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23
MUSEUMS. Cont'd.
From
Delacroix to Matisse: Drawings from the Algiers Museum of Art
From the Desk of Gisele von
Guntunbergersen, Ruth Sielberg and Inga Schell
Une Baignade
is a whole collection of Seurat's motifs---and a truly
remarkable work for a young man of twenty-four. The kinship with
Piero della Francesca
that has often been remarked is distinct in the
ordered rhythm of design and the firmly simplified contours. The feeling of
repose is heightened by the lateral directions of figures, stylized shadows and
river bank. The
picture was exhibited at the first Salon des Indépendants in 1884 and in 1886
was one of the `Works in Oil and Pastel by the Impressionists of Paris'
exhibited by Durand-Ruel at the National Academy of Design in New York. Too
original to find immediate favor either in Paris or New York, it received harsh
criticism. The critic in an American paper who described this painting
as the product of `a vulgar, coarse and commonplace mind' seems with every
epithet to present the exact opposite opinion to that with which the work is
regarded now. Planning
the composition of Bathing at Asnieres, Seurat made field trips to the island of
La Grande Jatte; the approximate site can be checked on any map of the Paris
suburbs. But this first of his big canvases was executed in the studio, merely
drawing upon the preliminary studies made outdoors. Coming from Paris, Beaubourg
wrote to Coquiot, the island was on one's right, more or less opposite the
spot where people swim on Sundays, halfway between the Bineau bridge and the
northern tip of the island, just where the river makes a sharp bend toward
Courbevoie and Asnieres. Seurat was often to be seen painting there.
Jules
Christophe left this short description of Bathing at Asnieres: Water, air,
the railroad bridge in the distance, boats, shimmering trees, seven men and boys
in various stages of undress, either in the water or sprawled upon the grass.
Not many people saw the canvas (at the Salon des Independants it was relegated
to the bar), but it represented a great deal of work.
According to Signac
this large composition, for which Seurat had made so many preliminary drawings
and oil studies, was painted
in broad, smooth brush strokes placed atop one
another, in a palette of ochres and more vivid colors. Like
Delacroix,
he blended his colors in individual areas.
Signac goes on to sum up Seurat's
method as follows: Observance of the laws of contrast, methodical separation
of the elements (light, shadow, local color, reactions).
This is a hazy
work, saturated with summer heat. In the distance loom factories and their
smokestacks. We feel the oppressiveness of the atmosphere, the immobility of the
scene. The light here weighs more heavily than the shadows. In an article,
Arsene Alexandre refers to the enormous amount of work that went into this
painting: Bathing at Asnieres made it clear that Seurat was the one younger
artist capable of putting his back into it-one of the few capable of organizing
a vast composition utilizing hitherto unknown techniques.
The many partial
studies that went to produce this work have been brought together into a
coherent, unified whole. The summer silence is broken only by the boy who is
cupping his hands to make a sound like a boat horn. This is vacation time, rest
after toil. The distribution of blacks and whites, light tones and dark, strait
and curving lines (the latter predominating) is very elaborate. The light, the
sun, the greenery, the buildings, the water, the people, the boats gliding along
in the background- everything gives off the torpid heat of a summer afternoon.
–Nicholas Pioch


Rodin Museum
77 Rue de Varenne, 75007 Paris. Tél. 00 33 (0)1 44 18 61 10. Fax. 00 33 (0) 1 44 18 61 30

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