Portrait Of Madame Cézanne With Loosened Hair
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''Portrait of Madame Cézanne with Loosened Hair'' (or ''Madame Cézanne with Unbound Hair'') is an oil-on-canvas painting by French artist
Paul Cézanne Paul Cézanne ( , , ; ; ; 19 January 1839 – 22 October 1906) was a French Post-Impressionism, Post-Impressionist painter whose work introduced new modes of representation, influenced avant-garde artistic movements of the early 20th century a ...
, variously dated from the mid-1870s to the early 1890s. Although the model, his wife Hortense Fiquet, was not supportive and did not understand or take an interest in her husband's work, this is one of forty-four portraits in which she sat for him from 1869, a period during which she progressed from mistress, to wife, to ex-wife. Something of a
socialite A socialite is a person, typically a woman from a wealthy or aristocratic background, who is prominent in high society. A socialite generally spends a significant amount of time attending various fashionable social gatherings, instead of having ...
, Cézanne latterly found Fiquet often fickle and shallow, and once remarked, "My wife only cares for Switzerland and lemonade". The sensitivity and depth ascribed to her in this work is likely drawn from his own personality and projected onto her image. While elements of the work show the influence of
Impressionism Impressionism was a 19th-century art movement characterized by visible brush strokes, open Composition (visual arts), composition, emphasis on accurate depiction of light in its changing qualities (often accentuating the effects of the passage ...
, it lacks the characteristic extroverted charm of that movement and instead focuses on the subject's inner life. It departs from the artist's earlier portraits of his wife, whom he had earlier divorced, in its sensitivity, delicacy of tone and more relaxed countenance, as seen in the loosened fall of her hair.Cachin, et al, 346


Background

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. Fiquet and Cézanne married on 28 April 1886, though by that time he had said that he no longer had any feelings for Hortense, whom one scholar has described as "a high-maintenance woman". Although he continued to paint his wife until the 1890s, he disinherited her; their only child, Paul (1872—1947) inherited the estate. The settlement that Hortense received from her son was squandered through gambling. After the death of Louis-Auguste Cézanne that same year, Cézanne and his wife separated, and he moved in with his sister and mother, remarking, "My wife only cares for Switzerland and lemonade".Lindsay, Jack. ''Cézanne: His Life and Art". Connecticut: New York Graphic Society, 1969. The psychological distance between husband and wife appears to be reflected in the portraits where she gives the impression of self-absorption. The tilt of her head and body in this work, along with the look of submission and the downward-shaped mouth, are all indicative of an inward, self-concerned nature. Yet, the image is a tender representation of a coyness, shyness and sensitivity which art historian
Meyer Schapiro Meyer Schapiro (23 September 1904 – 3 March 1996) was a Lithuanian-born American art historian who developed new art historical methodologies that incorporated an interdisciplinary approach to the study of works. An expert on early Christian, ...
believed to be a projection of Cézanne's own character. One critic wrote that Cézanne painted heads as if they were apples, a tendency very evident here in the blush of her cheek and the oval shape and curves of her face.


Description

The work is oppressively flat and rectangular. While it lacks pictorial depth, it is highly symmetrical, showing a near full-face and centred body view, with a number of playful deviations, including the lean of her head and torso and the thick vertical line in the background, which is positioned slightly to the left. As with much of Cézanne's mature work, it has many abstract forms, especially the vertical lines of her dress, which echo the diagonals of her hair and join the heavy line in the background on which her head seems to rest.Schapiro, 70 The dress may be made of blue-black velvet upon which are added bands of gray satin; such striping shows up in several earlier portraits Cézanne painted of his wife. The manner in which it utilises costume and background to express tone and mood harks back to techniques used in portraiture during the
early Netherlandish Early Netherlandish painting is the body of work by artists active in the Burgundian and Habsburg Netherlands during the 15th- and 16th-century Northern Renaissance period, once known as the Flemish Primitives. It flourished especially in the ...
period, especially those by
Rogier van der Weyden Rogier van der Weyden (; 1399 or 140018 June 1464), initially known as Roger de le Pasture (), was an Early Netherlandish painting, early Netherlandish painter whose surviving works consist mainly of religious triptychs, altarpieces, and commis ...
. Art historian Liliane Brion-Guerry saw in the painting a delicacy absent from later portraits by Cézanne, in which individual expressiveness would give way to "icy hardness": "The face of Madame Cézanne conveys, even in its transcription, the delicate flutter of human emotion." Though criticized for her extravagances, she possessed "an even-tempered disposition and a tireless patience. When Cézanne couldn't sleep, she read to him in the night, sometimes for hours at a time."


Dating

Biographers disagree on the picture's dating and position within the series.
Lionello Venturi Lionello Venturi (25 April 1885 – 14 August 1961) was an Italian historian and critic of art. He edited the first catalogue raisonné of Paul Cézanne. His son was the historian Franco Venturi. Life Lionello Venturi was born in Modena in 1885 ...
dated it from 1883–87, and Georges Rivière placed it in the mid-1870s. Based on its style,
John Rewald John Rewald (May 12, 1912 – February 2, 1994) was an American academic, author and art historian. He was known as a scholar of Impressionism, Post-Impressionism, Cézanne, Renoir, Pissarro, Seurat, and other French painters of the late 19th cen ...
wrote that it was made in the early 1890s; the fuller form of the face may indicate a later date when Madame Cézanne would have been in her forties. If Rewald's date—now accepted by the
Philadelphia Museum of Art The Philadelphia Museum of Art (PMA) is an List of art museums#North America, art museum originally chartered in 1876 for the Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia. The main museum building was completed in 1928 on Fairmount, a hill located at ...
—is accurate, the painting would be the last Cézanne made of Hortense, who first posed for him in 1869.Adriani, 153


References


Sources

* Adriani, Götz. ''Cézanne Paintings''. Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 1995. * Cachin, Françoise, et al. ''Cézanne''. Philadelphia Museum of Art, 1996. * Fry, Roger. ''Cézanne, A Study of his Development''. New York: Macmillan, 1927. *
Garb, Tamar Tamar Garb is Durning Lawrence Professor in the Department of History of Art at University College London. A researcher of French art of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Garb has published numerous catalogue essays and books ...
. ''The Painted Face, Portraits of Women in France 1814-1914''. Yale University Press, 2007. * Schapiro, Meyer. ''Cézanne''. Harry N. Abrams, 2004. * Rishel, Joseph J. ''Philadelphia Museum of Art: Handbook of the Collections'', 1995. 208.


External links


Philadelphia Museum of Art
{{DEFAULTSORT:Portrait of Madame Cezanne with Loosened Hair Portraits by Paul Cézanne Cezanne 1880s paintings Cezanne Paintings in the Philadelphia Museum of Art