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 preparatory oil sketch on wood, measuring just 1/8 × 9 1/2 inches. Created as part of the artist's rigorous process for his monumental masterpiece *A Sunday Afternoon on the of La Grande Jatte1884* (now at the Art Institute of Chicago), this panel captures a serene park scene on the Seine River island near Paris. Seurat meticulously studied figures, poses, and light effects outdoors, reflecting the leisurely bourgeois life of 1880s France amid rapid industrialization. A pioneer of Pointillism and Divisionism—a Post-Impressionist technique where pure colors are applied in tiny dots to blend optically in the viewer's eye—this study showcases Seurat's innovative method in nascent form. Unlike the final canvas's thousands of precise dots, this oil sketch reveals looser brushwork and tonal modeling, bridging Impressionist spontaneity with scientific precision. Seurat produced over 60 such studies, emphasizing his analytical approach to color theory and composition. Housed in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Robert Lehman Collection since 1975, this intimate work invites visitors to glimpse the genius behind one of modern art's icons. It highlights how Seurat transformed everyday park outings into a timeless meditation on modern leisure and visual harmony. (198 words)