Le nature morte cezanne biography
Paul Cézanne (–), Nature morte à la bouilloire (Still life with kettle) (), oil on canvas, 64 x 81 cm, Musée d'Orsay, Paris.!
Following on from the painters of the Dutch and Spanish schools, who devoted much attention to the "silent life", Cézanne was sensitive to the poetry of.
Paul Cezanne (1839-1906)
Irritable, defiant and, from 1886, increasingly isolated (in that year his father had died and he had broken off relations with Zola, whose L'Oeuvre, which had used him partly as a model, had wounded him), Cezanne was now known to only a few intimates.
But although a mysterious figure, he had a certain fame. The Nabis, led by Pierre Bonnard (1867-1947), Paul Serusier (1865-1927), and Maurice Denis (1870-1943), were from then on profoundly influenced by him.
By 1890 Cezanne had become so reclusive that painters in Paris thought he was dead.
In 1886, he had inherited the family estate together with some 400,000 francs ($400,000), from his father, which made him a wealthy man.
Nature morte de pêches et poires (Still life with Peaches and Pears) Cézanne was born in and died in Cézanne's many.Sadly, he also contracted diabetes which caused great difficulties in his relationship with Hortense (whom he had married in 1886) and his family. Artistically speaking, it wasn't until the mid-1890s that his works began to attract the serious acclaim they deserved.
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