Thursday, September 19, 2019
Cezanne, Lowry and Landscapes Essay -- Visual Arts Paintings Art
Cezanne, Lowry and Landscapes    Cezanne    Paul Cezanne, who was the son of a wealthy banker, became a painter in  the 1860s in Paris when he quit his studies of Law. By 1874 he was  painting landscapes in the Impressionist manner and had some of his  work included in their first exhibition held during that very same  year. He painted in the Impressionistic manner, but sheared off in a  different direction to the main body of Impressionist painters. The  main body of Impressionist painters were concerned with the 'fleeting  effects of light and colour', and in order to capture the surface  impression of that moment 'they had to work fluently and quickly'. 's  analysis was far more prolonged and pains-taking; He spent so long  analysing his subjects that some of his work was never finished. began  to be more concerned with the use of colour in modelling objects and  landscape and as a way of expressing their underlying form. The basic  ideas of Cubism have been claimed to be present in his philosophy. His  theory was that the painter could always find the cone, the sphere and  the cylinder in Nature, and that all natural shapes were composed of  these shapes at their most basic form. inherited sufficient wealth to  live in rich seclusion in Provence near Aix. He needed this solitude  or he found it difficult getting on with others: being naturally ill  at ease, neurotically sensitive and suffering from outbursts of  temper. His great contribution to art was to make Impressionism solid:  to restore the careful analysis of form and structure that pervaded  the old masters but to combine this with an intensity of colour and  harmony, full of personal expression. In his landscapes he showed a  deep feeling for the force of nature in each sweeping line and  chopping stroke of the brush, in the intense orange earth against the  clear Provence skies.    Always dissatisfied with his efforts, struggled unceasingly to reveal  the truths of nature. He made many landscape paintings of the area  where he lived and through them he achieved great success even in his  old age. Many of these landscapes like "Route-Tournante" pulse and  glow with his free and painstaking analysis. Part of the vitality of  this picture lies in the loose and patchy technique The effect is  particularly striking in the subtle greens of the trees and the subtle  earth tones. Part of the interest ...              ...riel Decamps, Charles-Emile Jacque, and other minor  landscape and animal painters - e.g Brascassat/Rosa Bonheur.    During the second half of the nineteenth century, the school became  more and more famous - the number of painters in the "school" also  increased.    Barbizon was the name of the area in France where members of this  school settled down to paint. Jean-Francois Millet, together with  Theodore Rousseau, became the centre - the nucleus of the Barbizon  community, and the reference point for all the other Barbizonners -  the other members of the Barbizon school. Millet settled down in  Barbizon in 1849.    has often been described as the initiator of the Impressionist  movement, and indeed he did develop many of the ideas that we saw in  the movement as it developed. It could be said that Lowry painted  landscape in an Impressionist fashion as well, as his pictures are  painted in such a way as to make the viewer aware of the message  behind the picture rather than the actual picture which has been  depicted using brushstrokes from a man of incredible painting skill. A  painting by has been included with this essay, along with a  reproduction of one of Lowry's pictures.                      
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