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  1. Paul Cézanne, one of the most significant French painters of the second half of the nineteenth century, is generally held to be “the father of modern art.”. He started out studying law at Aix, but moved to Paris in 1861 to become a painter. In the French capital he enrolled at the Académie Suisse, copied many paintings in the Louvre and ...

  2. Cézanne’s struggles to “incomplete” Bouilloire et fruits have been tracked in some detail here, and, because of them, he created a work of almost unparalleled energy for a “still-life.”. Five generations of truly great collectors have recognized this energy. Now, we need a new one. Written by Dr. Richard Brettell.

  3. Paul Cézanne (1839 - 1906) Las primeras obras de Cézanne, ejecutadas en colores oscuros, estaban profundamente inspiradas por las de los maestros antiguos y por las composiciones de Delacroix, Daumier y Courbet.

  4. Artist: Paul Cézanne (French, Aix-en-Provence 1839–1906 Aix-en-Provence) Date: 1900–1906. Medium: Watercolor over graphite on laid paper. Dimensions: sheet: 12 3/8 x 19 3/16 in. (31.4 x 48.8 cm) Classification: Drawings. Credit Line: The Walter H. and Leonore Annenberg Collection, Gift of Walter H. and Leonore Annenberg, 2001, Bequest of ...

  5. Still Life with Blue Pot (The J. Paul Getty Museum Collection); about 1900–1906; Paul Cézanne (French, 1839 - 1906); Watercolor over graphite; Unframed: 48.1 × 63.2 cm (18 15/16 × 24 7/8 in.); Still Life with Blue Pot (The J. Paul Getty Museum Collection)

  6. Catalogue de la 50° exposition de la Société des Artistes indépendants. Centenaire du peintre indépendant Paul Cézanne 1839-1906, cat. exp. (Paris, Réunion des musées nationaux - Grand Palais, du 17 mars au 10 avril 1939), Paris, Société des Artistes indépendants, 1939, Notice 41 , Non reproduit

  7. This is the largest, the last, and in many ways, the most ambitious work from Cézanne’s lifelong exploration of the time-honored theme of nudes in a landscape. It is also, perhaps, in its unfinished state, the purest and most serene witness to the man whom Paul Gauguin described as spending “entire days on mountaintops reading Virgil,” dreaming of wooded glades populated with beautiful ...