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Christie’s to sell an important landscape by Cézanne

Paul Cézanne, Vue sur L’Estaque et Le Château d’If

Paul Cézanne
Vue sur L’Estaque et Le Château d’If
circa 1883-1885
estimate: £8-12 million

Christie’s to sell an important landscape by Cézanne On 4 February 2015, Christie’s will auction Paul Cézanne’s ‘Vue sur L’Estaque et Le Château d’If’, which comes to the market for the first time since it was acquired in 1936 by Samuel Courtauld.]]>

December 17, 2014, source: Christie’s

The painting remained in the private collection of Samuel Courtauld -the founder of the illustrious Courtauld Gallery and Institute of Art in London- throughout his lifetime and following his generous bequest to the Courtauld Gallery. The magisterial work was painted circa 1883-1885, during one of the last visits that Cézanne ever made to L’Estaque, a fishing port and small seaside resort in his native Provence, where he sought inspiration repeatedly from the mid-1860s. This is a rare example on a vertical canvas of Cézanne’s treatment of this iconic motif; the format lends the composition stately dignity and remarkable concentration of colour and form.

The splendid panorama – captured in Vue sur L’Estaque et Le Château d’If – from the hilltop above the town, looking over the rooftops toward the bay of Marseille and the distant islands of Frioul, provided the basis for some of the most innovative landscapes of Cézanne’s career, in which he fully realised his goal to “make of Impressionism something solid and enduring like the art in museums.”

The stable and harmonious distribution of forms within the composition, with broad horizontal bands of land, sea, and sky framed by majestic pine trees, is profoundly indebted to the classical landscape tradition of Poussin, which Cézanne used to organise his sensations before nature. At the same time, Cézanne’s constructive transformation of the townscape into an architectural geometry of flat, overlapping planes is powerfully modern, as the next generation of the avant-garde would recognise. “The discovery of his work overturned everything,” exclaimed Braque, who traveled to L’Estaque repeatedly during the formative years of cubism.

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Christie's to sell an important landscape by Cézanne