Sunday at the Park with George: An Ode to the Trade-offs We Make from the Eyes of a Painter | The Odyssey Online
Start writing a post

Sunday at the Park with George: An Ode to the Trade-offs We Make from the Eyes of a Painter

A theater review of "Sunday at the Park with George", a play about the French painter George Seurat

23
Sunday at the Park with George: An Ode to the Trade-offs We Make from the Eyes of a Painter



George freezing a scene for his painting in time, Sunday in the Park with George Broadway Remake



Anyone who has ever got to know an artist personally may find solidarity in the impression that is repeatedly sung in the musical, Sunday in the Park with George that "Artists are bizarre". A short introduction at the beginning of the video tells us that this work of historical fiction tells us of "what little we know" about George Seurat. Yet just as his painting requires people to look closer, we see through the eyes of his lover along with other characters that George is much more complex than that.

Sunday in the Park with George by Stephen Soundheim and James Lapine is a Pulitzer Prize winner, nominated for ten Tony Awards, starring Tony Award winners, Best Actor and Actress, Mandy Patinkin and Bernadette Peters. It opened at the Booth Theater on May 2, 1985 with 35 previews and 604 performances before closing on October 13. It was later remade by Broadway with Jake Gyllenhaal and Annaleigh Ashford.

The story follows George in the months he pours into finishing a painting he called A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte, which eventually became the work he was most known for. In his stubborn preoccupation to "finish the hat" ("there never was a hat") and perfect a new style he would later on introduce as pointillism, George "alienates the French bourgeoisie, spurns his fellow artists, and neglects his lover, not realizing that his actions will reverberate over the next 100 years" (Vine, 2019).

The French Bourgeoisie

George drawing a portrait of a boatman

George painted people from all walks of life, even when they didn't understand what he was doing to the point of gossiping about him. Even when the scene was chaotic, he found something worth painting about what he saw. "Pretty isn't beautiful, Mother. Pretty is what changes. What the eye arranges-- is what is beautiful." The standard for what is pretty changes over time. Beauty, however, isn't always obvious, but one can decide to see what is beautiful.

His Fellow Artists

Goerge's fellow artist and critics

Early on in the play, one of the first things we learn about George is of his strict work ethic and discipline marked by his understanding of the fundamentals of art. He may seem like nothing more than a passive observer to just about every character in the play, yet his encounter with his adversary in the art world tells us that not for one moment did he mind that no one understood him or his vision.

"Work is what I do for others. Art is what I do for myself." - George

In one scene, he patiently describes pointillism to another artist through his discovery in color theory. Instead of mixing colors, he dots the canvas with colors placed in very close proximity to each other. From the viewer's perspective, the colors blend at a certain distance. One is only able to distinguish the colors from each other up close. When the other artist feigned jaded uninterest to mask his envy, George was unfazed. His reaction? "Anything you do. Let it come from you. Then it will be new." This tells us that he wasn't just painting to showcase his innovation or to prove himself to the people around him. His true concern wasn't so much about originality, but authenticity.

Dot

George with Dot

Finally, his lover, endearingly nicknamed Dot, is the one who suffers most throughout the play. After having enough of his neglect, deciding she can no longer beg for his time and attention, she ends up with Louis, the baker whom everyone loves. George however is far from forgotten.

"We lose things, and then we choose things"; "I chose and my world was shaken, so what? The choice may have been mistaken; the choosing was not." ― Dot

The decision has been made for George who confesses his feelings for Dot when it was already too late:

"I cannot divide my feelings up as neatly as you, and I am not hiding behind my canvas - I am living in it! I am what I do. Which you knew. Which you always knew. What I thought you were a part of!"

Marie with his grandson, George

Sunday in the Park with George is a poignant musical about the trade-offs we must make in life, and how we won't always know where our choices will take us. Nevertheless, we must move on and believe in the sincerity of our vision. As Dot's daughter Marie said, "There are only two worthwhile things to leave behind when you depart this world of ours - children and art".



Source:

Soundheim, S. (1986). [Video]. Retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fUdfHcfjsPM

Report this Content
This article has not been reviewed by Odyssey HQ and solely reflects the ideas and opinions of the creator.
Entertainment

Every Girl Needs To Listen To 'She Used To Be Mine' By Sara Bareilles

These powerful lyrics remind us how much good is inside each of us and that sometimes we are too blinded by our imperfections to see the other side of the coin, to see all of that good.

389322
Every Girl Needs To Listen To 'She Used To Be Mine' By Sara Bareilles

The song was sent to me late in the middle of the night. I was still awake enough to plug in my headphones and listen to it immediately. I always did this when my best friend sent me songs, never wasting a moment. She had sent a message with this one too, telling me it reminded her so much of both of us and what we have each been through in the past couple of months.

Keep Reading...Show less
Zodiac wheel with signs and symbols surrounding a central sun against a starry sky.

What's your sign? It's one of the first questions some of us are asked when approached by someone in a bar, at a party or even when having lunch with some of our friends. Astrology, for centuries, has been one of the largest phenomenons out there. There's a reason why many magazines and newspapers have a horoscope page, and there's also a reason why almost every bookstore or library has a section dedicated completely to astrology. Many of us could just be curious about why some of us act differently than others and whom we will get along with best, and others may just want to see if their sign does, in fact, match their personality.

Keep Reading...Show less
Entertainment

20 Song Lyrics To Put A Spring Into Your Instagram Captions

"On an island in the sun, We'll be playing and having fun"

259418
Person in front of neon musical instruments; glowing red and white lights.
Photo by Spencer Imbrock on Unsplash

Whenever I post a picture to Instagram, it takes me so long to come up with a caption. I want to be funny, clever, cute and direct all at the same time. It can be frustrating! So I just look for some online. I really like to find a song lyric that goes with my picture, I just feel like it gives the picture a certain vibe.

Here's a list of song lyrics that can go with any picture you want to post!

Keep Reading...Show less
Chalk drawing of scales weighing "good" and "bad" on a blackboard.
WP content

Being a good person does not depend on your religion or status in life, your race or skin color, political views or culture. It depends on how good you treat others.

We are all born to do something great. Whether that be to grow up and become a doctor and save the lives of thousands of people, run a marathon, win the Noble Peace Prize, or be the greatest mother or father for your own future children one day. Regardless, we are all born with a purpose. But in between birth and death lies a path that life paves for us; a path that we must fill with something that gives our lives meaning.

Keep Reading...Show less

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Facebook Comments