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Paul Cézanne

Paintings

On the banks of the Marne

Bacchanal ( Love Fight )

Bathers


Bathers


Bathers


Bathers


Bathers


Bathers


Bathers


Bathers


Bathers


Bathers


Bathers ( Four Bathers )


Bather


Bather with outstretched arms

Farmer in blue tunic


Mountains in the French Provence


Mountains in Provence


View of Auvers


View of Auvers- sur -Oise. The Fence


Look at Gardanne


View of L' Estaque ( area near Marseille)


View of L' Estaque and the Chateaux d'If


Bridge in the forest (" Le petit pont " )


Château de Médan


Château Noir


The " Château Noir " behind trees


The buffet


The dessert


The Eternal Feminine


The House of the Hanged Man at Auvers


The House of Pere Lacroix


The house with cracked walls


The House of Dr. Gachet


The Sea at l' Estaque


The valley of the Oise


The African Scipio


The Railway Cutting


The murder


The millstone


The Dovecote in Bellevue


The pond of the Jas de Bouffan in winter


The Clockmaker


The bay of Marseille seen from L' Estaque


The Abduction


The Large Pine


The large bathers


The large bathers


The cabin Jourdan


The Fruit picker


The poplars


The Black Marble Clock


The Seine at Bercy


The Road ( The Wall)


The Temptation of St. Anthony


Village behind the trees , Ile de France


Three bathing women


A painter at work


Hermitage, Pontoise


Carnival


Rocks in the forest of Fontainebleau


Rock forest of Fontainebleau


River at the bridge of the three sources


Woman with coffee pot


Luncheon on the Grass


Gardanne


Old woman with rosary


Large pine with red boxes


harlequin


harlequin


House in Provence


House in Provence


House with red roof


House and tree


Houses in Provence (Houses at L' Estaque )


Tall Trees at the Jas de Bouffan


In the forest


In the forest of Fontainebleau


Jas de Bouffan


Young Italian Girl


Young girl with doll

The Card Players


Chestnut Trees at the Jas de Bouffan


Jas de Bouffan


Boy with a Red Waistcoat


Boy with a Red Waistcoat


Boy with a Red Waistcoat


Boy with a Red Waistcoat


L' Estaque, View through the pines


L' Estaque with red roofs


landscape


landscape


Landscape at the Jas de Bouffan


Landscape in the Ile de France


Landscape with fountains


Landscape with Viaduct ( Mont Sainte- Victoire )


Le Château Noir


Girl at the Piano


Girl with doll


Maison Maria on the way to the Château Noir


Man with the straw hat ( Portrait of Boyer )


Man with the pipe


Man with Pipe


Banks of the Marne


Medea (after Delacroix)


Mont Sainte- Victoire


Mont Sainte- Victoire


Mont Sainte- Victoire


Mont Sainte- Victoire


Mont Sainte- Victoire


Mont Sainte- Victoire


Montagne Saint- Victoire


Montagne Sainte- Victoire and Chateau Noir


Montagne Sainte- Victoire


Montaigne Sainte- Victoire


Montaigne Sainte- Victoire


Mill on the River


Afternoon in Naples ( The rum punch )


Orchard in Pontoise


Olympia


Paul Alexis reads before Zola


Pines and Aqueduct ( The Viaduct )


Portrait of Mme Cézanne


Portrait of Mme Cézanne in the yellow armchair


Portrait of Mme Cézanne in the greenhouse


Portrait of Mme Cézanne in red armchair


Portrait of Achille Emperaire


Portrait of Ambroise Vollard


Portrait of Antony Valabrègue


Portrait of Louis -Auguste Cézanne


Portrait of Louis Guillaume


Portrait of Mme Cézanne


Portrait of Uncle Dominique


Portrait of Uncle Dominique as a monk


Portrait of Vallier


Portrait of Vallier ( The Sailor )


Portrait of Victor Chocquet


Portrait of a Lady in Blue


Portrait of an old man


Portrait of a man


Portrait of Gustave Geffroy


Portrait of Madame Cézanne


Portrait of his son Paul Cézanne


Portrait of Victor Chocquet sitting


Castle of Marines


Snow melt in L' Estaque


Lake Annecy


Lake Annecy


Self-portrait


Self-portrait


Self-portrait


Self-portrait


Self-portrait


Self-portrait


Self-portrait


Self Portrait with Beret


Self-Portrait with Palette


Self-portrait with a white turban


Self- portrait in front of an olive wallpaper


Self-portrait in front of pink background


Sitting Farmer


Quarry at Bibémus


Quarry at Bibémus


Still life


Still life


Still life


Still Life , Flowers in a Vase


Still life , Delft vase with flowers


Still life , drapery , jug and fruit bowl


Still life , three skulls


Still life , geranium stick with fruits


Still life , ginger jar


Still life , jug and fruits


Still life , pitcher and fruit on a table


Still life with apples


Still life with apples and biscuits


Still life with apples and fruit bowl


Still life with apples and biscuits


Still life with apples and oranges


Still life with apples and peaches


Still life with aubergine


Still Life with Blue Vase


Still life with flowers and fruits


Still life with bread and eggs


Still life with bottle and apple basket


Still life with bottle and apple basket


Still life with bottle and onions


Still Life with Fruit Basket


Still Life with Pomegranate and Pears


Still life with green container and tin kettles


Still life with cherries and peaches


Still Life with Fruit Bowl


Still life with open drawer


Still Life with Oranges


Still Life with Putto


Still life with seven apples


Still Life with Statuette


Still life with soup tureen


Still life with sugar bowl


Still life with onions


Still life , peppermint bottle


Still life , bottle of rum


Still life , skull pyramid


Still life , bowl of apples


Still life , tulips and apples


Still life , vase with flowers


Still life vase with tulips


Road at the Montagne Sainte- Victoire


Road in Chantilly


Street in front of the mountain Sainte Victoire


Turn in the road


Road curve in Montgeroult


Dovecote at Montbriant


Banks of the Oise


Around Gardanne

Judgment of Paris


Temptation of St. Anthony


Viaduct


Preparation for burial ( Autopsy )


Forest in the rock caves above the Château Noir

Forest

Two card players


Drawings

Bather


Tree Allee


Look at the Arc Valley


The Gardener Vallier


Olympia


Portrait of the art dealer Ambroise Vollard


provençal landscape


Sketch by Pigalles "love and friendship"


Study of a card player


Study after Michelangelo's "slave " in the Louvre


study sheet


Illustrations

The Bathers


The Bathers, small version


Head of a girl


Landscape at Auvers


Self- Portrait in Front of the Easel

FRENCH

Paul Cézanne, by Gustave Coquiot

Paul Cézanne (French pronunciation: [pɔl seˈzan]; 19 January 1839 – 22 October 1906) was a French artist and Post-Impressionist painter whose work laid the foundations of the transition from the 19th century conception of artistic endeavor to a new and radically different world of art in the 20th century. Cézanne can be said to form the bridge between late 19th century Impressionism and the early 20th century's new line of artistic enquiry, Cubism. The line attributed to both Matisse and Picasso that Cézanne "is the father of us all" cannot be easily dismissed.

Cézanne's work demonstrates a mastery of design, colour, composition and draftsmanship. His often repetitive, sensitive and exploratory brushstrokes are highly characteristic and clearly recognizable. He used planes of colour and small brushstrokes that build up to form complex fields, at once both a direct expression of the sensations of the observing eye and an abstraction from observed nature. The paintings convey Cézanne's intense study of his subjects, a searching gaze and a dogged struggle to deal with the complexity of human visual perception.

Life and work
Femme au Chapeau Vert (Woman in a Green Hat. Madame Cézanne.) 1894–1895

Early years and family

The Cézannes came from the small town of Cesana now in West Piedmont, and it has been assumed that their name came from Italian origin.[1] Paul Cézanne was born on 19 January 1839 in Aix-en-Provence, in Provence in the south of France.[2] On 22 February, Paul was baptized in the parish church, with his grandmother and uncle Louis as godparents.[2] His father, Louis-Auguste Cézanne (28 July 1798 – 23 October 1886),[3] was the cofounder of a banking firm that prospered throughout the artist's life, affording him financial security that was unavailable to most of his contemporaries and eventually resulting in a large inheritance.[4] On the other hand, his mother, Anne-Elisabeth Honorine Aubert (24 September 1814 – 25 October 1897),[5] was vivacious and romantic, but quick to take offense.[6] It was from her that Paul got his conception and vision of life.[6] He also had two younger sisters, Marie and Rose, with whom he went to a primary school every day.[2][7]

At the age of ten, Paul entered the Saint Joseph school, where he studied drawing under Joseph Gibert, a Spanish monk, in Aix.[7][8] In 1852 Cézanne entered the Collège Bourbon (now Collège Mignet), where he met and became friends with Émile Zola, who was in a less advanced class,[4][7] as well as Baptistin Baille—three friends who would come to be known as "les trois inséparables" (the three inseparables).[9] He stayed there for six years, though in the last two years he was a day scholar.[10] From 1859 to 1861, complying with his father's wishes, Cézanne attended the law school of the University of Aix, while also receiving drawing lessons.[11] Going against the objections of his banker father, he committed himself to pursuing his artistic development and left Aix for Paris in 1861. He was strongly encouraged to make this decision by Zola, who was already living in the capital at the time. Eventually, his father reconciled with Cézanne and supported his choice of career. Cézanne later received an inheritance of 400,000 francs (£218,363.62) from his father, which rid him of all financial worries.[12]

Cézanne the artist
The Cardplayers, an iconic work by Cézanne (1892).

In Paris, Cézanne met the Impressionist Camille Pissarro. Initially the friendship formed in the mid-1860s between Pissarro and Cézanne was that of master and disciple, with Pissarro exerting a formative influence on the younger artist. Over the course of the following decade their landscape painting excursions together, in Louveciennes and Pontoise, led to a collaborative working relationship between equals.

His early work is often concerned with the figure in the landscape and comprises many paintings of groups of large, heavy figures in the landscape, imaginatively painted. Later in his career, he became more interested in working from direct observation and gradually developed a light, airy painting style that was to influence the Impressionists enormously. Nevertheless, in Cézanne's mature work we see the development of a solidified, almost architectural style of painting. Throughout his life he struggled to develop an authentic observation of the seen world by the most accurate method of representing it in paint that he could find. To this end, he structurally ordered whatever he perceived into simple forms and colour planes. His statement "I want to make of impressionism something solid and lasting like the art in the museums",[13] and his contention that he was recreating Poussin "after nature" underscored his desire to unite observation of nature with the permanence of classical composition.
Les Grandes Baigneuses, 1898–1905: the triumph of Poussinesque stability and geometric balance.

Optical phenomena

Cézanne was interested in the simplification of naturally occurring forms to their geometric essentials; he wanted to "treat nature by the cylinder, the sphere, the cone" (a tree trunk may be conceived of as a cylinder, an apple or orange a sphere, for example). Additionally, the concentrated attention with which he recorded his observations of nature resulted in a profound exploration of binocular vision, which results in two slightly different simultaneous visual perceptions, and provides us with depth perception and a complex knowledge of spatial relationships. We see two different views simultaneously; Cézanne employed this aspect of visual perception in his painting to varying degrees. The observation of this fact, coupled with Cézanne's desire to capture the truth of his own perception, often compelled him to render the outlines of forms so as to at once attempt to display the distinctly different views of both the left and right eyes. Thus Cézanne's work augments and transforms earlier ideals of perspective, in particular single-point perspective.

Exhibitions and subjects

Cézanne's paintings were shown in the first exhibition of the Salon des Refusés in 1863, which displayed works not accepted by the jury of the official Paris Salon. The Salon rejected Cézanne's submissions every year from 1864 to 1869. Cézanne continued to submit works to the Salon until 1882. In that year, through the intervention of fellow artist Antoine Guillemet, Cézanne exhibited Portrait of Louis-Auguste Cézanne, Father of the Artist, reading 'l'Evénement', 1866 (National Gallery, Washington), his first and last successful submission to the Salon.[14]
Still Life with a Curtain (1895) illustrates Cézanne's increasing trend towards terse compression of forms and dynamic tension between geometric figures.

Before 1895 Cézanne exhibited twice with the Impressionists (at the first Impressionist exhibition in 1874 and the third Impressionist exhibition in 1877). In later years a few individual paintings were shown at various venues, until 1895, when the Parisian dealer, Ambroise Vollard, gave the artist his first solo exhibition. Despite the increasing public recognition and financial success, Cézanne chose to work in increasing artistic isolation, usually painting in the south of France, in his beloved Provence, far from Paris. He concentrated on a few subjects and was highly unusual for 19th-century painters in that he was equally proficient in each of these genres: still lifes, portraits, landscapes and studies of bathers. For the last, Cézanne was compelled to design from his imagination, due to a lack of available nude models. Like the landscapes, his portraits were drawn from that which was familiar, so that not only his wife and son but local peasants, children and his art dealer served as subjects. His still lifes are at once decorative in design, painted with thick, flat surfaces, yet with a weight reminiscent of Gustave Courbet. The 'props' for his works are still to be found, as he left them, in his studio (atelier), in the suburbs of modern Aix.

Although religious images appeared less frequently in Cézanne's later work, he remained a devout Roman Catholic and said, "When I judge art, I take my painting and put it next to a God-made object like a tree or flower. If it clashes, it is not art."[15]

Cézanne's paintings were not well received among the petty bourgeoisie of Aix. In 1903, Henri Rochefort visited the auction of paintings that had been in Zola's possession and published on 9 March 1903 in L'Intransigeant a vicious article entitled “Love for the Ugly”. Rochefort describes how spectators had supposedly experienced laughing fits, when seeing the paintings of “an ultra-impressionist named Cézanne”. Erroneously believing that Cézanne's paintings in fact represented “the art dear to Zola” (Rochefort's Dreyfusard archenemy), he drew connections between “Dreyfusard snobs”, the “officer who sold to the enemy the defense plans of the fatherland” and Zola's supposedly cherished artist, Cézanne. The public in Aix was overwhelmed with joy, and for many days, copies of L'Intransigeant appeared on Cézanne's door-mat with messages asking him to leave the town “he was dishonouring.”[16]

Death of Cézanne

One day, Cézanne was caught in a storm while working in the field.[17] Only after working for two hours under a downpour did he decide to go home; but on the way he collapsed. He was taken home by a passing driver.[17] His old housekeeper rubbed his arms and legs to restore the circulation; as a result, he regained consciousness.[17] On the following day, he intended to continue working, but later on he fainted; the model with whom he was working called for help; he was put to bed, and he never left it again.[17] He died a few days later, on 22 October 1906.[17] He died of pneumonia and was buried at the old cemetery in his beloved hometown of Aix-en-Provence.[18]

Main periods of Cézanne's work
Paul Cézanne, about 1861

Various periods in the work and life of Cézanne have been defined.[19]

Dark period, Paris, 1861–1870

In 1863 Napoleon III created by decree the Salon des Refusés, at which paintings rejected for display at the Salon of the Académie des Beaux-Arts were to be displayed. The artists of the refused works included the young Impressionists, who were considered revolutionary. Cézanne was influenced by their style but his social relations with them were inept—he seemed rude, shy, angry, and given to depression. His works of this period[20] are characterized by dark colours and the heavy use of black. They differ sharply from his earlier watercolours and sketches at the École Spéciale de dessin at Aix-en-Provence in 1859, and their violence of expression is in contrast to his subsequent works.

In 1866–67, inspired by the example of Courbet, Cézanne painted a series of paintings with a palette knife. He later called these works, mostly portraits, une couillarde ("a coarse word for ostentatious virility").[21] Lawrence Gowing has written that Cézanne's palette knife phase "was not only the invention of modern expressionism, although it was incidentally that; the idea of art as emotional ejaculation made its first appearance at this moment".[21] Among the couillarde paintings are a series of portraits of his uncle Dominique in which Cézanne achieved a style that "was as unified as Impressionism was fragmentary".[22] Later works of the dark period include several erotic or violent subjects, such as Women Dressing (c.1867), The Rape (c.1867), and The Murder (c.1867–68), which depicts a man stabbing a woman who is held down by his female accomplice.

Impressionist period, Provence and Paris, 1870–1878

After the start of the Franco-Prussian War in July, 1870, Cézanne and his mistress, Marie-Hortense Fiquet, left Paris for L'Estaque, near Marseilles, where he changed themes to predominantly landscapes. He was declared a draft-dodger in January, 1871, but the war ended in February and the couple moved back to Paris, in the summer of 1871. After the birth of their son Paul in January, 1872, in Paris, they moved to Auvers in Val-d'Oise near Paris. Cézanne's mother was kept a party to family events, but his father was not informed of Hortense for fear of risking his wrath. The artist received from his father an allowance of 100 francs.
Jas de Bouffan, 1876.

Camille Pissarro lived in Pontoise. There and in Auvers, he and Cézanne painted landscapes together. For a long time afterwards, Cézanne described himself as Pissarro's pupil, referring to him as "God the Father" and saying, "We all stem from Pissarro".[23] Under Pissarro's influence Cézanne began to abandon dark colours and his canvases grew much brighter.

Leaving Hortense in the Marseille region, Cézanne moved between Paris and Provence, exhibiting in the first (1874) and third Impressionist shows (1877). In 1875, he attracted the attention of the collector Victor Chocquet, whose commissions provided some financial relief. But Cézanne's exhibited paintings attracted hilarity, outrage and sarcasm. Reviewer Louis Leroy said of Cézanne's portrait of Chocquet: "This peculiar looking head, the colour of an old boot might give [a pregnant woman] a shock and cause yellow fever in the fruit of her womb before its entry into the world".[24]

In March 1878, Cézanne's father found out about Hortense and threatened to cut Cézanne off financially but, in September, he decided to give him 400 francs for his family. Cézanne continued to migrate between the Paris region and Provence until Louis-Auguste had a studio built for him at his home, Jas de Bouffan, in the early 1880s. This was on the upper floor and an enlarged window was provided, allowing in the northern light but interrupting the line of the eaves. This feature remains today. Cézanne stabilized his residence in L'Estaque. He painted with Renoir there in 1882 and visited Renoir and Monet in 1883.

Mature period, Provence, 1878–1890
Jas de Bouffan, 1885–1887.

In the early 1880s the Cézanne family stabilized their residence in Provence where they remained, except for brief sojourns abroad, from then on. The move reflects a new independence from the Paris-centered impressionists and a marked preference for the south, Cézanne's native soil. Hortense's brother had a house within view of Montagne Sainte-Victoire at Estaque. A run of paintings of this mountain from 1880 to 1883 and others of Gardanne from 1885 to 1888, are sometimes known as "the Constructive Period".

The year 1886 was a turning point for the family. Cézanne married Hortense. In that year also, Cézanne's father died, leaving him the estate purchased in 1859; he was 47. By 1888 the family was in the former manor, Jas de Bouffan, a substantial house and grounds with outbuildings, which afforded a new-found comfort. This house, with much-reduced grounds, is now owned by the city and is open to the public on a restricted basis.

Also in that year Cézanne broke off his friendship with Émile Zola, after the latter used him, in large part, as the basis for the unsuccessful and ultimately tragic fictitious artist Claude Lantier, in the novel L'Œuvre. Cézanne considered this a breach of decorum and a friendship begun in childhood was irreparably damaged.

Final period, Provence, 1890–1905
Still Life with Apples and Oranges, 1895–1900.

Cézanne's idyllic period at Jas de Bouffan was temporary. From 1890 until his death he was beset by troubling events and he withdrew further into his painting, spending long periods as a virtual recluse. His paintings became well-known and sought after and he was the object of respect from a new generation of painters.

The problems began with the onset of diabetes in 1890, destabilizing his personality to the point where relationships with others were again strained. He travelled in Switzerland, with Hortense and his son, perhaps hoping to restore their relationship. Cézanne, however, returned to Provence to live; Hortense and Paul junior, to Paris. Financial need prompted Hortense's return to Provence but in separate living quarters. Cézanne moved in with his mother and sister. In 1891 he turned to Catholicism.

Cézanne alternated between painting at Jas de Bouffan and in the Paris region, as before. In 1895 he made a germinal visit to Bibémus Quarries and climbed Mt. Ste. Victoire. The labyrinthine landscape of the quarries must have struck a note, as he rented a cabin there in 1897 and painted extensively from it. The shapes are believed to have inspired the embryonic 'Cubist' style. Also in that year, his mother died, an upsetting event but one which made reconciliation with his wife possible. He sold the empty nest at Jas de Bouffan and rented a place on Rue Boulegon, where he built a studio.

The relationship, however, continued to be stormy. He needed a place to be by himself. In 1901 he bought some land along the Chemin des Lauves, an isolated road on some high ground at Aix, and commissioned a studio to be built there (now open to the public). He moved there in 1903. Meanwhile, in 1902, he had drafted a will excluding his wife from his estate and leaving everything to his son. The relationship was apparently off again; she is said to have burned the mementos of his mother.

From 1903 to the end of his life, he painted in his studio, working for a month in 1904 with Émile Bernard, who stayed as a house guest. After his death it became a monument, Atelier Paul Cézanne, or les Lauves.

Legacy
The Overture to Tannhäuser: The Artist's Mother and Sister, 1868, Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg.

After Cézanne died in 1906, his paintings were exhibited in Paris in a large scale museum-like retrospective in September 1907. The 1907 Cézanne retrospective at the Salon d'Automne greatly affected the direction that the avant-garde in Paris took, lending credence to his position as one of the most influential artists of the 19th century and to the advent of Cubism.

Cézanne's explorations of geometric simplification and optical phenomena inspired Picasso, Braque, Gris, and others to experiment with ever more complex multiple views of the same subject, and, eventually to the fracturing of form. Cézanne thus sparked one of the most revolutionary areas of artistic enquiry of the 20th Century, one which was to affect profoundly the development of modern art.

Resources

Notes and references

1. ^ J. Lindsay Cézanne; his life and art, p.3
2. ^ a b c J. Lindsay Cézanne; his life and art, p.6
3. ^ "Louis Auguste Cézanne". Guarda-Mor, Edição de Publicações Multimédia Lda.. http://genealogia.netopia.pt/pessoas/pes_show.php?id=472543. Retrieved 2007-02-27.
4. ^ a b "Paul Cézanne Biography (1839-1906)". Biography.com. http://www.biography.com/search/article.do?id=9542036&page=1. Retrieved 2007-02-17.
5. ^ "Louis Auguste Cézanne". Guarda-Mor, Edição de Publicações Multimédia Lda.. http://genealogia.netopia.pt/pessoas/pes_show.php?id=472544. Retrieved 2007-02-27.
6. ^ a b A. Vollard First Impressions, p.16
7. ^ a b c A. Vollard, First Impressions, p.14
8. ^ P. Machotka Narration and Vision, p.9
9. ^ National Gallery of Art timeline, retrieved February 11, 2009
10. ^ J. Lindsay Cézanne; his life and art, p.12
11. ^ P. Cézanne Paul Cézanne, letters, p.10
12. ^ J. Lindsay Cézanne; his life and art, p.232
13. ^ Paul Cézanne, Letters, edited by John Rewald, 1984.
14. ^ Gowing, 1988, p. 110
15. ^ "Paul Cézanne quotes". ThinkExist.com Quotations. http://thinkexist.com/quotation/when_i_judge_art-i_take_my_painting_and_put_it/218338.html. Retrieved 2007-02-17.
16. ^ http://books.google.de/book d=0CD4Q6AEwBA#v=onepage&q&f=false
17. ^ a b c d e Vollard The Last Years, p.113–114
18. ^ "Paul Cézanne 1839-1906". MyStudios.com. http://www.mystudios.com/art/post/cezanne/cezanne.html. Retrieved 2007-02-18.
19. ^ The scheme presented here is essentially that of the Encyclopedia Britannica. Some alternative names are mentioned. On the whole the various classifications tend to converge.
20. ^ It is sometimes called "the Romantic Period", but Cézanne was not primarily interested in Romanticism. The term here refers to personal disposition, rather than connection with a historical movement.
21. ^ a b Gowing 1988, p. 10.
22. ^ Gowing 1988, p. 104.
23. ^ Brion, 1974, p. 26
24. ^ Brion, 1974, p. 34

References

* Brion, Marcel (1974). Cézanne. Thames and Hudson. ISBN 0500860041.
* Chun, Young-Paik (2006). "Melancholia and Cézanne's Portraits: Faces beyond the mirror". in Griselda Pollock (ed.). Psychoanalysis and the Image. Routledge. ISBN 1405134635.
* Cézanne, Paul; John Rewald, Emile Zola, and Marguerite Kay. Paul Cézanne, letters. B. Cassirer. ISBN 0878172769. OCLC 1196743.
* Gowing, Lawrence; Adriani, Götz; Krumrine, Mary Louise; Lewis, Mary Tompkins; Patin, Sylvie; Rewald, John (1988). Cézanne: The Early Years 1859-1872. Harry N. Abrams.
* Lehrer, Jonah (2007). "Paul Cézanne, The Process of Sight". in Jonah Lehrer. Proust Was a Neuroscientist. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 0618620109.
* Klingsor, Tristan. Cézanne. Paris: Rieder.
* Lindsay, Jack. Cézanne; his life and art. United States: New York Graphic Society. ISBN 0821203401. OCLC 18027.
* Machotka, Pavel. Cézanne: Landscape into Art. United States: Yale University Press. ISBN 0300067011. OCLC 34558348.
* Pissarro, Joachim (2005). Cézanne & Pissarro Pioneering Modern Painting: 1865-1885. The Museum of Modern Art. ISBN 0870701843.
* Vollard, Ambroise. Cézanne. England: Courier Dover Publications. ISBN 0486247295. OCLC 10725645.

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