The exhibition at the Frist Art Museum includes works by the likes of Claude Monet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir and Paul Gauguin.
Less known but of no less importance was Georges Seurat, born in 1859, who made it his goal to weld science and art into a technique of dot, dab and stitch strokes that would not only challenge ...
It’s called ‘Seurat and the Sea’, and it’s happening at the Courtauld Gallery in early 2026 ...
Things don’t always go as planned. Theatre Lawrence’s concert production of “Sunday in the Park with George” will explore the ...
A life-long artist and print maker ... It was made famous by Georges Seurat. Dots of color are placed on a surface and later mixed by the viewer’s eyes, creating the effect.
Sunday in the Park with George follows painter Georges Seurat in the months leading up to the completion of his most famous painting, "A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte." ...
a fire broke out in the Museum of Modern Art. Smoke quickly filled the building and it took firefighters an hour to contain the blaze. A retrospective of Post-Impressionist pioneer Georges Seurat ...
A foundational figure of the post-impressionists was Georges Seurat. The painter was one of the first to want to venture ...
Paris in the 1880s The Impressionists dominate the art scene but a brilliant new talent is about to emerge GeorgesPierre Seurat artist extraordinaire and father of Pointillism creates a style so ...
This is when Claude Monet’s masterful gaze settled on lilies and haystacks, and Georges Seurat’s on picnicking ... These layered events underpin the Frist Art Museum’s group exhibition ...
Narrator: Georges Seurat was born in Paris, in 1859 and started drawing when he was in school. In the school library, he found a book about drawing. This book inspired Seurat to look at art in a ...