Paul Signac
Paul Signac (born Paris, 1863 – Paris, 1935) Neo-Impressionist French painter and art writer. He studied with Armand Guillaumin. Signac met Claude Monet and helped establish the Salon des Artistes Indépendants in 1884 where George-Pierre Seurat exposed his Bathers at Asniéres. Signac and Seurat developed the Neo-Impressionism movement and Pointillism technique. They created the group "Impressionnistes dits scientifiques". Paul Signac was also a good friend of Pierre Bonnard.
His paintings are mainly of the French coast; St. Tropez, Cherbourg, Marseille, Nice, Collioure, Ste. Maxime and La Rochelle. His early works were done around Asnières (Paris). Signac loved painting the water and sailing.
Golfe Juan, 1896.
In 1899 Signac published: De Delacroix au Neo-Impressionism, an important study.
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Colour division is more a philosophy than a system. |
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See also
External links
- Paul Signac
- Paul Signac
- Paul Signac ARTCYCLOPEDIA.
- Paul Signac In French.