Georges Seurat's powerful presence as the leader of Neo-Impressionism resonated among artists for decades. Charles Angrand's self-portrait (1975.1.566) bears a striking resemblance to Seurat's shadowy sheets drawn in black crayon (55.21.1; 61.101.16). Henri-Edmond Cross and Hippolyte Petitjean adapted the Divisionist technique to watercolor painting. In Saint-Clair, a village on the Côte d'Azur near Saint-Tropez, Cross painted radiant landscapes in watercolor, using a vivid palette of saturated color in mosaic-like brush marks (48.10.7). Petitjean's watercolors mastered the art of Pointillism to decorative perfection (1975.1.681). In the early twentieth century, Fauve artists turned to Seurat's technique for purity of color. Even abstract painters Mondrian and Kandinsky practiced Pointillism.