This is the second post on this exhibition. You can see the first post here . As always, I am including the introduction in this second post - if you don't want to read it again, go down to the first picture.
A wonderful exhibition, which gave me great pleasure. Firstly because it was great seeing paintings that I had seen before and loved. Secondly because some of it was new to me, and this includes artists I had not come across before.
The ensemble of eighty three works of forty five artists, mostly paintings, which is on loan from a Swiss private collection, was assembled over three generations, affording us the opportunity to retrace the history of modern art from the 1880s until the present day.
Most of the major movements, currents and trends that have marked the evolution of painting are touched upon here in varying degrees of detail: Impressionism, Symbolism, Neo-Impressionism, Post-Impressionism, Japonisme, Synthetism, the Nabis, Fauvism, Expressionism, Cubism, Surrealism, Abstract Expressionism and Pop Art. They reflect the increasing changes imposed on perspective, colour and figuration, as well as the historical context in which they were conceived.

Neo-Impressionism:
The 8th Impressionist exhibition of 1886 marked both the end of this shared adventure and its renewal through the contribution of young artists with a different vision. On that occasion, Georges Seurat exhibited his monumental A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte, the very first Neo-Impressionist work as it was designated by Felix Feneon. He was joined in this initiative by Paul Signac, along with Camille and Lucien Pissaro.
Numerous other artists became affiliated with the movement and following the untimely death of Seurat, it was Signac who became the head.
Paul Signac, Avignon, Morning
Paul Signac, Saint-Tropez, After the Storm, 1895, (oil on canvas)
Paul Signac, Asnieres
Paul Signac, Clichy Wharf
In 1887, Signac embarked upon a series of works characteristic of his first Divisionist period. Similar to dots, his brush marks precisely depict the Clichy Wharf.
Paul Signac, Juan-les-Pins, Evening, 1914
Two versions of this work, a preparatory ink study on cardboard, and the subsequent oil painting.
Paul Signac, Saint-Tropez, Place des Lices, 1905, (watercolour enhanced with pen and ink on paper)
Paul Signac, Still Life (Composition with Lemons), 1918, (watercolour on paper)
Henri-Edmond Cross, Cap Negre
Henri-Edmond Cross
Maximilien Luce, The Coffee, 1892, (oil on canvas)
Here Luce treated a subject he was partial to, that of the life of the working class, and painted a contemporary genre painting.
Maximilien Luce, The Steelworks, 1899, (oil on canvas)
Maximilien Luce, Quai de l'Ecole, Paris, Evening, 1889, (oil on canvas)
Louis Hayet, two small oil paintings, conceived as pendants.
Achile Lauge, Tree in Blossom
Leon Pourtau, Beach Scene
Beach scene was plainly inspired by the emblematic A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte by Georges Seurat. The suburban idyll imaged by Seurat has been transposed here to a beach in Normandy.
Lucien Pissarro, Gouvernes, near Lagny, 1888, (oil on canvas)
Theo van Rysselberghe, Canal in Flanders in Gloomy Weather, 1894, (oil on canvas)
Theo van Rysselberghe, Kalf's Mill, 1894, (oil on canvas)
Post-Impressionism:
The term Post-Impressionism characterises a period of modern art rather than any precise artistic movement. Coined by Roger Fry in 1910, it served to designate all the avant-garde trends that were developing in parallel in Paris on the margins of the gradual dissolution of the Impressionist group.
Paul Gauguin, Henri Toulouse-Lautrec and Vincent van Gogh are today the most illustrious Post-Impressionists. By expanding the horizons opened by their predecessors, they laid claim to a subjectivity in their painting that ignored all convention.
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, The Clowness at the Moulin-Rouge, 1897, (lithograph in crayon, pencil and splatter, printed in six colours)
Paul Gauguin, Words of the Devil, 1894, (monotype heightened with watercolour and gouache on Simili Japon paper)
Louis Anquetin, Interior of Bruant's club: The Mirliton, 1886-87, (oil on canvas)
Among the numerous venues enlivening Parisian nightlife, Louis Anquetin chose to represent the Mirliton, the notorious cabaret founded by Aristide Bruant. Here he gathered together, from left ro right, Francois Gauzi, Emile Bernard, Marie Valette, Louis Weber, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Marcel Legay and Bruant himself.
Louis Valtat, Mothers at the Bois de Bouloghe, 1903, (oil on canvas)
Louis Anquetin, 1887
In 1887 Anquetin's style developed radically. Forms were simplified, flat patches of bold colours were outlined in thick black contours that evoke both Medieval stained glass and enamels as well as Japanese woodcut prints. He influenced Vincent van Gogh, who drew inspiration from this composition for his Terrace of a Cafe at Night at Arles in 1888.