Tumgik
#Paul Signac - Golfe Juan (1896)
lemuseum · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
1 note · View note
the-cricket-chirps · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media
Paul Signac
Golfe Juan
1896
30 notes · View notes
nancydrewwouldnever · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media
Paul Signac, Golfe Juan, 1896, oil/canvas (Art Museum, Worcester)
8 notes · View notes
stigmatam4rtyr · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
Golfe Juan (1896, oil on canvas) | Paul Signac
13 notes · View notes
longlistshort · 9 months
Text
Tumblr media
(Frank Weston Benson, “Natalie”, 1917, Oil on canvas)
Tumblr media
(Childe Hassam, “Gathering Flowers in a French Garden”, 1888, Oil on canvas)
Tumblr media
(Luther Emerson Van Gorder, “In the Park”, before 1894, Oil on canvas)
Tampa Museum of Art’s current exhibition, Frontiers of Impressionism: Paintings from the Worcester Art Museum, features paintings by American and European impressionists and is a lovely reminder of the extraordinary works these artists created during this time period. The enduring popularity of the impressionists throughout the years makes sense when walking among these paintings. The use of color and brush work, as well as the details and beauty of the subject matter (not to mention the wealth and comfort often depicted)- make the viewer feel like they are being transported through time to the artist’s idyllic world.
From the museum-
In 2024, the term “impressionism” celebrates its 150th anniversary. Such a significant occasion inspires reflection on the profound impact that a relatively small group of artists in Paris made by positing a new mode of painting: one that favored painting outdoors over in a studio, immediacy over planning, the everyday over the grand, and the fleeting over the eternal. In doing so, the impressionists upended centuries of traditions in European art. This exhibition explores the radical impulses behind impressionism and its seemingly endless adaptability, as artists from around the world came to Paris to study and returned to their homelands, assimilating what they had absorbed and propelling the movement further.
The Worcester Art Museum pioneered new artistic horizons by embracing impressionism early in its history. The French and American impressionism collections at the Worcester Art Museum have long drawn visitors to the galleries. The first directors purchased works by Monet from his Parisian dealer, Durand-Ruel, as well as directly from American impressionists, making the Museum one of the first in the United States to collect impressionism actively as contemporary art. Over the past 125 years, this collection has grown, encapsulating the story of the movement’s roots and emergence in France and its subsequent expansion to the United States, Germany, Scandinavia, and beyond. Highlighting more than 30 artists, including Claude Monet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Camille Pissarro, Mary Cassatt, Childe Hassam, and Max Slevogt, this exhibition demonstrates impressionism’s international allure, captured in subjects as far-flung as Monet’s famed Giverny lily pond to the natural wonders of the Grand Canyon.
Below are a few more selections from the show.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Max Slevogt, “Selbstbildnis im Garten (A Self-Portrait in the Garden at Godgramstein), 1910, Oil on canvas
Tumblr media
Lovis Corinth, “Vordem Spiegel (At the Mirror)”, 1912, Oil on canvas
Tumblr media
Thomas Cole, “View on the Arno, near Florence”, 1837, Oil on canvas
Tumblr media
Paul Signac, “Golfe Juan”, 1896, Oil on canvas
Tumblr media
John Singer Sargent, “Katherine Chase Pratt”, 1890, Oil on canvas
About the unfinished painting above (from the museum)-
A successful society portraitist, Sargent painted the elite from his international social circles. In June 1890, Sargent visited Worcester, Massachusetts, where he was inundated by requests for portraits. The sitter’s father, Frederick Pratt, a noted collector and eventual acting director of the Worcester Art Museum (1908 and 1917), became friends with the artist and invited him to return a few months later to paint his daughter, Katherine- although the idea for Katherine’s portrait originated in Sargent’s first trip to Worcester, when he had made a sketch of hydrangeas. Sargent’s vision of Katherine against a backdrop of flowers, however, proved less than satisfactory for his client and he abandoned the painting for another, more formal depiction. As an unfinished work, this painting reveals the immediacy of Sargent’s process, with careful attention to broad swaths of color and patterns in the brushwork to convey flower petals or folds of clothing.
This exhibition will be on view until 1/7/2024.
3 notes · View notes
artist-signac · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Golfe Juan, 1896, Paul Signac
145 notes · View notes
yama-bato · 4 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Golfe Juan, 1896 - Paul Signac - WikiArt.org
69 notes · View notes
lionofchaeronea · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Golfe Juan, Paul Signac, ca. 1896
75 notes · View notes
strictlyfavorites · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Golfe Juan, 1896, Paul Signac
0 notes
weary-hearted-art · 7 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Paul Signac, Golfe Juan, c.1896
69 notes · View notes
vcam1952 · 4 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Paul Signac | Golfe Juan, 1896 #myartera (at Royal Oak, Michigan) https://www.instagram.com/p/CLMYQsqDqjk/?igshid=yi0ujhjfjx6p
0 notes
aleyma · 7 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Paul Signac, Golfe Juan, 1896 (source).
94 notes · View notes
artist-signac · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Golfe Juan, 1896, Paul Signac
37 notes · View notes
artist-signac · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Golfe Juan, 1896, Paul Signac
22 notes · View notes
artist-signac · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Golfe Juan, 1896, Paul Signac
15 notes · View notes
artist-signac · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Golfe Juan, 1896, Paul Signac
21 notes · View notes