Welcoming one pensively to the Philadelphia Museum of Art’s marvelous exhibition “Cézanne and Beyond” is the French master’s “The Bather” (c. 1885), familiar for many years as the first painting one ...
He would return to the same subjects again and again: forests and trees, fruit and faces, bathers in and out of water. For the renowned French artist Paul Cézanne, it was all about the effort: "I ...
A new exhibition at the Philadelphia Museum of Art shows how the French painter’s influence endured for more than a century, making him “the Master of us all,” as Matisse said.By Richard Lacayo The ...
After all the retrospectives given to Paul Cezanne (1839-1906) in recent years -- especially the magisterial survey at the Philadelphia Art Museum in 1996 and its smaller "Cezanne and Beyond," which ...
As an “ode to the ultimate summer muse,” London gallery Saatchi Yates has organized the exhibition “Bathers,” on view through August 10. Artists have depicted this subject since Classical antiquity, ...
Cézanne painted bathers from the 1870s onwards, including numerous compositions of male and female bathers, singly or in groups. Late in life, he painted three large-scale female bather groups. In ...
The most poignant detail of “Cezanne,” a co-exhibit between the Art Institute and London’s Tate Modern, is also one of its tiniest. If you’ve seen Paul Cezanne’s works on display before, you’ve ...
Paul Gauguin, Paul Cézanne, and Henri Matisse are not commonly associated with backward-looking movements, said Rachel Wolff in The Wall Street Journal. Yet at the heart of this summer-long exhibit in ...
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