Art

Paul Cézanne, Landscapes, Camille Pissarro – Origins of Modern Art 5



Cézanne’s development towards a post-impressionist vision on landscape painting
See my playlist on art:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL61C3B135E7EBE785
Paintings:
00:13 Paul Cézanne 1865 – Landscape near Aix-en-Provence. Private collection
01:07 Camille Pissarro 1873 – The Haystack, Pontoise. Private collection
01:25 Camille Pissarro 1873 – Self Portrait, 56 x 46,5 cm. Musée d’Orsay, Paris
01:55 Camille Pissarro 1874 – Portrait of Cezanne. Private Collection
02:47 Camille Pissarro 1874 – Landscape near Pontoise, 61 × 81 cm. Private collection (Sammlung Oskar Reinhart am Römerholz)
03:26 Camille Pissarro 1877 – Orchard with Flowering Trees, Spring, Pontoise, 65.5 x 81 cm. Musée d’Orsay, Paris
03:53 Paul Cézanne 1877 – Fruit Garden / Orchard in Pontoise. Private collection
05:16 Paul Cézanne 1879 – Bridge of Maincy (Pont de Maincy), 59 × 72 cm. Musée d’Orsay, Paris
05:48 Camille Pissarro 1875 – The Little Bridge of Pontoise (Le Petit Pont, Pontoise), 65 x 81 cm. Städtliche Kunsthalle, Mannheim
06:23 Camille Pissarro c1900 – Apple Trees in Bloom, Éragny. John C. Whitehead Collection, Courtesy of Achim Moeller Fine Art, New York.
06:41 Paul Cézanne 1900/04 – The Grounds of the Château-Noir, 90,7 × 71,4 cm. National Gallery, London
07:27 Paul Cézanne 1885/87 – The Jas de Bouffan, 60x71cm. National Gallery in Prague
08:29 Paul Cézanne c1868 – Road in Provence. Museum of Fine Arts, Montreal
08:50 Paul Cézanne 1873 – The House of Dr. Gached in Auvers, 46 x 38 cm. Musée d’Orsay, Paris
09:00 Paul Cézanne 1873 – Houses Along a Road, 60 x 73.5 cm (23 5/8 x 28 7/8 in). The State Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg
09:10 Paul Cézanne 1900/06 – Bend in Road, 81.3 x 64.8 cm (32 x 25 1/2 in). National Gallery of Art, Washington
09:44 Albrecht Altdorfer 1510 – St. George in the Forest, 22.5 × 28.2 cm (8.9 × 11.1 in). Alte Pinakothek, Munich
10:05 Albrecht Altdorfer c1518-20 – Landscape with a Footbridge, oil on vellum and wood, 42.1 x 35.5 cm. National Gallery, London
10:30 Nicolas Poussin c1673 – Landscape with a Man Scooping Water from a Stream, 63 x 78 cm. National Gallery London
10:41 Paul Cézanne 1885 – View of L’Estaque and Chateaux d’If, 71 x 57.1 cm. Private Collection
10:50 Paul Cézanne c1882 – The Bay of L’Estaque from the East. 53.98 cm x 65.09 cm (21 1/4 in. x 25 5/8 in). Memorial Art Gallery of the University of Rochester, US
10:55 Claude Monet 1884 – Bordighera. 65 x 80.8 cm (25 5/8 x 31 13/16 in). The Art Institute of Chicago, Illinois
11:11 Caspar David Friedrich 1829 – The Oak Tree in the Snow, 71 × 48 cm. Alte Nationalgalerie, Berlin
11:25 Paul Cézanne 1866 – Landscape, 36.6 x 40.5 cm. Private collection
11:30 Paul Cézanne 1894 – Forest, 116.2 x 81.3 cm (45 13/16 x 32 in). Los Angeles County Museum of Art, US
11:37 Gustave Courbet 1864 – The Oak at Flagey (also known as The Oak of Vercingetoris). Murauchi Art Museum (Japan)
11:59 Claude Monet 1918-19 – Weeping Willow, 99.7 × 120 cm (39.3 × 47.2 in). Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth, Texas
12:17 Paul Cézanne 1876 – Landscape at The Jas De Bouffan, 45 x 54 cm. Private Collection
12:32 Paul Cézanne c1889 – The Large Pine, 84×92 cm. Museu de Arte se São Paulo Assis Chateaubriand, São Paulo Brazil
12:42 Paul Cézanne 1890/95 – Large Pine and Red Earth, 72x91cm. The State Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg
12:48 Vincent van Gogh.1889 – The Mulberry Tree, Saint Rémy. Norton Simon Museum Pasadena, California, US
13:31 Paul Cézanne 1897 – Mont Sainte-Victoire, Bibémus, 65 x 81 cm. Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore, us
13:37 Paul Cézanne c1897 – Bibémus: The Red Rock, 91 x 66 cm. Musée du Louvre, Paris
13:49 Paul Cézanne 1898-1900 – Quarry Bibémus, 65 × 81 cm. Museum Folkwang, Essen, Germany
14:44 Paul Cézanne 1890 – Reflections in the Water. Private Collection

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10 thoughts on “Paul Cézanne, Landscapes, Camille Pissarro – Origins of Modern Art 5
  1. thanks once more ,it gives a very interesting explanation to Ce'zanne's way of life thoughts and method -as if bringing him back for a moment to talk with him.I DO love your way of bringing Cezanne.

  2. Yep, if I want something in the picture that's not visible from my current point of view, I just add it anyway, it's drawing, painting, … not photography it's perfectly possible to include things from different angles.
    Didn't know Cezanne was the one who started all that 😀 not including pre-renaissance art I guess where realism and line of sight wasn't even discovered yet.

  3. Yes Grandpa?That not a good preparations FOR CHURCHES PREACHING ?OHOH SO MANYS GRANDPA TO INJOYING ON THE NAME OF YOU AND YOUR SON GOD LOVE WOMEN FOR HIS TWO SONS…

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