Genève
Technique: Giclée quality print
Recommended by our customers
More about this artwork
The painting titled "Genève" by Paul Signac beautifully captures a picturesque view of Geneva, Switzerland. This artwork, dating from 1919, exhibits Signac's characteristic style where he employs vivid colors and emphasis on light through delicate brushstrokes, despite it being a little looser and more fluid than his typical pointillist technique.In the foreground, we notice a visually engaging landscape featuring lush greenery and patches of bright colors, perhaps representing blooming flowers or cultivated land. This area uniquely transitions into the serene blue of Lake Geneva, dotted with subtle hints of orange and purple that might suggest either reflections or activity on the water.Towards the middle of the composition, a panoramic view of the city of Geneva unfolds. Notably, the city skyline is punctuated by the silhouette of Saint Pierre Cathedral, recognizable by its tall, spired architecture which dominates this part of the scene. The cathedral and surrounding buildings are rendered in darker hues, contrasting strikingly against the light sky behind it, symbolizing perhaps the historical and cultural significance of the city.The background is comprised of gentle mountains that cradle the city, drawn with soft, bluish outlines and interspersed with patches of purple and green shadows that give depth to the vista.
Delivery
Returns
Paul Signac (1863-1935) was a French Neo-Impressionist painter. Together with Georges Seurat, Signac developed the Pointillism style. He was a passionate sailor, bringing back watercolor sketches of ports and nature from his travels, then turning them into large studio canvases with mosaic-like squares of color. He abandoned the short brushstrokes and intuitive dabs of color of the impressionists for a more exact scientific approach to applying dots with the intention to combine and blend not on the canvas, but in the viewer's eye.