Tosh's Journal - December 2 (“A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Gra...




Tosh's Journal - December 2

“A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande (Un dominate après-midi à I’île de la Granda Jatte) is a painting that I have always found fascinating. I have never seen it in person, so my observations are like watching a movie on an airplane, and I’m watching someone else’s screen a row in front of me. I get the ‘drift’ of the film, and it’s the same way as seeing a painting in an art book or magazine. Then you have to think about what is the best representation of this painting? An expensive art book, a postcard, online? Some years back, I wrote a poem about this painting, or to be honest, inspired by the picture that was published in a book of paintings by Georges Seurat:



You, boats, dog

& a  A monkey

Fishing

All under an umbrella or two

Each point

Is sharp

Yet, you don’t look at me

Except for the little girl

She can see the ghost

… Of a chance

When I look at this painting, I think of death. Because surely all these people, real or imagined, would be dead by now. I go through a time tunnel where I’m transformed into that place and time. When I was in Paris, I went to the Île de la Jatte, so that I can imagine what that landscape looked like in Seurat’s painting. Of course, everything has changed, but I still wandered around the area to figure out where the painter viewed his’ scene. ‘I did bring a postcard image of the painting with me, but I decided to look at the landscape without the picture. I wanted to do it through memory, which I find is more accurate in the sense that the thoughts of a place are eventually more important than the facts.

It took Seurat two years to do this painting. He did many sketches and drawings before completing “A Sunday Afternoon.” What I find interesting is that he did a similar painting called “Bathers at Asnières,” which is the flip-side of “A Sunday Afternoon.” Same place (different location), but the bathers are in the sunshine, wherein the other painting all the figures are under the shade, either from the umbrellas or trees.

I’m also intrigued by the woman who has a monkey with her. Was that a regular everyday occurrence in Paris 1884? The more you look at the picture, the more interesting and borderline eccentric imagery comes out towards the viewer. Seurat was very much a theorist as well as a painter. He was genuinely interested in optical and color theory. The whole painting consists of tiny dots or minimal brushstrokes, and what I find fascinating is that he enclosed the canvas with a simple white wooden frame. Again, I have never seen this painting in person. Still, seeing a photograph of the work being displayed in its current home (Art Institute of Chicago), the white frame sets the painting from the world today. When one looks at “La Grande Jatte,” you’re looking at the painter, not the art itself.
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Published on December 02, 2019 22:05
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message 1: by Astrid (new)

Astrid Galactic This is an amazing painting. I've been fortunate enough to actually see this work a couple times and the photos do it no justice other than to cut to the chase and tell you what is going on subject-wise. Although, some of the prints are nice in their own right.

Interesting that you mentioned it being like a movie in a plane because each dot of paint can be thought of as being a frame within a film. They don't tell you much in isolation, but put them all together at once, and you've got yourself a whole story to get lost in to keep your imagination running for a good while.

Seurat's work is the ultimate in the Pointillistic style of painting. The canvas is very large and "must" be viewed from afar in order to perceive the grand picture itself. If you stand too close, all you see are dots and blobs of paint. You can only see the images by standing so many feet away.

Hopefully, you will have the opportunity to see it for yourself one day. Well worth the visit.


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