Chrysanthemums, 1800
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Paul Cézanne
was born in Aix-en-Provence on January 19, 1839, the first child
and only son to Louis-Auguste Cézanne, a prosperous hatter,
and owner of the local bank. Cézanne received a classical
education and in 1856-7 began classes at the Free Drawing School
attached to the Musée d'Aix (now the Musée Granet).
His father wanted him to study law and become a banker, so bowing
to paternal pressure, he registered at the Aix law school in 1858.
However after three years he dropped out and headed for Paris
to pursue his interest in art, encouraged by his good friend Émile
Zola. In Paris Cézanne discovered he was technically inferior
to the other students at the Salon, and dejected, returned home
after 5 months. Back home he tried banking for a while, hated
it, and after bitter family quarrels his father finally gave him
an allowance to pursue painting and in 1862 he went back to Paris.
Never really comfortable in the city, Cézanne
moved back and forth between Paris and Aix for the next 10 years,
trying to find his artistic voice. Though he met and mixed with
artists such as Manet, Whistler, Degas and Renoir, he remained
essentially an outsider.
Basket of Apples, 1890-4
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By all accounts Cézanne
had a difficult personality and did not make friends easily. A
notable exception was Camille Pissarro who took Cézanne
under his wing and became a lifelong friend and influence on his
artistic development. His early work is characterized by mainly
dark themes, bizarre and violent scenes of fantasy, rape and murder;
in stark, somber colouring and heavy, thickly textured paintwork.
In 1859 Cézanne's father
bought Jas de Bouffan, a large farm on the outskirts of Aix, as
a family estate and this locale figured prominently in many of
Cézanne's earlier works.
In 1869 Cézanne met Marie-Hortense Fiquet, a model who
he eventually married in 1886. In 1872 Hortense bore his only
child, a son also named Paul, and at the instigation of Pissarro
they moved to Auvers. Pissarro and Cézanne
admired and respected each other's talent, had similar backgrounds
and views on art and were extremely hard-working. They frequently
painted together, mostly outdoors, learning and experimenting
with each other's techniques.
| The Museum of Modern Art hosted an interesting
exhibition June - September 2005, Pioneering Modern Painting:
Cézanne and Pissarro 18651885, a collection
of "mirror" paintings by the two artists - an example
can be seen below. |
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Cézanne
Côte, Saint-Denis, Pontoise,
1877
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Pissarro
Côte, Saint-Denis, Pontoise,
1877
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"Pioneering Modern Painting
presents the work of Paul Cézanne and Camille Pissarro
in the context of their artistic relationship. Features
approximately eighty paintings and eight drawings executed
by both artists as they worked side by side in Pontoise
and Auvers in Frances Oise River Valley". Visit
MoMA online exhibition
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Under the influence of Pissarro, Cézanne
began his "impressionist" phase. He now placed more
emphasis on a close observation of nature and the rendering of
light and atmospheric effects, producing works with a lighter
palette and freer brushwork, which he exhibited in Paris at the
impressionist exhibitions of 1874 and 1877.
In 1866 Emile Zola published his novel
The Masterpiece (L'Oeuvre), a semi-autobiographical account of
his relationship and friendship with Cézanne set amongst
the artistic fraternity. In the book his thinly disguised and
unflattering portrayal of Cézanne as a failed artist upset
Cézanne so much that he broke off the friendhip.
Later that same month Cézanne married Hortense, and in
October his father died; his inheritance finally giving him financial
independence. In 1895 the famous art dealer Ambroise Vollard organized
Cézanne's first solo exhibition of about 150 paintings
which Cézanne chose himself;
and he finally began to receive critical recognition and acclaim.
Further exhibitions at Vollard's gallery in 1904-06, established
his reputation as an artist of brilliance and his impact on younger
artists like Matisse and Picasso was recognized.
Trees in Park, Jas de Bouffan
c 1887
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By the mid 1880's Cézanne
had developed full artistic maturity, adopting what he called
his "constructive stroke" - a characteristic style in
which paint was applied in even colours in regular, hatchet strokes,
like a mosaic, meant to capture solid form rather than the fleeting
effects of light and shade rendered by the impressionists. During
the last decade of his life, Cézanne's paintings became
more simplified, the objects in his landscapes reduced to cylinders,
cones and spheres. Cézanne
felt all nature could be reduced to these 3 basic shapes, thus
anticipating cubist and abstract art.
In his striving for perfection he sometimes worked on the same
picture for years, never satisfied with the results, leaving many
unfinished, sometimes even destroying others. He seldom signed
his works, meaning to retouch or rework them later. Those he did
sign had his approval.
A significant event in Cézanne's last decade was the death
of his mother in 1897, which led to the sale of the Jas de Bouffan
in 1899. In 1902 he had a studio built in the outlying hills of
Les Lauves. It is from here that Cézanne began his portrayals
of Montagne Sainte-Victoire, a nearby landmark and one of his
signal themes. Another major theme, throughout his whole life,
was still lifes, of which he painted over 200 in his lifetime.
The Garden at Les Lauves, c 1906
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"By the time of his death (in Aix on October 22, 1906) he
had attained the status of a legendary figure, and his work had
begun to be shown and seen all over Europe. During his last years
many younger artists travelled to Aix to observe him at work and
to receive any words of wisdom he might offer. Both his style
and his theory remained mysterious and cryptic; he seemed to some
a naive primitive, while to others he was a sophisticated master
of technical procedure. The intensity of his colour, coupled with
the apparent rigor of his compositional organization, signalled
to most that, despite the artist's own frequent despair, he had
synthesized the basic expressive and representational elements
of painting in a highly original manner" (from MSN Encarta).
An online exhibition: Cézanne
in Provence, at National Gallery of Art, Jan - May 2006
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