
Cezanne's Shadows
Poussin, Chardin, Rubens
Nancy Locke(Author)
Pennsylvania State University Press
Published on 22. April 2025
Book
Hardback
176 pages
978-0-271-09879-1 (ISBN)
Description
Modernism has often been described as a rejection of the art of the past, but Cezanne's Shadows makes an eloquent case for precisely the opposite artistic practice.
In this book, Nancy Locke argues that the idea of a modernist forgetting would never have taken hold if the modernist painters themselves, and Cezanne in particular, had not wrestled so fiercely with the work of their predecessors. Cezanne routinely interrupted his work with a model to go back to the Louvre or to consult sketches and studies he did after the old masters. Exploring the importance of Cezanne's involvement with the art of the past in essays devoted to Poussin, Chardin, and Rubens, Locke argues that Cezanne's art cannot be understood without an investigation into what he made of these earlier models and how they continued to haunt even his mature work.
Cezanne's Shadows offers an elegant new model for understanding the relationship between modernist painting and the creative tradition it often feigns to reject. This study of artistic ambitions and an analysis of nineteenth-century art writing will be especially valuable to scholars of modernism and European art history.
In this book, Nancy Locke argues that the idea of a modernist forgetting would never have taken hold if the modernist painters themselves, and Cezanne in particular, had not wrestled so fiercely with the work of their predecessors. Cezanne routinely interrupted his work with a model to go back to the Louvre or to consult sketches and studies he did after the old masters. Exploring the importance of Cezanne's involvement with the art of the past in essays devoted to Poussin, Chardin, and Rubens, Locke argues that Cezanne's art cannot be understood without an investigation into what he made of these earlier models and how they continued to haunt even his mature work.
Cezanne's Shadows offers an elegant new model for understanding the relationship between modernist painting and the creative tradition it often feigns to reject. This study of artistic ambitions and an analysis of nineteenth-century art writing will be especially valuable to scholars of modernism and European art history.
Reviews / Votes
"Cezanne's Shadows offers 'slow looking' at its very best-a form of interpretation that unpacks the material immediacy and compositional intelligence of Cezanne's art to its fullest. Locke's delicate prose shines throughout with her many nuanced and novel observations about this key modernist painter's artistic pantheon. A major achievement and an unforgettable read."-Andre Dombrowski, author of Cezanne, Murder, and Modern Life "By conceiving of artistic influence as an unfinished conversation, Locke offers convincing accounts not just of Cezanne's work but also that of the 'source' painters Poussin, Chardin, and Rubens. Allowing paintings to speak to one another across time challenges the conventional understanding of impact as moving in only one direction-forward-and makes clear how much our interpretations of artists are inflected by what came after them."
-Allison Deutsch, author of Consuming Painting: Food and the Feminine in Impressionist Paris
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
University Park
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Illustrations
23 Halftones, color; 52 Halftones, black and white
Dimensions
Height: 254 mm
Width: 203 mm
Thickness: 19 mm
Weight
1021 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-271-09879-1 (9780271098791)
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Schweitzer Classification
Person
Nancy Locke is Professor of Art History at the Pennsylvania State University. She is the author of Manet and the Family Romance.