The term Post-Impressionism was coined in 1910 to describe a loose grouping of artists who used techniques of impressionism but developed their own unique styles. These artists wanted to combine the immediacy of impressionism with more traditional composition, and either focused on design or emotion in their works. One influential Post-Impressionist was Georges Seurat, whose large painting A Sunday Afternoon on La Grande Jatte from 1884 is an example of his Pointillism technique where small dots of primary colors and black and white are optically mixed from a distance to form the scene and colors.