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Paul Czanne 18391906 Anna Barskaya Yevgenia Georgievskaya

  • SKU: BELL-10817662
Paul Czanne 18391906 Anna Barskaya Yevgenia Georgievskaya
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Paul Czanne 18391906 Anna Barskaya Yevgenia Georgievskaya instant download after payment.

Publisher: Parkstone International
File Extension: PDF
File size: 34 MB
Pages: 160
Author: Anna Barskaya, Yevgenia Georgievskaya
ISBN: 9781780422909, 1780422903
Language: English
Year: 2011

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Paul Czanne 18391906 Anna Barskaya Yevgenia Georgievskaya by Anna Barskaya, Yevgenia Georgievskaya 9781780422909, 1780422903 instant download after payment.

Since his death 200 years ago, Cézanne has become the most famous painter of the nineteenth century. He was born in Aix-en-Provence in 1839 and the happiest period of his life was his early youth in Provence, in company with Emile Zolá, another Italian. Following Zolá’s example, Cézanne went to Paris in his twenty-first year. During the Franco-Prussian war he deserted the military, dividing his time between open-air painting and the studio. He said to Vollard, an art dealer, “I’m only a painter. Parisian wit gives me a pain. Painting nudes on the banks of the Arc [a river near Aix] is all I could ask for.” Encouraged by Renoir, one of the first to appreciate him, he exhibited with the impressionists in 1874 and in 1877. He was received with derision, which deeply hurt him. Cézanne’s ambition, in his own words, was “to make out of Impressionism something as solid and durable as the paintings of the museums.” His aim was to achieve the monumental in a modern language of glowing, vibrating tones. Cézanne wanted to retain the natural colour of an object and to harmonise it with the various influences of light and shade trying to destroy it; to work out a scale of tones expressing the mass and character of the form. Cézanne loved to paint fruit because it afforded him obedient models and he was a slow worker. He did not intend to simply copy an apple. He kept the dominant colour and the character of the fruit, but heightened the emotional appeal of the form by a scheme of rich and concordant tones. In his paintings of still-life he is a master. His fruit and vegetable compositions are truly dramatic; they have the weight, the nobility, the style of immortal forms. No other painter ever brought to a red apple a conviction so heated, sympathy so genuinely spiritual, or an observation so protracted. No other painter of equal ability ever reserved for still-life his strongest impulses. Cézanne restored to painting the pre-eminence of knowledge, the most essential quality to

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