Discover Paul Cézanne's fruits in his famous paintings. A precursor of Cubism and Futurism who revolutionized still lifes.
Paul Cezanne's famous paintings in included many still lifes, which were innovative in his style and approach to the canvas. While he infrequently exhibited until the 1890s, there was renewed interest in his work by curators and critics during this decade of his life as styles and trends chan...
保罗·塞尚(Paul Cezanne)高清作品《绿帽子的女人(塞尚女士)》 作品名:绿帽子的女人(塞尚女士) 艺术家:保罗·塞尚 年代:1894—1895 风格:后印象派 类型:肖像 材质:布面油彩 尺寸:100.3 81.3厘米x 收藏:巴尼斯基金会,下梅里翁,PA,美国 塞尚不像他那个时代的其他许多画家只画一个构图领域,他擅长许多构图领域,...
While Cézanne painted as large a variety of subjects as any of his fellow Impressionists, the number of his flower paintings is relatively few--about 35 oils and 20 watercolors--when compared to those of Monet or Renoir, or in relation to his own still-lifes of other objects. Because they...
(Montagne le Victoire at Dusk, c. 1905, Pushkin Museum, Moscow). His colors helped define spatial planes, which the artist combined harmoniously with precise line and clarity of composition. In his still lifes Cézanne brought out the plastic richness of the objective world, stressing the ...
Cézanne's depictions of Vallier have often been interpreted as a poignant meditation on mortality, much like the still-lifes of skulls that the artist painted during his last years. The portraits show the gardener as dignified yet work-worn, his hands gnarled, his shoulders slumped, his beard...
Despite these challenges, Cezanne found solace in art. His still lifes were famous for evoking a sense of place and exploring correspondences among objects. He often shifted between euphoria and despair, but had close confidantes like Émile Zola who listened to him in times of need. ...
Unlike other artists, Cézanne painted all subject matter: still lifes, landscapes, bathers, and things from his imagination. No matter what he painted though, Paul was a devout Catholic, and his religion influenced his work. “When I judge art, I take my painting and put it next to a Go...
Though he is predominantly renowned for his mountainous landscapes and still lifes that play with perspective, French Post-Impressionist painter Paul Cézanne also often painted portraits. Sometimes, as in the case of Self Portrait, he even depicted himself. Created from 1878 through 1880, this piece...
Cézanne sought to “recreate nature” by simplifying forms to their basic geometric equivalents, utilizing contrasts of 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 Kitc...