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Boy in a Red Waistcoat

Paul Cézanne1888-1890

National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

National Gallery of Art, Washington DC
Washington, DC, United States

This is, at once, an astonishingly modern painting and one that reflects Cézanne's admiration for and connection to the past. He said himself that he "wanted to make of impressionism something solid and durable like the art of the museums." The boy's pose is that of an academic life study, and for some art historians it has recalled the languid elegance of 16th–century portraiture. As a young man in Paris, Cézanne had learned his art not only from his impressionist colleagues but also through studying old masters in the Louvre.


On the other hand, it is possible to see this so–called portrait as an entity of shapes and colors. Notice the paints used in the hands and face: these greens and mauves have little to do with human flesh. The almost dizzying background of angles and gentle arcs, which are difficult at first to "read" as draperies and a chair back, divide space rather than define it. A work such as this looks forward to the reconstructed pictorial space of the cubists Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso, leading one noted critic to write, "Cézanne's art ...lies between the old kind of picture, faithful to a striking or beautiful object, and the modern 'abstract' kind of painting, a moving harmony of color touches representing nothing."

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  • Title: Boy in a Red Waistcoat
  • Creator: Paul Cézanne
  • Date Created: 1888-1890
  • Physical Dimensions: overall: 89.5 x 72.4 cm (35 1/4 x 28 1/2 in.) framed: 118.43 × 100.33 × 11.11 cm (46 5/8 × 39 1/2 × 4 3/8 in.)
  • Provenance: (Ambroise Vollard [1867-1939], Paris); sold 1896 to Egisto Fabbri [1866-1933], Paris and Florence, until at least 1925;[1] (Paul Rosenberg, Paris, and Wildenstein Galleries, Paris); sold 1929 to Jakob Goldschmidt [d. 1955], Berlin and New York; his estate; (Goldschmidt sale, Sotheby's, London, 15 October 1958, no. 6); purchased by (Carstairs Gallery, New York) for Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mellon, Upperville, Virginia; gift 1995 to NGA. [1]According to John Rewald, _The Paintings of Paul Cézanne: a Catalogue Raisonné_, New York, 1996, no. 659, Fabbri sold the picture back to Vollard in 1904 and repurchased it at a later date. Fabbri lent it to the 1925 exhibition in Paris.
  • Medium: oil on canvas
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

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