Frases de Paul Signac

Paul Victor Signac fue un pintor neoimpresionista francés famoso por su desarrollo de la técnica divisionista junto a Georges Seurat. Siguiendo las enseñanzas de Seurat, es uno de los principales representantes de la liberación del color con respecto al objeto. Al principio tuvo influencias de Monet, pero después de la fundación del Salón de los independientes de París se convirtió en un neoimpresionista. Wikipedia  

✵ 11. noviembre 1863 – 15. agosto 1935
Paul Signac Foto
Paul Signac: 9 citas0 Me gusta

Paul Signac: Frases en inglés

“The Neo-Impressionist does not stipple, he divides. And dividing involves… guaranteeing all benefits of light.”

Paul Signac

As quoted in: Flaminio Gualdoni. Art: The Twentieth Century, Rizzoli, 2008, p. 12
From Delacroix to Neo-Impressionism, 1899

“Frankly, this is my position: I have been painting for two years, and my only models have been your [ Monet's ] own works; I have been following the wonderful path you broke for us. I have always worked regularly and conscientiously, but without advice or help, for I do not know any impressionist painter who would be able to guide me, living as I am in an environment more or less hostile to what I am doing. And so I fear I may lose my way, and I beg you to let me see you, if only for a short visit. I should be happy to show you five or six studies; perhaps you would tell me what you think of them and give me the advice I need so badly, for the fact is that I have the most horrible doubts, having always worked by myself, without teacher, encouragement, or criticism.”

Paul Signac

In a letter to Claude Monet, 1880; quoted by Geffroy: Claude Monet, vol. I, p. 175; as quoted by John Rewald, in Georges Seurat&#x27;, a monograph https://ia800607.us.archive.org/23/items/georges00rewa/georges00rewa.pdf; Wittenborn and Compagny, New York, 1943. p. 15 <br class="br">In 1880 an exhibition of the works of Claude Monet had - as Signac was to say later - &#x27;decided his career,&#x27; - and after his first efforts as an impressionist Signac had ventured to appeal to Monet, writing him this sentence in his letter

“Of the three primary colors, the three binary ones are formed. If you add to one of these the primary tone that is its opposite, it cancels it out. This means that you produce the required half-tone. Therefore, adding black is not adding a half-tone, it is soiling the tone whose true half-tone resides in this opposite me have just described. Hence the green shadows found in red. The heads of the two little peasants. The yellow one had purple shadows; the redder and more sanguine one had green ones.”

Paul Signac

Quoted by Maria Buszek, online - note 19 http://mariabuszek.com/mariabuszek/kcai/Expressionism/Readings/SignacDelaNeo.pdf <br class="br">The notebook where this sentence appears was only published, in facsimile, in 1913 by J. Guiffrey. Signac therefore must have consulted it at the Conde Museum, in Chantilly. This Moroccan travel document was bought at the Delacroix sale by the painter Dauzats for the Duc of Aumale. <br class="br">From Delacroix to Neo-Impressionism, 1899

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