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More than 250 watercolors and drawings on paper, which reveal the French artist's revolutionary style, are featured in a landmark exhibition at New York's Museum of Modern Art, "Cézanne Drawing." ...
The first retrospective of his work in Paris after he died in 1906 jolted the history of Western art, making Cézanne a source of inspiration for everything from Cubism to abstraction.
There is no question that his lovely, shuffling paintings are hugely important: they influenced Cubism, to a lesser degree Fauvism, and, through phenomenological philosopher Maurice Merleau-Ponty ...
Among the first things in the show is a gorgeous painting by Paul Cezanne, L’Allée au Jas de Bouffon, from 1890, coming from the Museum of Art and History in Geneva. All cubist roads, Barr ...
It's just possible that Paul Cézanne, that reactionary old recluse who stayed holed up in Provence until his death in 1906, made the most complex, most widely influential art the West has ever ...
The century-long rift between Cezanne and his native city came to an end in 2006 when the Granet Museum held its first exhibition of the artist's work. The city has since declared 2025 "Cezanne's ...
John Spike knew he was looking at a Cézanne. Analysis and testing of the painting “The Miracle of the Slave” have backed up his now certainty that it was painted by French artist Paul Cézanne as a ...
A surprisingly mediocre little landscape painting by Paul Cézanne, whose posthumous 1907 Paris retrospective kick-started the Cubist revolution, represents focused scrutiny on the problem of ...
The Muscarelle Museum’s chief curator, John Spike, believes he has identified a painting by 19th century French artist Paul Cézanne. The work, part of the museum’s “Art and… ...
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