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Paul Signac - Watercolors and Drawings

Don Fowler rates the current Paul Signac exhibition as the Hiroshima Museum of Art's best for quite some time, and urges any art-lovers out there to get down there before it's gone.

Paul Signac (1863-1935) was one of the founder members of the Salon des Independants, an organisation set up in 1884 to display the work of innovative artists whose work had been rejected by the official Salon. There he met Georges Seurat, whose Bathers at Asnieres had been rejected that very year, and together they went on to develop what came to be known as pointillism, a painstaking technique whereby dots of pure colour were applied to the canvas, avoiding "muddy mixtures" as Signac put it, to be blended by the viewer's eye.

Followers of the Impressionists, the pointillists were interested in contemporary theories of colour analysis and visual perception, particularly the discovery that colour was mixed on the retina, each spot of pure colour accompanied by "a halo of its complementary around it: orange rimmed with blue, for instance". Inspired by late nineteenth-century positivism and scientific optimism, they took Impressionist notions of "true" representation to more extreme lengths, in the process drawing flak from Gauguin, who dismissed the pointillists as "these chemists who pile up little dots". Lest this give the impression of a dry, academic artist, it should be said that the finished works defy their mode of composition in vivacity and artistic interest, and no less a figure than Pissaro, a fervent anarchist as was Signac, experienced a complete "conversion" to the style for a committed five year period. Even Gauguin, in spite of his scathing comments, is said to have had the "expressive possibilities of colour revealed to him" in the pictures of Seurat and Signac.

In any case, the exhibition currently being held at Hiroshima Museum of Art displays not early oil pointillist works but landscape watercolours of Signac's maturity, beautifully composed paintings that evoke the coastline of France with understated but supreme skill. In the words of Robert Hughes, "Paul Signac had what comparatively few artists - or people of any kind, for that matter - ever get: an enviably happy life, whose pleasures never reduced him to complacency". Born into a wealthy middle-class family he was free of the burden of making a living, but still managed to place himself at the centre of one of the most fertile periods in the history of art. He visited Van Gogh at Arles in 1889 and was hugely impressed by his late work; and Matisse (who Picasso later regarded as his only rival) came to stay with him in Saint-Tropez early in the twentieth century. Signac had discovered Saint-Tropez in 1892 when it was still nothing more than a small fishing village and moved there to continue his attempts to capture the effects of light. Significantly, Matisse was impressed by Signac's paintings of the bay and he travelled south again in 1905, this time to work with Derain in the coastal town of Coullioure. Together, they started to produce the works that provoked cries of les fauves but were displayed by Signac who, as president of the Salon des Independants (from 1908 to 1934) was active in encouraging and promoting innovative and radical artists of the day.

In the watercolours on exhibition in Motomachi, in keeping with his pointillist past, Signac favours dabs and washes of pure colour, but in contrast to the seamless precision of pointillism the paint in these pictures works in tandem with broad, rough strokes of his pencil. Standing in front of these works, one can almost feel the breeze or sense the rain in the air, even hear the colours in their lively, synaesthetic array. In fact the rhythmic beauty of these paintings can only be fully appreciated in their originals and since this is the first chance to see them in Japan, any art-lovers out there should make every effort to go.

Signac was a keen sailor, naming his beloved yacht Olympia in homage to Manet, and the many sea views testify to his love of the sea. A sense of vivified repose infuses the paintings, comparable to the mood that settles on the city-dweller who sits finally relaxed on a quayside. Starting en plein air, Signac re-worked his paintings in the studio with more attention to the play of colour than representative accuracy. The influence of Van Gogh, who Signac much admired, is strongly evident in the earlier, less so in the later works where the style is very much his own. Signac's painting is more composed, in both senses of the word, than the impassioned Dutchman, but by no means is it merely eyeball-pleasing: reproductions really do not do the paintings justice.

It would be difficult to come up with a more contrasting set of images from the same era than the monochrome Rouaults that greet the viewer who returns to ground level. The power and agony of his Miserere works send the heart on a swift rebound, plummeting into the depths of human suffering. Be warned but don't be put off! From the open, colourful landscapes (apart from a few sepia monochromes) of Signac to the tormented realm of Rouault: figures tightly boxed within the frame. From the play of colour to solid, sculptural forms, inspired more by statuary than the evanescence of animate figures, the void of their black eye sockets unchanging whether living, slain or, literally, skeletal. The Rouault room can only be seen as a huge bonus, the unlikely pairing making this the best exhibition at Hiroshima Museum of Art for quite a while, but visitors may wish to refresh themselves with another stroll through the delightful sights of Signac before heading out into the streets.

The exhibition only runs until May 6th. Be careful not to miss it.



Don Fowler 04/2002
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