He is so important because he revolutionized Cubism!
Paul Cezanne isn't even a real person so, he has no main subjects in his work! Go to: randomtalkpage.wikispace.com
I do not think so - he had a wife and a son.
It would not be possible for anyone to do so. In babyhood and infancy for example.
It's "Monte Sainte Victorie", by Paul Cezanne.
Cezanne influenced the development of cubism and abstract art.
In the early 1870's Paul Cezanne was influenced by the impressionists- he worked with Picasso. He had his first impressionist exhibition in 1874. But he soon became disillusioned with impressionism- he found it too superficial. Paul Cezanne wanted to make impressionism more solid adn durable, so he was influenced by his desire to create a more diverse adn interesting genre of art. Cezanne continued to be influenced by impressioism as he matured as an artist, yet he developed his own technique adn style. Seeming to become more comfortable with the style he is producing.
humanities is so very iumportant
Its not
Because if Jesus did not rise from the dead - then he did not return to send Paul on the 'road to Damascus' - this is why it is so important. No Resurrection = No commission = No Christianity!
Cézanne was not an impressionist painter. He worked for some time together with Pissarro and so he took part in the first 'Impressionist Exhibition' in 1874. After that he went his own way and did not exhibit with the impressionists.
Baptistin Baille was born in France in 1841. His full name was Jean-Baptiste Baille. His friendship with Paul Cezanne and Emile Zola dates from when the three of them were at Bourbon college - a boarding school in Aix, France. Their friendship was so close that they became known as "Les trios inseparables" (the three inseparables). Whilst at college they would often swim together in the River Arc, Provence, France. These recalled images would become the subject of many of Paul Cezanne's paintings of bathers. Emile Zola also referred to their experiences in his fourteenth novel "L'oeuvre" (published in 1886). Baptistin Baille and Paul Cezanne exchanged letters and remained friends long after their college days. Baptistin Baille became a professor of optics and acoustics at the "École de Physique et de Chimie Industrielles" in Paris. He died in 1918.
Because his work comes during and after impressionism and is not impressionistic.