Study for "A Sunday on La Grande Jatte"
Georges Seurat, 1884
About this artwork
Georges Seurat's *Study for "A Sunday La Grande Jatte"*1884) is a captivating oil-on-canvas preparatory work for one of the most iconic paintings in modern art. Created during a pivotal moment in French Impressionism's evolution, this 27 3/4 x 41-inch sketch captures a leisurely scene on the Island of La Grande Jatte the Seine River near Paris. Seurat meticulously composed groups of men, women,, dogs, and even monkeys—evoking the bourgeois Sunday outings of 1880s Parisians—blending everyday recreation with a sense of timeless harmony. As a pioneer of Pointillism (or Divisionism), Seurat applied small dabs of color to build form and light through optical mixing, though this study shows a freer, more fluid brushwork than the final masterpiece at the Art Institute of Chicago. Housed in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's European Paintings department (Bequest of Sam A. Lewisohn, 1951), it reveals the artist's methodical process: dozens of studies like this refined his groundbreaking technique, revolutionizing how light and color interact on canvas. This piece not only showcases Seurat's scientific approach to art—inspired by optics and color theory—but also reflects the cultural shift toward modern urban leisure, inviting viewers to ponder the poised elegance of 19th-century life along the riverbanks.