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Cezanne and Provence: The Painter in His Culture
 
 
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Cezanne and Provence: The Painter in His Culture [Hardcover]

Nina Maria Athanassoglou-Kallmyer (Author)
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Book Description

May 1, 2003 0226423085 978-0226423081 1
In 1886 Paul Cézanne left Paris permanently to settle in his native Aix-en-Provence. Nina M. Athanassoglou-Kallmyer argues that, far from an escapist venture like Gauguin's stay in Brittany or Monet's visits to Normandy, Cézanne's departure from Paris was a deliberate abandonment intimately connected with late-nineteenth-century French regionalist politics.

Like many of his childhood friends, Cézanne detested the homogenizing effects of modernism and bourgeois capitalism on the culture, people, and landscapes of his beloved Provence. Turning away from the mainstream modernist aesthetic of his impressionist years, Cézanne sought instead to develop a new artistic tradition more evocative of his Provençal heritage. Athanassoglou-Kallmyer shows that Provence served as a distinct and defining cultural force that shaped all aspects of Cézanne's approach to representation, including subject matter, style, and technical treatment. For instance, his self-portraits and portraits of family members reflect a specifically Provençal sense of identity. And Cézanne's Provençal landscapes express an increasingly traditionalist style firmly grounded in details of local history and even geology. These landscapes, together with images of bathers, cardplayers, and other figures, were key facets of Cézanne's imaginary reconstruction of Provence as primordial and idyllic—a modern French Arcadia.

Highly original and lavishly illustrated, Cézanne and Provence gives us an entirely new Cézanne: no longer the quintessential icon of generic, depersonalized modernism, but instead a self-consciously provincial innovator of mainstream styles deeply influenced by Provençal culture, places, and politics.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

While art historians have long treated Provence as merely "another 'motif' in Cezanne's visual repertory," Athanassoglou-Kallmyer (Eugène Delacroix: Prints, Politics, and Satire) smartly insists that the painter's regional alliance wholly affected both his stylistic innovation and his critical acclaim. In 1886, at age 47, the painter abandoned Paris for his native Aix-en-Provence. Contextualizing Cezanne's move within late 19th-century French nationalist efforts to preserve and exalt the regional cultures that modernization threatened to destroy, the author produces startlingly original, often convincing readings of his work. She invokes the commercialized revivals of once-Rabelaisian local festivals to illuminate Cezanne's wry burlesques of "disjointed and weightless" harlequins moving "within a flat, boxlike space." She considers the 1895 parliamentary ban on the manufacture of cards, which jeopardized a major regional industry and pastime, as a provocation for Cezanne's impassive Cardplayers. She brings contemporary advances in geology and archeology to bear upon the painter's densely striated, crudely forged icons of Mont Sainte-Victoire; by consciously aligning his work with the primitive artifacts discovered at the mountain's base, she contends, Cezanne aimed to tunnel down into the landscape's "essence" and back to a cultural purity. Finally, she shows how the painter's deliberate mythification of Provence anticipated his own critical reception. When his work was at last exhibited in 1895, Parisian critics, now keen to idealize the provinces as the destined site of national renewal, lauded Cezanne as the authentic "hard-toiling village artisan" whose coarse style rebuked the polished products of the elitist Salon. Athanassoglou-Kallmyer may overstate her case by marshaling every facet of Cezanne's oeuvre-pastoral scenes, subversive humor, pottery, pigeons, fabric and skulls-into a sphere of specifically Provençal concern. Still, her tirelessly researched and generously illustrated study (including 120 color plates, 102 halftones) freshly de-centers the academy's standard conflation of modernism and urbanism, and impressively grounds the elusive "father" of modern painting in a vivid place and propitious time.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

Paul Cezanne was a country boy in nineteenth-century Paris, and some people never let him forget it. Yet, for much of Cezanne's painting life, he asserted the character of his native south, lamented encroaching modernity, and, taking after his childhood friend, Zola, subtly lampooned both the "pernicious classicism" of forebears such as Ingres and the effete urbanism of contemporaries such as Manet. This smart and fascinating scholarly study traces the dynamics of place and cultural notions in Cezanne's work by looking closely at groups of his paintings--portraits of family, views of rustic villages, still-lifes--and mining the currents of literature, philosophy, and artistic debate. That Cezanne painted Provence's iconic Mont Sainte-Victoire at least 25 times suggests to this author that these paintings are more than mere scenic vistas: they contain Cezanne's search for the essence of nature expressed by color, for truth in the depths of geological science, for a spiritual touchstone in its symbolic link of earth and heaven. As artistic cycles go, by the year of his death, 1906, Cezanne's "primitivism" was all the rage. Steve Paul
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 334 pages
  • Publisher: University Of Chicago Press; 1 edition (May 1, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0226423085
  • ISBN-13: 978-0226423081
  • Product Dimensions: 11.2 x 8.8 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 3.6 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,242,719 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A stunning picture, August 7, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Cezanne and Provence: The Painter in His Culture (Hardcover)
This lavishly illustrated book paints a fascinating, colorful picture of the artist Cezanne and his life in his native Provence. Cezanne has generally been portrayed as a member of the Paris circles of modern art, but in truth he spent most of his life and time living and working in the beautiful countryside of Provence, where he was born. Kallmyer describes how the painter took the province, with its landscapes, agriculture, and people as a key subject, partly out of political motive. Centrists were working to establish Paris as the political center of power and government in France, much to the dismay and horror of rural French citizens. Cezanne worked hard to help Provence develop the identity it retains today as a lush, magical, light-filled place and the destination of millions of visitors each year.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
ONCE UPON A TIME there was a village dog from Provence. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
photographies documentaires, regionalist rhetoric, aux limbes, mon moulin, peasant images, provincial woman, droite révolutionnaire, provincial women, monde sensible, petit chemin
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Art Resource, Barnes Foundation, New York, All Rights Reserved, Mont Sainte-Victoire, Numa Coste, Museon Arlaten, Universal Exposition, Achille Emperaire, Arc River, Copyright Réunion des Musées Nationaux, Louis-Auguste Cézanne, Mont de Cengle, Second Empire, Hervé Lewandowski, Léo Larguier, Middle Ages, Paul Alexis, Saint Anthony, The Museum of Modern Art, Copyright Erich Lessing, King René, King Solomon, Maurice Denis, Musée du Vieil-Aix
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