1839 - 1906

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Paul Cézanne 1839 - 1906. 1839 - 1906. Photo of Paul Cézanne in front of The Bathers. Artistic Purpose. To convey the message that his pictures were flat, painted canvases, not imitations of reality. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of 1839 - 1906

  • 1839 - 1906Paul Czanne1839 - 1906

  • Photo of Paul Czanne in front of The Bathers.

  • Artistic PurposeTo convey the message that his pictures were flat, painted canvases, not imitations of reality.To paint nature convincingly so as to reveal its basic structures and their relationships in space: Interpret nature in terms of the cylinder, the sphere, the cone.

  • Artistic CredoA painting is an artistic composition separate from realitya creation rather than a reproduction.Creation must be based on the contemplation of nature.For the sake of composition, objects are distorted, reduced into basic geometrical shapes, and presented from multiple points of view.

  • PortraitsThe sitter is not portrayed as an individual nor within the context of social criticism.The human head, like an apple, can be seen as nothing more than a convenient geometric starting point for a composition in which every element was treated with equal respect and attention.

  • Paul Czanne. Portrait of Madame Czanne in the Greenhouse (ca. 1890). Oil on canvas.

  • Paul Czanne. Portrait of Madame Czanne in a Yellow Chair (1888-90).Oil on canvas.

  • Czannes wife Marie-Hortensephotographed in 1900 at theage of 50.

  • Still Lifes: A Challenge in the Investigation of Visual PerceptionA means of creating a new reality: making observers aware that what they were looking at was an image on a two-dimensional canvasA means of achieving a canvas that could be appreciated for itself as a solidly composed structure of forms and colorsA means of expressing multiple points of view simultaneously

  • Paul Czanne. Still Life: Basket of Apples (1880-90). Oil on canvas.

  • Paul Czanne. Still Life with Apples and Oranges(1895-1900). Oil on canvas.

  • Paul Czanne. Still Life with Vaseof Flowers and Apples (1889-1890).Oil on canvas.

  • Paul Czanne. Still Life with Basket of Fruit(1888-90). Oil on canvas.

  • Multiple Points of View

  • Paul Czanne. Still Life with Dresser(1883-1887). Oil on canvas.

  • LandscapesMont Sainte-VictoireExercises in painting the mountain from different points of viewExercises in neutralizing the effects of perspective in favor of a unified picture space: developing an independent harmonious composition in harmony in parallel with nature Exercises in editing Exercises in expressing nature as architecture

  • The landscape round Aix-en-Provence with theMont Sainte Victoire.

  • Mont Sainte-VictoireReady for a days work

  • Paul Czanne. Mont Sainte-Victoire from the Chemin de Velcros (1879). Oil on canvas.

  • Paul Czanne. Mont Sainte-Victoire from Bellevue (1882-85). Oil on canvas.

  • Abandons Linear PerspectivePerspective is not achieved through lines of sight converging on a common vanishing point.Isolated diagonals and verticals, in the form of paths, aqueducts, or towering pine trees cut through the compositions to give the impression of depthPassage (overlapping planes of color) create the impression of depth

  • Overlapping Planes: PassageThe surface of the image is composed of horizontal areasof color set side by side and interlinking the separate spatial fields. Progressing through one spatial field after another, the alternating brown and green areas provide a sense of depth.

  • Paul Czanne. Mont Sainte-Victoire (1885-87). Oil on canvas.

  • Paul Czanne. Mont Sainte-Victoire from the Large Pine (1885-87). Oil on canvas.

  • Paul Czanne. Mont Sainte-Victoire (1889). Oil on canvas.

  • Photograph of the site

  • Photograph of the site

  • Paul Czanne. Road Near Mont Sainte-Victoire (1900).Oil on canvas.

  • Photograph of the site

  • Paul Czanne. Bibmus: The Red Rock (1897-98). Oil on canvas.

  • Paul Czanne. Quarry and Mont Sainte-Victoire fromBibmus (1897). Oil on canvas.

  • Detail of Quarry and Mont Sainte-Victoire from Bibmus (1897).

  • Photograph of the site

  • View of the quarry

  • Czannes Compositional MethodsSizeCentral axisColorForm

  • This illustration shows that Czanne has more than doubled the size of the mountain.

  • This is an illustration of the principle of organization so Often used by Czanne: planes and volumes moving around an imaginary central axis.

  • The orange and green shapes are here reduced to two-dimensional patterns emphasizing how Czanneinterlocks and interweaves the pictorial surface.

  • The mass of the mountain is shown here in combination with the small white shapes to which it is related. Without these small shapes the mountain would be isolated. Here the two are interrelated through distribution and repetition.

  • Paul Czanne. Bibmus Quarry (1895). Oil on canvas.

  • Paul Czanne. BibmusQuarry (1898). Oil on canvas.

  • Paul Czanne. Mountains in Provence(ca. 1890). Oil on canvas.

  • Paul Czanne. Mont Sainte-Victoire and the Chateau Noir(1904-06). Oil on canvas.

  • Two views of the Chateau Noir with the Mont Sainte-Victoirein the background

  • Photograph of the site from Lauves.

  • Paul Czanne. Mont Sainte Victoire (1902-04).Oil on canvas.

  • Paul Czanne. Mont Sainte-Victoire fromLes Lauves (1904-06). Oil on canvas.

  • Paul Czanne. Mont Sainte-Victoire Seen from Lauves (1902-04). Oil on canvas.

  • The BathersExercises in painting figures in landscapesSettings and figures have equal emphasisIntegration of style and subjectMultiple points of view

  • Paul Czanne. Great Bathers (1894-1905). Oil on canvas.

  • Paul Czanne. Les Grandes Baigneuses (1900-05). Oil on canvas.

  • Paul Czanne. Great Bathers (1894-1905).Oil on canvas.

  • Czannes studio