Painting. World artists. Paul Cezanne (1839-1906)
The leading painter of the late nineteenth century in
France, one of the most powerful artists in the history
of Western painting, was Paul Cezanne. Son of a
prosperous banker in the southern French city of Aix-en-Provance,
Cezanne never experienced financial difficulties. He
received some artistic training in Aix. Cezanne arrived
in Paris for the first time in 1861, but he never set up
permanent residence there. At first Cezanne was
interested m the official art of the Salons but soon
achieved an understanding of Delacroix and Courbet, and
before long of Manet as well, but his early works were
Romantic. Only in the early 1870s Cezanne adopted the
Impressionist palette, viewpoint, and subject matter
under the tutelage of Pissarro. Cezanne exhibited his
paintings with the Impressionists in 1874, 1877, 1882.
During most of his independent career Cezanne remained
in Aix. His isolation from other artists helped him to
concentrate on the formation of a new style of painting.
Cezanne's mature style is often interpreted in the light
of his celebrated sayings: "I want to do Poussin over
again, from nature," "I wish to make of Impressionism
something solid and durable, like the art of the
museums," and "Drawing and colour are not distinct...
The secret of drawing and modelling lies in contrasts
and relations of tones."
Among the subjects Cezanne repeatedly studied was Mont
Sainte Victoire, the rocky mass that dominates the plain
of Aix. His Mont Sainte-Victoire was painted about
1885-1887. Nothing indicates the time of the day or even
the season. It neither rains nor snows in this
landscape. Time is defeated by permanence. In this
picture it is not clear where Cezanne places the
observer. It is not certain where the tree is rooted.
Some objects are identifiable as houses, trees, fields,
but Cezanne's visual threshold is high and below that
level nothing is defined. The effect of durability and
massiveness is produced by a new use of the
Impressionist colour spots. The landscape becomes a
colossal rock crystal of colour - a cubic cross section
of the world. Its background and foreground planes are
established by branches and by the mountain whose
rhythms they echo. The constituent planes embrace a
great variety of hues of blue, green, yellow, rose, and
violet. The delicate differentiation between these hues
produces the impression of three-dimensional form. To
construct form Cezanne has used the very colour patch
the Impressionists had used ten years before to dissolve
it. He has achieved from nature a construction and
intellectual organisation much like that Poussin had
derived from the organisation of figures, and made of
Impressionism something durable, reminding us of the
airless backgrounds of Giotto. Cezanne created a world
remote from human experience. The beauty of his colour
constructions is abstract, and it is no wonder that many
artists of the early twentieth century, especially the
Cubists, claimed him as the father of modern art.
Still life was to Cezanne second only to landscape. His
Still life with Apples and Oranges was painted between
1895 and 1900. The arrangements of fruits, bottles,
plates and a rumpled cloth on a tabletop never suggest
the consumption of food or drink; they are spheroid or
cylindrical masses. The appearance of reality is
neglected; the table has a tendency to disappear under
the table-cloth at one level and emerge from it at
another, and the two sides of a bottle can be sharply
different. Whether Cezanne did not notice such
discrepancies in his search for the right colour to make
a form go round in depth, or whether he decided on
deformations consciously, has never been convincingly
determined. He cared for subjects as arrangements of
form and colour, but they also possessed for him strong
psychological significance.
For his rare figure pieces Cezanne chose subjects as
quiet, impersonal, and remote as his still lifes. The
Card Players, of about 1890-1892, shows three men, two
of whom are clad in the blue smock of the farmer
labourer, sitting around a table, while a fourth gazes
downward, arms folded. The card game had been a
favourite subject among the followers of Caravaggio. The
quite figures contemplate the cards, themselves planes
of colour on white surfaces. The Giotto-like folds of
the smock of the man on the right echo in reverse those
of the hanging curtain, locking foreground and
background in a single construction. Yet the background
wall fluctuates at an indeterminable distance like the
sky in one of Cezanne's landscapes.
The full beauty of Cezanne's developed style is seen in
his Woman with the Coffee-pot, of about 1895. Cezanne's
planes of varying hues of blue and blue-violet have
built majestic cylinders from the arms and a fluted
column from the body. Stability is very important for
Cezanne. Yet the door panels in the background tilt
slightly to the left, compensating for the turn of the
head toward the right, and the placing of the coffee-pot
and cup. The adjustments are so exquisite that the
removal of one element inflicts the whole picture a
fatal blow. Cezanne's search for the exact plane of
colour to fit into his structure was so demanding that
at times the plane eluded him. Surprising elements are
the mysteriously vertical spoon, and the cylinders of
cup and pot, definitely out of drawing.
By the end of his life Cezanne's development toward
abstraction became more evident. The large Bathers, of
1898-1905, is the culmination of his series of nude
compositions. The figures were neither painted from
life, nor in the open air (women in the eighteenth and
nineteenth centuries did not bathe naked in streams and
sun themselves on the banks). The fantasy gave Cezanne
the materials with which to build a grand imaginary
architecture, composed of strikingly simplified figures,
overarching tree trunks, blue sky and white clouds - a
modern cathedral of light and colour. The figures and
heads remained schematic, features are suppressed and
mouths are omitted entirely. The end result is a
simplification of the human figure that had not been
seen since the Middle Ages.
Literature: Book "Western European
art" A.P. Minyar-Belorucheva |