Radical Harmony Helene Kröller-Müller's Neo-Impressionists
Glorious exhibition at the National Gallery of the Neo-Impressionist collection of Helene Kröller-Müller.
This show included many beautiful paintings. The Neo-Impressionists are the artists we might think of as pointillists which is s a style, I am fond of so I was so excited to see so many of the works together. The subjects were much broader than I expected. I tend to think of the pictures as landscapes, but I loved a room of portraits.
I expected to see Signac and Seurat but new finds included the Belgium artist Theo van Rysselberghe and my favourite work in the show was this picture by him of five women in a garden. I love the way you can't see their faces.
A lovely touch was to include two paintings inspired by works by Millet as there is also a small exhibition of his work in the gallery at the moment. These included a Van Gogh who wasn't a Neo-Impressionists but experimented with some of the techniques and he visited Seurat's studio.
This is a show that works on two levels. Knowing more about the ideas and artists enhances the show but you can also just walk round it revelling in the beauty of the paintings and the sense of colour and calm.
It was also lovely to be back in the exhibition spaces of the Sainsbury Wing and they were beautifully decorated in pale grey and purple to reflect Kröller-Müller's museum and the colour theories of the artists. A shout out too to the lovely frames used by Kröller-Müller. I had fun spotting them around the show.
Closes 8 February 2026
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