CEZANNE, PAUL (1839-1906), French painter, was born at Aix, the ancient capital town of Provence, on Jan. 19, His father was a banker. Paul was educated at the lycee of the town, where he formed an intimate friendship with tmile Zola, the novelist. The two boys were both inspired by a love of the classics, particularly of Virgil, through whom, perhaps, Cezanne realized the beauty of his native country. Both decided to con secrate themselves to art. Zola settled down early to a literary career in Paris, but Cezanne endeavoured to comply with his father's wish that he should carry on the family bank. But after two unsuccessful attempts the father allowed Paul to settle in Paris and attended the art school. He arrived there in 1863.
Cezanne became known as one of the most extreme of the young revolutionary painters, the bitterest in his denunciation of official art and of Ingres who, then in his old age, was regarded as the head of the reactionaries. In this way he became acquainted with the group of painters who encircled Manet, and who afterwards be came known as the impressionists. But Cezanne's work in his early years shows no sign of this frequentation. At this period he was most influenced by Delacroix and by the Baroque painters whom Delacroix studied, by Rubens and Tintoretto. His ambi tion was to create grandiose compositions of a purely imaginative description, expressive of his own internal moods, using either vio lently dramatic themes—"Les Assassins," "L'Autopsie," "Lazare" —or lyrical motives—"Le Jugement de Paris," "Dejeuners sur l'herbe." He also painted a series of portraits in which dramatic and psychological effects were undertoned. In these the influence of Courbet is evident. They are painted with broad strokes, the palette-knife ploughing up and planting down an exceedingly thick and dense impasto. In all these early works the colour is reduced to a few simple notes in which black, white and earth reds and yellows predominate. The tension of Cezanne's imaginative life shows itself in the tumultuous vehemence of these early compo sitions. He trusts to his inner convictions with a blind and reckless courage which was unfortunately not supported by the gifts neces sary to make such an imagery plausible, or to give verisimilitude to the contorted poses of his Tintorettesque nudes. His outlook on nature seems to have been confined for the most part to the search for motives of chiaroscuro suitable to the dramatic effects of his imaginative designs. He showed at this stage nothing of the curiosity about natural effects of colour which distinguished the impressionist group. He was, in fact, far more concerned with expressing the exaltation of his own feelings, inspired by litera ture or imaginative brooding, than with the phenomena of the visible world. A few still-lif es of this period show, however, how much greater his native endowment was in this direction than in the one he was consciously pursuing ; but even in these the dra matic evocations of the thing seen are what chiefly interested him.
During the years 1872-73 a great change came over Cezanne. He spent the summers of these years at Anvers-sur-Oise in the company of Camille Pissaro, who was one of the impressionists. Pissaro was some years older than Cezanne and had already dis covered his personal style and perfected a methodical and precise technique adapted to it. Cezanne, who had hitherto trusted to the inspiration of his imaginative ideas for his daring, but rather fortuitous technique, here for the first time underwent a methodi cal course of training. He learned for the first time to look on nature with a curious and contemplative gaze, and he learned a precise and methodical technical process, by which to record the results thus obtained. Above all, the whole world of "atmospheric" colour was thus revealed to him. Certain pictures painted by Cezanne in these years approximate very nearly to Pissaro's work, but they show Cezanne's greater power of organizing form, and the greater profundity of the conceptions which his contemplation of natural appearance provoked in his intensely passionate nature. For these years, then, Cezanne may be counted an impressionist.
But Cezanne's response to appearances gave him a notion of design more vigorously constructed, and evocative of far deeper feelings, than any that the impressionists envisaged. To them the weft of colour which nature revealed to their specialized visual sense was all that mattered ; out of that each artist could choose unconsciously those harmonies which specially appealed to him. But Cezanne always believed in some underlying reality of a more permanent kind, more consonant with the deeper instincts of human nature. The impressionist vision was both too casual and too imperfectly organized for him. It missed part of the truth which the older masters had apprehended. Cezanne summed up his own attitude by saying that his ambition was to do Poussin over again after nature, i.e., to incorporate into a clearly organized formal unity, like Poussin's, the vision of natural appearance as enriched by impressionist researches. From this point Cezanne's personal vision and his personal expression of it were established. Such changes as his style underwent in the succeeding decades were only gradual modifications of what he had established once for all. The essentials of that style were due, as we have seen, to the special use he made of the impressionist vision. They were based upon the most rigorous construction of the design by means of the interplay of clearly articulated planes. But the movement of these planes, their salience and recession, was interpreted quite as much by changes in local colour as by the definition of form by light and shade. A characteristic of Cezanne's completely realized manner is the extreme simplicity of the approach, the fact that objects are presented in full frontal aspect. In nearly all his por traits the sitter is placed nearly in the centre of the canvas, the head and body being seen nearly in full face. In the landscapes a similar treatment is found ; objects are extended in planes par allel to the picture plane, and frequently the main mass will be centrally placed. Such extreme symmetrical simplicity of ap proach takes us back to the practice of the Italian Primitives. It is violently opposed to the principles of Baroque composition as followed by most of Cezanne's predecessors and by himself in his early period.
Such an exaggeratedly simple disposition would probably strike us as crude and uninteresting if it were not that within the volumes which he places before us in this elementary fashion, his analysis of changes of surface and plastic movement is pushed to an extra ordinary degree, and this is accompanied by innumerable slight modulations of colour, so that the whole surface takes on some thing of the infinity of natural appearance. This practice he developed with ever-increasing power. In the '7os and early '8os, the almost laborious scrutiny of infinitesimal colour changes led him to load the canvas with repeated layers of colour, though without ever losing purity and intensity. Later on he was able to get the same multiplicity of surface with thinner layers of colour. Together with this he tended also to simplify the colour changes, adopting even a regular principle of colour sequences to express movements away from the highest relief of any given volume. All this was strictly in keeping with his philosophical conception of the aim of painting. In everything he did he sought a synthesis in which the most rigorously logical plastic structure should be com bined with the utmost liveliness of surface; that is to say, he sought, without losing the infinitude of natural appearance, to give to it an intelligibility and a logical coherence which it lacks. This, no doubt, is more or less the problem of all painting; what distinguishes Cezanne is his endeavour to attain this synthesis when each of the opposite terms is at its highest pitch.
To the last decade of the 19th century belong some of his most celebrated works : the portrait of Geffroy, which is perhaps un equalled in modern art for the completeness of its realization, the complexity and assurance of its harmonies; several versions of a composition of men seated at a café table and playing cards, in which the primitive simplicity of the arrangement gives an ele mental grandeur to the forms; and a series of landscapes in which the pyramidal mass of Mt. Ste. Victoire dominates the design. Even to the end of his life, Cezanne always cherished the hope of creating imaginative and "poetical" designs of nude figures in landscape, of ter the manner of some of Giorgione's and Titian's pictures. But in this he was hampered by his extreme reluctance to draw from the nude model, and most of these grandiose at tempts remain failures.
At the very end of his life there seems to have been a kind of recrudescence in Cezanne of the romantic tendencies of his youth. His paintings become richer, more intense and vivid in colour, more agitated in rhythm, more vehement in accent ; they also de part more and more from the careful analysis of natural appear ance of the middle period, as though his long apprenticeship to nature had ceased and he felt free to follow unhesitatingly his in stinctive feeling. The middle and end of Cezanne's life was passed in great seclusion at Aix, with occasional visits to Paris. In the '8os and '9os his very name had become almost unknown in the larger art circles of Paris, though he never lacked a few enthu siastic admirers. Gradually his fame began to circulate among the more intelligent artists, and in 1904 a retrospective exhibition of his works in the Autumn Salon revealed to the public the existence of this almost unknown genius. It was the only foretaste of his posthumous fame which he experienced. He died Oct. 23, 1906.
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