CÉZANNE, PAUL

pōl sāzänˈ, 1839–1906, French painter, b. Aix-en-Provence. Cézanne was the leading figure in the revolution toward abstraction in modern painting.

Early Life and Work

From early childhood Cézanne was a close friend of Émile Zola, who for a time encouraged the painter in his work. Cézanne went to Paris in 1861; there he met Pissarro, who strongly influenced his development. He divided his time between Provence and the environs of Paris until his retirement to Aix in 1899. Cézanne's early work is marked by a heavy use of the palette knife, from which he created thickly textured and violently deformed shapes and scenes of a fantastic, dreamlike quality. Although these impulsive paintings exhibit few of the features of his later style, they anticipate the expressionist idiom of the 20th cent.

Through Pissarro, Cézanne came to know Manet and the impressionist painters (see impressionism). He was concerned, after 1870, with the use of color to create perspective, but the steady, diffused light in his works is utterly unrelated to the impressionist preoccupation with transitory light effects. House of the Hanged Man (1873–74; Louvre) is characteristic of his impressionist period. He exhibited at the group's show of 1874 but later diverged from the impressionist style and developed a firmer structure in his paintings.

Mature Work

Cézanne sought to "recreate nature" by simplifying forms to their basic geometric equivalents, utilizing color and considerable distortion to express the essence of landscape (e.g., Mont Sainte-Victoire, 1885–87, Phillips Coll., Washington, D.C.), still lifes (e.g., The Kitchen Table, 1888–90, Louvre), and figural groupings (e.g., The Card Players, 1890–92; one version, S.C. Clark Coll., New York City). His portraits are vital studies of character, e.g., Madame Cézanne (c.1885; S. S. and V. White Coll., Ardmore, Pa.) and Ambroise Vollard (Musée du Petit Palais, Paris).

Cézanne developed a new type of spatial pattern. Instead of adhering to the traditional focalized system of perspective, he portrayed objects from shifting viewpoints. He created vibrating surface effects from the play of flat planes against one another and from the subtle transitions of tone and color. In all his work he revealed a reverence for the integrity and dignity of simple forms by rendering them with an almost classical structural stability. His Bathers (1898–1905; Philadelphia Mus. of Art) is the monumental embodiment of a number of Cézanne's visual systems.

The artist's later works are largely still lifes (among them his famous apples), male figures, and recurring landscape subjects. While retaining a solid substructure, they seem freer and more spontaneous and employ more transparent painterly effects than earlier works. Cézanne worked in oil, watercolor, and drawing media, often making several versions of his works.

Influence and Collections

Cézanne's influence on the course of modern art, particularly on the development of cubism, is enormous and profound. His theories spawned a whole new school of aesthetic criticism, especially in England, that has ranked him among the foremost French masters. There are fine collections of his paintings in the Louvre; the Metropolitan Museum and the Museum of Modern Art, New York City; and the Barnes Foundation, Merion, Pa.

Bibliography

See his letters, ed. by J. Rewald (tr. 1941); his drawings, ed. by A. Chappuis (1973); his watercolors, ed. by T. Reff (1963); catalogues raisonnés by A. Chappuis (2 vol., tr. 1973) and J. Rewald (2 vol., 1997); biographies by J. Lindsay (1969) and J. Rewald (new ed. 1986); studies by M. Schapiro (2d ed. 1962), W. Andersen (1970), S. Geist (1988), R. Fry (new ed. 1989), and F. Cachin, I. Cahn, H. Layrette, and J. J. Rishel (1996).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: CEzanne Paul  - 881 results

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...Indispensable for the study of Cezanne is the catalogue of his works by Lionello Venturi, Cezanne, son art, son oeuvre 2 volumes, Paris, Paul Rosenberg, 1936, 1600...taken from Gerstle Mack, Paul Cezanne New York, Knopf, 1935...
...parallele a la nature ." Paul Cezanne, quoted by M. Joachim...in our own minds. For Cezanne has not come to us directly...why Jesus implies St. Paul; why St. Francis must have his brother Elias; why Cezanne already before his death...
...His Niece to Raphael Ingres , 163 Card Players series Cezanne , 435 , 680 Caricature, La, 232 , 233 Carolus-Duran...176 Cervara in the Roman Campagna, La Corot , 202 Cezanne, Paul, 184 , 205 , 263 , 271 , 272 , 279 , 281 , 285 , 286...
...54 Finding of Moses 284 Canvas, 91.5 O 132 36 O 52 By courtesy of the Trustees of the National Gallery, London CEZANNE, PAUL 1839- 1906 Card players 548 Canvas, 65 O 81 25 5/8 O 31 7/8 The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York Bequest...
...have been thought possible. II I cant agree with those who call Paul Cezanne the "Nietzsche of painting," because Nietzsche is brilliant and original while the fundamental qualities of Cezanne are sincerity,
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journal articles on: CEzanne Paul  - 189 results

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...in E. Bernard, Souvenirs sur Paul Cezanne (Paris, 1912), 372-97; and...12), 29; and S. Le Salyen, Paul Cezanne, Memorial dAix (28 October 1906...7. (45.) See E. Bernard, Paul Cezanne, in Les Hommes daujourdhui (Paris...
Hemingways debt to Cezanne: new perspectives by Theodore L...confided to Lillian Ross that it was from Paul Cezanne that he had learned how to construct...Paintings of Ernest Hemingway and Paul Cezanne" Hemingway Repossessed. Ed. Kenneth...
...Merleau-ponty and Cezanne by Theodore A. Toadvine...collaborated with Jean-Paul Same to found Les Temps...doubt" peculiar to Cezanne. In the second part...his relation to Jean-Paul Sartre. Giacometti...of Merleau-Ponty and Cezanne, and it is within the...
...Philadelphia: Philadelphia Museum of Art, 1996. Cezanne, Paul. Paul Cezanne: Letters. Ed. John Rewald. Trans. Marguerite...Academy of Arts, 1988. Krumrine, Mary Louise. Paul Cezanne: The Bathers. New York: Thames Hudson, 1990...
Cezanne and Delacroixs Posthumous...photograph of 1894 shows Paul Cezanne in his Paris studio at work...1880s and, in the company of Cezanne, at the foot of the Mont...Victoire. Vincent van Gogh and Paul Gauguin were in Aries in...
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magazine articles on: CEzanne Paul  - 222 results

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Cezanne Pissarro: A Crucial Friendship. by Karen Wilkin You can blame Paul Cezanne for most of the great upheaval...identities. To Henri Matisse, Cezanne was "the father of us all," to Paul Klee, "the teacher par excellence...
...Centennial Celebration of Cezanne: The Innovative Pioneer...NURTURED the life and art of Paul Cezanne like no other place...on a high hill, where Cezanne lived for a short time...and their young son Paul. The towns cascade of...
...shows have become the norm, the Cezanne exhibit at the Philadelphia Museum...original artist. Late in life, Paul Cezanne claimed that he had always worked...forms that anticipated the way Paul Cezanne arranged space. Other painters...
Cezanne Beyond. IN 1907, THE FRENCH painter Paul Cezannes posthumous retrospective...experimentation of European modernism. Cezanne (1839-1906) became for Henri...OMITTED ILLUSTRATION OMITTED "Cezanne Beyond" examines the seismic shift...
Cezanne in Provence. by Karen Wilkin When Paul Cezanne died in October 1906, aged sixty-seven (he was born...Caillebotte collection, on view after years of wrangling. Cezanne presented the first challenge to the entrenched traditions...
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newspaper articles on: CEzanne Paul  - 147 results

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...in anticipation of the Year of Paul Cezanne, which begins tomorrow in observance...Mediterranean from the south. Exquisite. Paul Cezanne was born in Aix on Jan. 19, 1839...perched on hilltops. In 2006, Paul Cezanne is the star of Provence, but the...
...artists in the world. The work of Paul Cezanne, Claude Monet and Auguste Rodin...chapter on Hortense Fiquet and Paul Cezanne is equally fascinating. There...Hortense, Paul Cezannes wife. Paul Cezanne, Mme Cezanne in a Red Armchair...
...could be looking at the first-ever Cezanne painting. To say Im excited would...people come in and say theyve got a Cezanne, you tend to think, "Of course...uk GENIUSS LONG WAIT FOR SUCCESS PAUL Cezanne, left, was born in 1839 in Aix...
Police in Hunt for Cezanne Raiders. POLICE were last night hunting...million painting by French impressionist Paul Cezanne from the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford...landscape featuring the town where Cezanne lived for a short time, was painted...
...Colorful Preview of Provencal Paul Cezanne. Byline: Ann Geracimos...offering the very presence of Paul Cezanne?" The Provence of Cezanne...admired the exhibition of Paul Cezannes works at the...grandchildren, Philippe and Aline Cezanne, were among the many...
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encyclopedia articles on: CEzanne Paul  - 5 results

 
 
CEZANNE, PAUL pol sazan , 1839 1906, French painter, b. Aix-en-Provence. Cezanne was the leading figure in the revolution...Early Life and Work From early childhood Cezanne was a close friend of Emile Zola , who...
KLEE, PAUL poul kla, 1879 1940, Swiss painter, graphic...Beardsley , Goya , Ensor , and, especially, Cezanne . In 1911 he became associated with the...and some 4,000 of his works are in the Paul Klee Center, Bern. See his notebooks...
...revived, as in the work of Ezra Pound and T. S. Eliot. Abstracted classical elements can be found in the paintings of Paul Cezanne and Pablo Picasso, and in the architecture of Ludwig Mies van der Rohe. A more overt classicism has found renewed...
...emotional intensity (see postimpressionism ). At the same time, Cezanne painted subtler nuances of tone and sought to achieve greater...the Bauhaus in the 1920s. Kandinsky, the highly imaginative Paul Klee , and the American Lyonel Feininger were among the celebrated...
...Rowlandson, Cozens, Girtin, Bonington, Cotman, and John and Paul Nash were also celebrated for their use of the technique. Many...French artists Daumier, Delacroix, and Gericault, and later, Cezanne, Signac, and Dufy, employed aquarelle to a large extent...


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