Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Madame Cézanne in a Garden, unknown date.Here she is presented as more extroverted, and her real life restless nature is evident. In most of the other portraits Hortense Fiquet is presented in more formal attire that perhaps reflects the importance she ascribed to fashion; it is said that an appointment with a dressmaker caused her to be late to her husband's deathbed in 1906. [1]
Paul Cézanne (1839–1906), Hortense Cézanne in a Red Dress, c.1890, São Paulo Museum of Art. Marie-Hortense Fiquet Cézanne (22 April 1850 – 1922) was a French artists' model. She is best known for her marriage to Paul Cézanne and the 27 portraits, mostly in oil, he painted of her between 1869 and the late 1890s. [1]
The art historian and collector Bernard Berenson hosted Gertrude and Leo in his English country house in 1902, facilitating their introduction to Paul Cézanne and the dealer Ambroise Vollard. [30] Vollard was heavily involved in the Cézanne art market, and he was the first important contact in the Paris art world for both Leo and Gertrude. [12]
Mary and Cornelius J. Sullivan, her husband, amassed a significant private collection of art during the 1920s and 1930s that included Modigliani's Sculptured Head of a Woman, Paul Cézanne's Madame Cézanne, Georges Rouault's Crucifixion, and a Hepplewhite desk that once belonged to Edgar Degas, as well as works by Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Paul ...
It was the first painting that Cézanne ever sold. [5] Dr. Gachet lent A Modern Olympia back to Cézanne for the First Impressionist Exhibition in 1874. [8] Despite its small size, Cézanne's A Modern Olympia was the subject of mockery and derision by critics and visitors more-so than any of the other paintings in the exhibition. [9]
In September, 2011 the U.S. District Court in Manhattan granted the Met's motion to dismiss the suit: [33] "The Court found that Mr. Konowaloff’s claim would require it to question the validity of the Soviet Union’s taking Cézanne’s portrait of his wife as part of its nationalization of private property after the Russian Revolution ...
Madame Cézanne (Hortense Fiquet, 1850–1922) in the Conservatory – painting by Paul Cézanne (MET, 61.101.2) Items portrayed in this file depicts. Marie-Hortense ...
Portrait of Madame Cézanne was exhibited along with works such as Man with Folded Arms at Lichtentein's first Pop exhibition in Los Angeles. [1] The linear twice-removed black-and-white (along with Man with Folded Arms) is regarded as a quotation of Erle Loran's outline diagram of Cézanne's compositional methods [2] published in a diagram book called Cézanne's Composition. [3]