had been a favourite subject among the followers of Caravaggio. The quite figures contemplate the cards, themselves planes of colour on white surfaces. The Giotto-like folds of the smock of the man on the right echo in reverse those of the hanging curtain, locking foreground and background in a single construction. Yet the background wall fluctuates at an indeterminable distance like the sky in one of Cezanne's landscapes.
The full beauty of Cezanne's developed style is seen in his
By the end of his life Cezanne's development toward abstraction became more evident. The large
Cezanne; Provance; Aix; fatal; threshold; majestic; imaginary; indeterminable; Victoire
1. Cezanne was born in Normandy.
2. Cezanne's early works were Neo-classic.
3. Cezanne exhibited his paintings at the Salon in 1877.
4. Portraiture to Cezanne was second only to still life.
5. Cezanne developed abstractionism.
6. The figures in the Bathers were painted from life.
II. How well have you read? Can you answer the following questions?
1. What interested Cezanne at the beginning of his career? What sayings illustrate Cezanne's mature style?
2. What subject did Cezanne repeatedly study? What is depicted in the Mont Sainte-Victoire^. How did Cezanne produce the effect of durability and massiveness? What did Cezanne achieve from nature?
3. What is shown in the
4. What subject did Cezanne choose for his figure pieces? What is depicted in the
5. Where is the full beauty of Cezanne's developed style seen? What dominates in this painting?
6. What makes the Bathers a masterpiece? Why is Cezanne claimed to be the father of modern art?
to adopt the Impressionist palette; objects are identifiable; a colossal rock crystal of colour; colour construction; spheroid or cylindrical masses; psychological significance; to inflict a fatal blow; search for the exact plane of colour; a developed style; a visual threshold; a fluted column; indispensable elements; the formation of a new style; simplified figures.
неотъемлемый элемент; упрощенные фигуры; зрительный порог; зрелый стиль; формирование нового стиля; постоянно изучать; сферические и цилиндрические фигуры; излюбленная тема; цветовые формы; не поддающиеся определению предметы; овладеть палитрой импрессионистов.
a) to inflict; fatal; indispensable; imaginary; to develop;
b) unreal; essential; to impose; to improve; doomed.
IV. Here are descriptions of some of Cezanne's works of art. Match them up to the titles given below.
1. Cezanne's planes have built majestic cylinders from the arms and a fluted column from the body.
2. The painting shows three men sitting around a table, while a fourth gazes downward, arms folded.
3. The fantasy gave Cezanne the materials with which to build a grand imaginary architecture, composed of simplified figures.
4. The table disappears under the tablecloth at one level.
5. Nothing indicates the time of the day or even the season.
a. Still life with Apples and Oranges
b. Bathers
c. Woman with the Coffee-pot
d. Mont Sainte-Victoire
e. Card Players
V. Translate the text into English.
До конца жизни Поль Сезанн подписывал свои произведения «ученик Писсарро», таким образом подчеркивая свою связь с импрессионистами. Сам Сезанн не принадлежал к этому направлению. У Сезанна нет картин сложного содержания. Наиболее сильная сторона таланта Сезанна – колорит. В передаче цветом реальности выявляются геометрические фигуры природных форм. «Все в природе лепится в форме шара, конуса, цилиндра; надо научится писать на этих простых фигурах, и, если вы научитесь владеть этими формами, вы сделаете все, что захотите». Взамен кажущейся случайности импрессионистов Сезанн принес чувство массы, выразительность образов.
Элементы абстрагирования, заложенные в искусстве Сезанна, позволили его последователям считать его основоположником абстракционизма.
VI. Topics for discussion.
1. Cezanne's artistic concepts.
2. Cezanne and Cubists.
3. Cezanne's as the forerunner of Abstract painting.
Unit XIV Toulouse-Lautrec (1864-1901)
Henry Toulouse-Lautrec, born to one of the oldest noble families in France, broke both his legs in early adolescence, and they never developed properly. For the rest of his brief existence he remained a dwarf, alienated from his family's fashionable life. He learned to paint, and took refuge in the night life of Paris, which he depicted with consummate skill – scenes of cafes, theatres, and cabarets. All of his portrayals are prompted by the same uncritical acceptance of the facts of Parisian night life that he wished for his own deformity and found only in this