Paul Cézanne
January 19, 1839 - October 22, 1906
Still Life and Curtains
Paul. Paul Cezanne was a famous French painter whose styles ranged from Impressionist to Cubist. His work laid the foundation for the transformation of 19th-century artistic concepts into 20th-century artistic styles. His work was directed at Henry. Matisse and Pablo. Picasso had an important impact. Using a cohesive approach to painting, his work profoundly influenced and revolutionized 20th-century fine art, especially the first solo exhibition in 1895 and the official retrospective of his work in 1907. Cézanne believed that "lines do not exist, light and shade do not exist, only the contrast between colors." The volume of the object is expressed in the exact interrelationship of tones". Most of his works are the embodiment of his own artistic ideas, showing a strong sense of geometry, ignoring the texture of objects and the accuracy of shapes, emphasizing the sense of thick and calm volume, and the overall relationship between objects. Sometimes even the independence and authenticity of the individual is abandoned in order to seek harmony in various relationships. Cézanne believes: "Painting does not mean blindly copying reality, it means seeking harmony in various relationships." Beginning with Cézanne, Western painters began to turn from the pursuit of realistic depiction of nature to self-expression, and began to appear in various formalist genres, forming a trend of modern painting. Cézanne's artistic approach to the pursuit of formal beauty provided a guide for the modern oil painting genre that emerged later, so in his later years, he was admired by many painters who were passionate about modern art, and he was honored as the "father of modern art".
"Kitchen Table"
Flowers in a Bottle
Apple
Flowers in a Blue Vase
Mont Sainte-Victor
"Fruit Plate Still Life"
Olive Flower Bed
"The Bend in the Road"
The Slopes of Provence
Bellevue's Field
Still Life: Apples and Pears
Apples and Cookies
"Apples and Kettles on the Table"
The Plains of Mount Saint Victor, from Valkros
Still Life Apple
"Seeing St. Victor's Hill from bibimus quarry"
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