“Bathers at Asnières” by Georges Seurat depicts a brilliant Seine River scene near a working-class suburb of Paris, over 100 years ago.
On the right-hand foreground of the canvas are two young bathers in the water and one on the grassy riverbank.
On the left are four figures and a dog resting on the river bank, enjoying the water views. In the background are trees, buildings, walls, a bridge, and several smoking industrial chimneys.
Seurat spent most of 1883 working on this large canvas, which was his first major painting. Impressionism influenced him in the use of color and light.
However, he departed from the Impressionist style. Seurat used a combination of sophisticated brush stroke techniques and meticulous planning for the application of contemporary color theory to bring a unique vibrancy and timelessness to this masterpiece.
Seurat applied to the French art establishment to have this work exhibited, but it was rejected, and at the time, this artwork puzzled many of Seurat’s contemporaries.
This painting did not receive acclaim until many years after Seurat’s death, and the appreciation of this painting only grew during the twentieth century.
Georges Seurat
Georges Seurat (1859 – 1891) is recognized for his innovative use of painting media and for devising the painting techniques known as chromoluminarism and pointillism.
He was passionate about abstraction and precision and completed this painting when he was twenty-four years old.
Unfortunately, Seurat died at the age of thirty-one, but his work and this monumental painting altered the direction of modern art by initiating a new art style, Neo-impressionism.
Bathers at Asnieres
- Title: Bathers at Asnières
- French: Une Baignade, Asnières
- Artist: Georges Seurat
- Year: 1883-1884
- Medium: Oil on canvas
- Dimensions: Height: 201 cm (79 in); Width: 301 cm (118 in)
- Museum: National Gallery, London
Georges Seurat
- Name: Georges-Pierre Seurat
- Birth: 1859 – Paris, France
- Died: 1891 (aged 31) – Paris, France
- Nationality: French
- Movement: Post-Impressionism, neo-impressionism, Pointillism
- Notable works:
- Bathers at Asnières
- A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte
- The Circus
- Le Chahut
Bathers at Asnières – Seurat
GEORGES PIERRE SEURAT – BATHERS AT ASNIERES
Composition of Seurat’s “Bathers at Asnieres”
19th Century Paintings – The National Gallery
- “Portrait of Doña Isabel de Porcel” by Francisco Goya – 1805
- “The Emperor Napoleon I” by Horace Vernet – 1815
- “Dido Building Carthage” by J. M. W. Turner – 1815
- “Salisbury Cathedral from the Meadows” by John Constable – 1831
- “The Execution of Lady Jane Grey” by Paul Delaroche – 1833
- “The Fighting Temeraire” by Joseph Mallord William Turner – 1839
- “Rain, Steam, and Speed – The Great Western Railway” by J. M. W. Turner – 1844
- “Cimabue’s Celebrated Madonna is carried in Procession through the Streets of Florence” by Frederic Leighton – 1855
- “Madame Moitessier” by Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres– 1856
- “The Gare St-Lazare” by Claude Monet – 1877
- “Bathers at Asnières” by Georges Seurat – 1884
- “Sunflowers” by Vincent van Gogh – 1888
- “After the Bath, Woman Drying Herself” by Edgar Degas – 1895
- “Boulevard Montmartre at Night” by Camille Pissarro – 1898
20th Century Paintings – The National Gallery
- “Misia Sert” by Pierre-Auguste Renoir – 1904
- “Portrait of Hermine Gallia” by Gustav Klimt – 1904
- Bathers (Les Grandes Baigneuses) by Paul Cézanne – 1905
- “Men of the Docks” by George Bellows – 1912
- “Water-Lilies” by Claude Monet (National Gallery, London) – 1916
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“They see poetry in what I have done. No. I apply my methods, and that is all there is to it.”
– Georges Seurat
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Photo Credit: 1) Georges Seurat [Public domain or Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
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