An art historian has discovered a previously unknown link between two landscapes by Paul Cézanne by studying the paper he used 140 years ago. It turns out that the great Post-Impressionist painter ...
Paul Cézanne, “Bibémus Quarry” (1895-1900), oil on canvas; The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, Missouri; gift of Henry W. and Marion H. Bloch (all images courtesy Princeton University Art ...
To understand art history is to understand artists’ practices, and there’s no better way to scrutinize a great painter’s techniques than to observe the canvas directly, says John Elderfield, the Adler ...
If money was no object, what art would you buy? Four hundred years ago, European royalty went in for Italian Old Masters; altarpiece-averse 19th-century English and American moguls, by contrast, were ...
It is quite astonishing to realise that a painting few people wanted to buy a little over a century ago is now worth a quarter of a billion dollars. Paul Cézanne’s The Card Players became the most ...
Paul Cézanne changed the way painters around the world worked, said Richard Nilsen in The Arizona Republic. Starting at the turn of the 20th century, when his canvases began to be widely shown, ...
"Still Life with a Peach and Two Green Pears," (circa 1883-87) by Paul Cézanne. (Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston) An exceptional little exhibition—and one of my favorite kinds—will be at Boston’s ...
Right now the Museum of Modern Art has an audacious show of 280 Paul Cézanne works on paper that demonstrates that this immensely influential artist took us to the furthest shores of seeing in his ...