December 1859 in Paris, at 60 rue<br />

de Bondy. The Seurat family<br />

moved to 136 boulevard de<br />

Magenta in 1862 or 1863. His<br />

father, Antoine Chrysostome<br />

Seurat, originally from Champagne,<br />

was a former legal official who had<br />

become wealthy from speculating<br />

in property, and his mother,<br />

Ernestine Faivre, was from<br />

Paris.Georges had a brother, Émile<br />

Augustin, and a sister, Marie-<br />

Berthe, both older. His father lived<br />

in Le Raincy and visited his wife and<br />

children once a week at boulevard<br />

de Magenta.<br />

Georges Seurat first studied art at<br />

the École Municipale de Sculpture<br />

et Dessin, near his family's home in<br />

the boulevard Magenta, which was<br />

run by the sculptor Justin<br />

Lequien.In 1878 he moved on to<br />

the École des Beaux-Arts where he<br />

was taught by Henri Lehmann, and<br />

followed a conventional academic<br />

training, drawing from casts of<br />

antique sculpture and copying<br />

drawings by old masters.Seurat's<br />

studies resulted in a wellconsidered<br />

and fertile theory of<br />

contrasts: a theory to which all his<br />

work was thereafter subjected.His<br />

formal artistic education came to<br />

an end in November 1879, when he<br />

left the École des Beaux-Arts for a<br />

year of military service.


After a year at the Brest Military<br />

Academy, he returned to Paris<br />

where he shared a studio with his<br />

friend Aman-Jean, while also<br />

renting a small apartment at<br />

16 rue de Chabrol.For the next<br />

two years, he worked at<br />

mastering the art of<br />

monochrome drawing. His first<br />

exhibited work, shown at the<br />

Salon, of 1883, was a<br />

Conté crayon drawing of Aman-<br />

Jean.He also studied the works<br />

of Eugène Delacroix carefully,<br />

making notes on his use of color.<br />

Bathers at Asnières<br />

He spent 1883 working on his<br />

first major painting—a large<br />

canvas titled Bathers at<br />

Asnières,a monumental work<br />

showing young men relaxing by<br />

the Seine in a working-class<br />

suburb of Paris. Although<br />

influenced in its use of color and<br />

light tone by Impressionism, the<br />

painting with its smooth,<br />

simplified textures and carefully<br />

outlined, rather sculptural figures,<br />

shows the continuing impact of his<br />

neoclassical training; the critic Paul<br />

Alexis described it as a "faux Puvis<br />

de Chavannes".Seurat also<br />

departed from the Impressionist<br />

ideal by preparing for the work<br />

with a number of drawings and oil<br />

sketches before starting on the<br />

canvas in his studio.<br />

Bathers at Asnières was rejected by<br />

the Paris Salon, and instead he<br />

showed it at the Groupe des<br />

Artistes Indépendants in May 1884.<br />

Soon, however, disillusioned by the<br />

poor organisation of the<br />

Indépendants, Seurat and some<br />

other artists he had met through<br />

the group – including Charles<br />

Angrand, Henri-Edmond Cross,<br />

Albert Dubois-Pillet and Paul Signac<br />

– set up a new organisation, the<br />

Société des Artistes<br />

Indépendants.Seurat's new ideas<br />

on pointillism were to have an<br />

especially strong influence on<br />

Signac, who subsequently painted<br />

in the same idiom.


A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte<br />

In summer 1884, Seurat began work on A Sunday Afternoon on the<br />

Island of La Grande Jatte.<br />

The painting shows members of each of the social classes participating<br />

in various park activities. The tiny juxtaposed dots of multi-colored<br />

paint allow the viewer's eye to blend colors optically, rather than having<br />

the colors physically blended on the canvas. It took Seurat two years to<br />

complete this 10-foot-wide (3.0 m) painting, much of which he spent in<br />

the park sketching in preparation for the work (there are about 60<br />

studies). It is now in the permanent collection of the Art Institute of<br />

Chicago.Seurat made several studies for the large painting including a<br />

smaller version, Study for A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La<br />

Grande Jatte (1884–1885), now in the collection of the Metropolitan<br />

Museum of Art, in New York City.<br />

The painting was the inspiration for James Lapine and Stephen<br />

Sondheim's musical Sunday in the Park with George


Later career<br />

Seurat concealed his relationship<br />

with Madeleine Knobloch (or<br />

Madeleine Knoblock, 1868–1903),<br />

an artist's model whom he<br />

portrayed in his painting Jeune<br />

femme se poudrant. In 1889 she<br />

moved in with Seurat in his studio<br />

on the seventh floor of 128 bis<br />

Boulevard de Clichy.<br />

When Madeleine became<br />

pregnant, the couple moved to a<br />

studio at 39 passage de l'Élyséedes-Beaux-Arts<br />

(now rue André<br />

Antoine). There she gave birth to<br />

their son, who was named Pierre-<br />

Georges, 16 February 1890.<br />

Seurat spent the summer of 1890<br />

on the coast at Gravelines, where<br />

he painted four canvases including<br />

The Channel of Gravelines, Petit<br />

Fort Philippe, as well as eight oil<br />

panels, and made a few drawings.<br />

Death<br />

Seurat died in Paris in his parents'<br />

home on 29 <strong>March</strong> 1891 at the age<br />

of 31.The cause of his death is<br />

uncertain, and has been variously<br />

attributed to a form of meningitis,<br />

pneumonia, infectious angina, and<br />

diphtheria. His son died two weeks<br />

later from the same disease. His<br />

last ambitious work, The Circus,<br />

was left unfinished at the time of<br />

his death.<br />

30 <strong>March</strong> 1891 a commemorative<br />

service was held in the church of<br />

Saint-Vincent-de-Paul.Seurat was<br />

interred 31 <strong>March</strong> 1891 at<br />

Cimetière du Père-Lachaise.<br />

At the time of Seurat's death,<br />

Madeleine was pregnant with a<br />

second child who died during or<br />

shortly after birth.<br />

Contemporary ideas<br />

During the 19th century, scientistwriters<br />

such as Michel Eugène<br />

Chevreul, Ogden Rood and David<br />

Sutter wrote treatises on color,<br />

optical effects and perception. They<br />

adapted the scientific research of<br />

Hermann von Helmholtz and Isaac<br />

Newton into a form accessible to<br />

laypeople.Artists followed new<br />

discoveries in perception with great<br />

interest.<br />

Chevreul was perhaps the most<br />

important influence on artists at<br />

the time


his great contribution was<br />

producing a color wheel of<br />

primary and intermediary hues.<br />

Chevreul was a French chemist<br />

who restored tapestries.<br />

During his restorations he noticed<br />

that the only way to restore a<br />

section properly was to take into<br />

account the influence of the<br />

colors around the missing wool;<br />

he could not produce the right<br />

hue unless he recognized the<br />

surrounding dyes. Chevreul<br />

discovered that two colors<br />

juxtaposed, slightly overlapping or<br />

very close together, would have<br />

the effect of another color when<br />

seen from a distance.<br />

The discovery of this phenomenon<br />

became the<br />

basis for the pointillist technique<br />

of the Neoimpressionist painters.<br />

Chevreul also realized that the<br />

"halo" that one sees after looking<br />

at a color is the opposing color<br />

(also known as complementary<br />

color). For example: After looking<br />

at a red object, one may see a<br />

cyan echo/halo of the original<br />

object. This complementary color<br />

(as an example, cyan for red) is<br />

due to retinal persistence.<br />

Neoimpressionist painters<br />

interested in the interplay of colors<br />

made extensive use of<br />

complementary colors in their<br />

paintings. In his works, Chevreul<br />

advised artists to think and paint<br />

not just the color of the central<br />

object, but to add colors and make<br />

appropriate adjustments to achieve<br />

a harmony among colors. It seems<br />

that the harmony Chevreul wrote<br />

about is what Seurat came to call<br />

"emotion".<br />

It is not clear whether Seurat read<br />

all of Chevreul's book on color<br />

contrast, published in 1859, but he<br />

did copy out several paragraphs<br />

from the chapter on painting, and<br />

he had read Charles Blanc's<br />

Grammaire des arts du dessin<br />

(1867),which cites Chevreul's work.<br />

Blanc's book was directed at artists<br />

and art connoisseurs. Because of<br />

color's emotional significance to<br />

him, he made explicit<br />

recommendations that were close<br />

to the theories later adopted by the<br />

Neoimpressionists. He said that<br />

color should not be based on the<br />

"judgment of taste", but rather it<br />

should be close to what we<br />

experience in reality.


Blanc did not want artists to use<br />

equal intensities of color, but to<br />

consciously plan and understand<br />

the role of each hue in creating a<br />

whole.<br />

While Chevreul based his<br />

theories on Newton's thoughts<br />

on the mixing of light,<br />

Ogden Rood based his writings on<br />

the work of Helmholtz.<br />

He analyzed the effects of mixing<br />

and juxtaposing material<br />

pigments. Rood valued as<br />

primary colors red, green,<br />

and blue-violet. Like Chevreul, he<br />

said that if two colors are placed<br />

next to each other, from a<br />

distance they look like a third<br />

distinctive color. He also pointed<br />

out that the juxtaposition of<br />

primary hues next to each other<br />

would create a far more intense<br />

and pleasing color, when<br />

perceived by the eye and mind,<br />

than the corresponding color<br />

made simply by mixing paint.<br />

Rood advised artists to be<br />

aware of the difference between<br />

additive and subtractive qualities<br />

of color,<br />

since material pigments and<br />

optical pigments (light) do not mix<br />

in the same way:<br />

Material pigments: Red + Yellow +<br />

Blue = Black<br />

Optical / Light : Red + Green + Blue<br />

= White<br />

Seurat was also influenced by<br />

Sutter's Phenomena of Vision<br />

(1880), in which he wrote that "the<br />

laws of harmony can be learned as<br />

one learns the laws of harmony and<br />

music".[23] He heard lectures in<br />

the 1880s by the mathematician<br />

Charles Henry at the Sorbonne,<br />

who discussed the emotional<br />

properties and symbolic meaning of<br />

lines and color. There remains<br />

controversy over the extent to<br />

which Henry's ideas were adopted<br />

by Seurat.<br />

The language of color<br />

Seurat took to heart the color<br />

theorists' notion of a scientific<br />

approach to painting. He believed<br />

that a painter could use color to<br />

create harmony and emotion in art<br />

in the same way that a musician<br />

uses counterpoint and variation to<br />

create harmony in music. He<br />

theorized that the scientific<br />

application of color was like any<br />

other natural law,


And he was driven to prove this<br />

conjecture. He thought that the<br />

knowledge of perception and<br />

optical laws could be used to<br />

create a new language of art<br />

based on its own set of heuristics<br />

and he set out to show this<br />

language using lines, color<br />

intensity and<br />

color schema. Seurat called this<br />

language Chromoluminarism.<br />

hues, by the predominance of<br />

warm colors, and by the use of lines<br />

directed upward. Calm is achieved<br />

through an equivalence/balance of<br />

the use of the light and the dark, by<br />

the balance of warm and cold<br />

colors, and by lines that are<br />

horizontal. Sadness is achieved by<br />

using dark and cold colors and by<br />

lines pointing downward<br />

Influence<br />

In a letter to the writer Maurice<br />

Beaubourg in 1890 he wrote:<br />

"Art is Harmony. Harmony is the<br />

analogy of the contrary and of<br />

similar elements of tone, of<br />

colour and of line. In tone, lighter<br />

against darker. In colour, the<br />

complementary, red-green,<br />

orange-blue, yellow-violet. In line,<br />

those that form a right-angle. The<br />

frame is in a harmony that<br />

opposes those of the tones,<br />

colours and lines of the picture,<br />

these aspects are considered<br />

according to their dominance and<br />

under the influence of light,<br />

in gay, calm or sad combinations".<br />

Seurat's theories can be<br />

summarized as follows: The<br />

emotion of gaiety can be achieved<br />

by the domination of luminous<br />

Where the dialectic nature of Paul<br />

Cézanne's work had been greatly<br />

influential during the highly<br />

expressionistic phase of proto-<br />

Cubism, between 1908 and 1910,<br />

the work of Seurat, with its flatter,<br />

more linear structures, would<br />

capture the attention of the Cubists<br />

from 1911.Seurat in his few years of<br />

activity, was able, with his<br />

observations on irradiation and the<br />

effects of contrast, to create afresh<br />

without any guiding tradition, to<br />

complete an esthetic system with a<br />

new technical method perfectly<br />

adapted to its expression.


"With the advent of monochromatic Cubism in 1910–1911," writes art<br />

historian Robert Herbert, "questions of form displaced color in the<br />

artists' attention, and for these Seurat was more relevant. Thanks to<br />

several exhibitions, his paintings and drawings were easily seen in Paris,<br />

and reproductions of his major compositions circulated widely among<br />

the Cubists. The Chahut was called by André Salmon 'one of the great<br />

icons of the new devotion', and both it and the Cirque (Circus), Musée<br />

d'Orsay, Paris, according to Guillaume Apollinaire, 'almost belong to<br />

Synthetic Cubism'."<br />

The concept was well established among the French artists that<br />

painting could be expressed mathematically, in terms of both color and<br />

form; and this mathematical expression resulted in an independent and<br />

compelling "objective truth", perhaps more so than the objective truth<br />

of the object represented.<br />

Indeed, the Neo-Impressionists had succeeded in establishing an<br />

objective scientific basis in the domain of color (Seurat addresses both<br />

problems in Circus and Dancers). Soon, the Cubists were to do so in<br />

both the domain of form and dynamics; Orphism would do so with<br />

color too.


Marilyn Monroe Captive Qajar Lady

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