His best-known works are
Bathers, 1883, 201x301 cm
A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of Grande Jatte, 1884, 205x308 cm
The Models, 1886, 178x185cm
Circus Parade, 1888, 100x150 cm
Woman Powdering Herself, 1889, 94x80 cm
Le Chahut, 1890, 171x140 cm
The Circus, 1891, 185x150 cm
Bridge at Port-en-Bessin, 1888, 67x85 cm
View of Port-en-Bessin, 1888, 65x81 cm
Click link below! You will see a few of his paintings. Between them are titles in blue to be clicked.
His subjects were people and landscapes, this did not change.
There is no Seurat painting of that name.
He worked in Paris.
Seurat's painting style is usually called Pointillism.
He used oil.
Georges SEURAT has written: 'Georges Seurat'
Oil paint for paintings, coal for drawings.
Georges-Pierre Seurat.
He did not give us that information.
In 1879 Seurat left the École des Beaux-Arts and rented a studio together with his friends Aman-Jean and Ernest Laurent.
The artist that developed a style called pointillism was Georges Seurat. This technique referred to the way that paint was applied to the canvas, and how it was composed of thousands of dots, making it look like points.
As a painter, Georges Seurat (along with Signac) pioneered the use of Pointillism.
Georges Seurat began to study art at the age of eighteen.