Gauguin, Cézanne, Matisse
visions of Arcadia
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Author
Contributions
- Philadelphia Museum of Art - Contributor
Publication
2012 - Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Language
English
Word Count
60,750 words, Guess
Page Count
243 pages
Identifiers
- ISBN-139780876332399
- ISBN-139780876332405
- ISBN-139780300179804
- ISBN-100876332394
- ISBN-100876332408
and 5 more
- ISBN-100300179804
- Library of Congress Control Number2012013803
- OCLC Control Number759174519
- Better World Books9780300179804
- Open LibraryOL25283253M
Classifications
- DDC759.4074/74811
- LCCN8205 .G38 2012
- LCCND548
Description
"The notion of a golden age set in an earthly paradise has long kindled the human imagination. Virgil envisioned such a place of bucolic pleasures - erotic and unsullied, sometimes shadowed by blunted desires and doubts - in his Eclogues, set in the valley of Arcadia in ancient Greece. His poems defined for Western art and literature a theme that continues to this day. Their resonance as a foundation for European painters around 1900 is the subject of this beautifully illustrated catalogue, which focuses on three monumental paintings - Paul Gauguin's Where Do We Come From? What Are We? Where Are We Going? (1897-98), Paul Cézanne's The Large Bathers (1906), and Henri Matisse's Bathers by a River (1909-10, 1913, and 1916-17). Other masterpieces by Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot, Nicolas Poussin, and Pierre Puvis de Chavannes establish the high value given to Arcadia in the history of French painting. These are joined by major works by Henri Edmond Cross, Robert Delaunay, André Derain, Pablo Picasso, Henri Rousseau, and Paul Signac, as well as paintings by Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, Franz Marc, and Natalia Goncharova to suggest the vitality of this subject outside the canonical French definitions. Distinguished scholars place these artists within the larger context of this inventive period in art history."--Publisher's description.
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