AFTER THE IMPRESSIONISTS TALK 4: SEURAT

Part of our Change Makers season of events

This event is at the Museum in the Headley Lecture Theatre and online via Zoom

It is the fourth in our series of talks on Post-Impressionists as Change Makers


With Juliet Heslewood, art historian and author

The first Impressionist exhibition was in 1874 and caused disruption in the Parisian art world. By the end of the century artists had explored its innovations, liberating them from the conventions of the past. Their dramatic changes, achieved out of the movement, would have wide-spread repercussions, establishing Paris as the centre of the modern European stage.

In this talk, Juliet discusses how Georges Seurat chose to reduce the swift, visible brushstroke a tiny dot that may have been entirely unspontaneous, but encouraged Impressionists such as Pissarro to radically change their style.

Seurat died young, but through his contemporaries Signac and Van Gogh, 'Pointillism' survived.
 

Young Woman Powdering Herself, Georges Seurat, (1888-90) © The Courtauld, London

Young Woman Powdering Herself, Georges Seurat, (1888-90) © The Courtauld, London


BOOKING

This event takes place in-person at the Headley Lecture Theatre and online via Zoom.

Tickets are £8

BOOK YOUR IN-PERSON TICKET    BOOK YOUR ONLINE TICKET

If you have any questions, please email us at publicprogrammes@ashmus.ox.ac.uk