Exhibitions
The Courtauld CÉzannes
25 June-
5 October 2008
Further information about the exhibition

Paul Cézanne Montagne Sainte-Victoire c.1887 © The
Courtauld Gallery
The Courtauld Gallery
holds the finest group of works by Paul Cézanne (1839-1906)
in Britain. As the culmination of The Courtauld Institute of
Art’s 75th anniversary, the Gallery is showing the entire
collection together for the first time. The importance of the
collection lies not only in its exceptionally high quality
but also in its wide range, with seminal paintings, drawings
and watercolours from the major periods of the artist’s
long career.
The Courtauld also holds an important group of nine hand-written letters in which Cézanne reflects upon the fundamental principles of his art. This exhibition is the first opportunity to enjoy this extraordinary collection in its entirety.
The collection includes such masterpieces as the iconic Montagne Sainte-Victoire (c.1887) and Card Players (c.1892-5) which show Cézanne working at the height of his powers. Through such works the exhibition charts the development of the artist’s revolutionary approach that would later see him acclaimed as the father of modern art. Having been rejected by the official Paris Salon in 1870, Cézanne exhibited at the first Impressionist group exhibition in 1874. However, his work was radically different from that of his contemporaries and found little favour with critics and collectors.

Paul Cézanne Cardplayers c.1892,
The Courtauld Gallery Following his lack of success
in Paris, Cézanne withdrew into relative obscurity at
his family home near Aix-en-Provence. Here he formed a deep
bond with the landscape and the local people, such as père
Alexandre, a gardener on his estate who is depicted in both Man
with a Pipe and Card Players. The landscape around
Aix exerted a powerful influence with the great Montagne Sainte-Victoire
taking on an iconic status for the artist. The Courtauld painting
is one of the finest examples of Cézanne’s treatment
of this subject. When the artist showed this work at
a local society of amateur painters in 1895 it was greeted
with incomprehension by all but the young poet Joachim Gasquet. Cézanne
signed the painting and presented it to him in gratitude. Two
years after Cézanne’s death in 1906, Gasquet sold
it for the astonishing sum of 12,000 francs. By then Cézanne
had been rediscovered by the young avant-garde, including Emile
Bernard with whom the letters now at The Courtauld Gallery
were exchanged. In one of these Cézanne famously advised
his protégé to “treat nature in terms of
the cylinder, the sphere and the cone”. This celebrated
statement would become a theoretical underpinning for the move
towards abstraction in the twentieth century. In a further
letter sent shortly before his death he wrote poignantly, “I
have sworn to die while painting, rather than sinking into
the degrading senility that threatens old men”.
The majority of The Courtauld Gallery’s collection was put together by the industrialist Samuel Courtauld (1876-1947) and formed part of his founding gift that established the Courtauld Institute of Art in 1932 as the first centre in Britain dedicated to the study of art history. Courtauld assembled his collection of Cézannes between 1923 and 1929 at a time when the artist was regarded with hostility and suspicion by the British art establishment. It was only in 1925, at Samuel Courtauld’s insistence and with his financial support, that the national collections were able to acquire their first painting by the artist.

Paul Cézanne Still Life with Plaster Cast c.1894,
The Courtauld Gallery Courtauld’s conversion
to the art of Cézanne came in 1922 when he visited an
exhibition at the Burlington Fine Arts Club in London entitled
The French School of the Last Hundred Years. He wrote later
of his epiphany, “At that moment I felt the magic, and
I have felt it in Cézanne’s work ever since”.
The following year he bought, for his private collection, one
of the most important and complex of Cézanne’s
late still lifes, Still life with Plaster Cast ( c.1894).
Its radical distortion of perspective challenged the conventions
of Western painting and prefigured the advent of cubism. A
similarly experimental approach is evident in Lac d’Annecy.
Cézanne painted this work while on holiday in the Haute-Savoie
in 1896, writing dismissively of the conventional beauty of
the landscape as “a little like we’ve been taught
to see it in the albums of young lady travellers”. He
rejected such conventions, seeking not to replicate the superficial
appearance of the landscape but to express what he described
as a “harmony parallel with nature” through a new
language of painting.
Courtauld bought works which he responded to personally and intuitively, rather than according to art-historical principles. In addition to major canvases, a number of outstanding watercolours were also purchased. Apples, Bottle and Chairback is a supreme example of Cézanne’s mastery of the watercolour medium and is remarkable particularly for its scale and complex luminous washes of brilliant colour.

Paul Cézanne Apples, Bottle and Chairback c.1904-6,
The Courtauld Gallery In 1978 The Courtauld Gallery’s
collection was further enriched with a group of works by Cézanne
assembled by the celebrated Old Master collector Count Antoine
Seilern (1901-78). The bequest included The Turning
Road, one of Cézanne’s largest landscapes.
This late work is characterised by an almost abstract treatment
of the landscape in patches of muted colours. Seilern’s
collection also included some fine watercolours and drawings,
such as the carefully observed and ambitiously composed portrait
of Hortense Fiquet sewing. Cézanne would
marry Hortense in 1886. The couple already had a son but the
artist had kept the relationship secret from his disapproving
father. This drawing was later used as an illustration on the
title page of the first monograph on Cézanne, published
by the pioneering dealer Ambroise Vollard in 1914.
As well as celebrating The Courtauld Gallery’s exceptional collection of works by Cézanne, this exhibition and its catalogue present the findings of a major new technical research project on the artist’s Courtauld oils and watercolours conducted in The Courtauld Institute of Art Department of Conservation. Using the very latest imaging technologies, this research has provided fresh insights into the artist’s working methods and techniques, in particular his experimental use of colour and line. The fully illustrated catalogue includes essays and individual entries as well as facsimiles of all the letters with new translations.
