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Divisionism : mastery of color? effusion of color! : Winter 1 / editor, Fondation Pierre Arnaud ; translations, Caroline Higgitt, Bronwen Saunders, John Tittensor.

Contributor(s): Publication details: Ostfildern : Hatje Cantz, [2014].Description: 295 pages : color illustrations ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 9783775735797 :
  • 3775735798 :
Other title:
  • Winter 1
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • N6465.N44 D58 2014
Summary: The representatives of Neo-Impressionism permanently liberated paint from the blend on the palette as well as from its traditional method of application, just as it had been revived through the atmospheric illusionism of the Impressionists. Beginning in France, the painterly revolution of the new movement-also known as Pointillism or Divisionism-stretched from the banks of the Seine to the snow-covered slopes of the Alps, from George Seurat to the Swiss artist Giovanni Giacometti. Unmixed and adhering to visual laws, the painters placed dots, spots, and lines of colour alongside each other so precisely that the human eye ultimately performs the job of blending the colours during the process of viewing. Exhibition: Fondation Pierre Arnaud, Lens, Switzerland (21.12.2013-20.4.2014).
Holdings
Item type Current library Home library Shelving location Call number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books American University in Dubai American University in Dubai Main Collection N 6465 .N44 D58 2014 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 5113405

Published in conjunction with the exhibition at Fondation Pierre Arnaud, Lens/Crans-Montana, December 22, 2013-April 22, 2014.

Part of a two-exhibition series making up a five-year cycle. Winter exhibitions explore the theme of the encounter between the particular and the universal, and summer exhibitions address either the connections between different civilizations or the influence of the past on the present.

Includes bibliographical references.

The representatives of Neo-Impressionism permanently liberated paint from the blend on the palette as well as from its traditional method of application, just as it had been revived through the atmospheric illusionism of the Impressionists. Beginning in France, the painterly revolution of the new movement-also known as Pointillism or Divisionism-stretched from the banks of the Seine to the snow-covered slopes of the Alps, from George Seurat to the Swiss artist Giovanni Giacometti. Unmixed and adhering to visual laws, the painters placed dots, spots, and lines of colour alongside each other so precisely that the human eye ultimately performs the job of blending the colours during the process of viewing. Exhibition: Fondation Pierre Arnaud, Lens, Switzerland (21.12.2013-20.4.2014).

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