Paul Victor Jules Signac (French: [pɔl siɲak]; 11 November 1863 – 15 August 1935) was a French Neo-Impressionist painter who, working with Georges Seurat, helped develop the Pointillist style.
Art is a creation of a higher order than a copy of nature which is governed by chance. . . . By the elimination of all muddy colors, by the exclusive use of optical mixture of pure colors, by a methodical divisionism and a strict observation of the scientific theory of colors, the neo-impressionists insures a maximum of luminosity, of color intensity, and of harmony- a result that has never yet been obtained.
The art of the colorist has in some ways elements of mathematics and music.
The golden age has not passed; it lies in the future.
Vuillard balances too far on the side of fantasy. . . the people in his pictures are not properly defined. As he's an admirable draughtsman it must be that he just doesn't want to give them mouths and hands and feet.
The anarchist painter is not the one who will create anarchist pictures, but the one who will fight with all his individuality against official conventions.
Bill Walton
Brigid Schulte
Marco Polo
Ken Ludwig
Fabio Novembre
Margarita Engle
Fran Kranz
Jessica Stroup
Talaat Pasha
Robert Novak
Alice Liddell
Bernard Lewis