Sunday in the Island of La Grande Jatte





Georges Seurat

This is the painting around which the entire musical, Sunday in the Park with George, was created. The people in the picture are the characters in the musical. The set is a 3-dimensional reproduction of the painting. The story is about the artist's life as he was creating this masterpiece and about his work on the painting.

The original of the painting is in the Art Institute of Chicago (AIC). The AIC is about one mile from the Amtrak station in Chicago, bordering Millenium Park. It is open until 9 pm on Thursdays and is free from 5 to 9 pm.

Here is a link to the map from the Amtrak station to the AIC:

About the Painting:

Influenced by the Impressionists’ experimentation with color, Postimpressionistpainter Georges Seurat worked with innovative techniques. On an enormous canvas, the artist depicted city dwellers gathered at a park on La Grande Jatte(literally, "the big platter"), an island in the River Seine. All kinds of people stroll, lounge, sail, and fish in the park.

Using newly discovered optical and color theories, Seurat rendered his subject by placing tiny, precise brush strokes of different colors close to one another so that they blend at a distance. Art critics subsequently named this technique Divisionism, or Pointillism. The artist visited La Grande Jatte many times, making drawings and more than 30 oil sketches to prepare for the final work. With his precise method and technique, Seurat conceived of his painting as a reform of Impressionism. The precise contours, geometric shapes, and measured proportions and distances in Seurat’s masterpiece (not to mention its monumental size) contrast significantly with the small, spontaneous canvases of Impressionism.

Over the past several decades, many scholars have attempted to explain the meaning of this great composition. For some, it shows the growing middle class at leisure. Others see it as a representation of social tensions between modern city dwellers of different social classes, all of whom gather in the same public space but do not communicate or interact.