With 32-pages of full-color inserts, and black-and-white
illustrations throughout.
Alex Danchev gives us the first comprehensive assessment of the
revolutionary work and restless life of Paul Cézanne to be
published in decades. One of the most influential painters of his
time and beyond, Cézanne was the exemplary artist-creator of the
modern age who changed the way we see the world.
With brisk intellect, rich documentation, and eighty-eight color
and fifty-two black-and-white illustrations, Danchev tells the
story of an artist who was originally considered a madman, a
barbarian, and a sociopath. Beginning with the unsettled teenager
in Aix, Danchev takes us through the trials of a painter who
believed that art must be an expression of temperament but was
tormented by self-doubt, who was rejected by the Salon for forty
years, who sold nothing outside his immediate circle until his
thirties, who had a family that he kept secret from his father
until his forties, who had his first exhibition at the age of
fifty-six—but who fiercely maintained his revolutionary beliefs.
Danchev shows us how the beliefs Cézanne held and the life he led
became the obsession and inspiration of artists, writers, poets,
and philosophers from Henri Matisse and Pablo Picasso to Samuel
Beckett and Allen Ginsberg. A special feature of the book is a
remarkable series of Cézanne’s self-portraits, reproduced in full
color.
Cézanne is not only the fascinating life of a visionary
artist and extraordinary human being but also a searching
assessment of his ongoing influence in the artistic imagination
of our time. A stunning portrait of a monumentally important
artist, this is a biography not to be missed.