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CEZANNE: FINISHED/UNFINISHED
01 January 2000


Cet article se compose de 2 pages.
1 2
Still he was the first to find the key that would open the door to Cubism shortly after his death. Some people would ask why he did not manage turn his back completely to classical painting but the answer appears quite simple as he was a man of the 19th Century who first tried to become a classical painter before fighting a long battle to diverge from academic painting facing the risk of being laughed at by his contemporaries.

The Impressionists were his companions at the start but eventually yielded to comfort when they became fashionable at the turn of the 20th Century thus leaving him alone in his quest for a new form of painting. Becoming lonely he no longer had the means to impose his new vision probably for fear of being considered as mad. One should understand that going against academic trends was like committing suicide during the 19th Century. Van Gogh did not resist the pressure while Gustave Moreau, a celebrated teacher and a master of Symbolism and Fantasy also came near abstraction but kept his experimentations secret.

Modern painting in fact needed new blood and Matisse, who left the studio of the deeply academic Bouguereau, whom Cézanne once thought as having as teacher, went on to pursue his studies with the much liberal Moreau. One should therefore understand that the strong dictatorship imposed by many teachers throughout the second half of the 19th Century prevented many of their pupils from trying to go against their teachings.

Thanks to Moreau, Matisse's career blossomed in a different way while Picasso started painting as a child and had the opportunity of escaping the Spanish academic world when he went to work alone in Paris at 20. Thanks to Cézanne, these painters and many other artists, notably those who belonged to the Nabi and Fauve movements, then felt free to develop new forms of painting using his late works as a useful springboard to achieve what he had surely dreamed of.

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