A thousand painters ought to be killed yearly. Say what you like: I’m every inch a painter.
About Paul Cezanne
Paul Cezanne was a French Post-Impressionist painter whose work introduced new modes of representation and influenced avant-garde artistic movements of the early 20th century, whose work formed the bridge between late 19th-century Impressionism and early 20th century Cubism.
While his early works were influenced by Romanticism – such as the murals in the Jas de Bouffan country house – and Realism, Cezanne arrived at a new pictorial language through intense examination of Impressionist forms of expression.
More quotes from Paul Cezanne
Don’t be an art critic. Paint. There lies salvation.
French painter (1839-1906)
Genius is the ability to renew one’s emotions in daily experience.
French painter (1839-1906)
There are two things in the painter, the eye and the mind; each of them should aid the other.
French painter (1839-1906)
Keep good company – that is, go to the Louvre.
French painter (1839-1906)
I have sworn to die painting.
French painter (1839-1906)
I ask you to pray for me, for once age has overtaken us, we find consolation only in religion.
French painter (1839-1906)
I want to die painting.
French painter (1839-1906)
The world doesn’t understand me and I don’t understand the world, that’s why I’ve withdrawn from it.
French painter (1839-1906)
It is impossible for emotion not to come on us in thinking of that time now flowed away.
French painter (1839-1906)
Painting from nature is not copying the object; it is realizing one’s sensations.
French painter (1839-1906)
I lack the magnificent richness of color that animates nature.
French painter (1839-1906)
Tell me, do you think I’m going mad? I sometimes wonder, you know.
French painter (1839-1906)
Pure drawing is an abstraction. Drawing and colour are not distinct, everything in nature is coloured.
French painter (1839-1906)
If isolation tempers the strong, it is the stumbling-block of the uncertain.
French painter (1839-1906)
The awareness of our own strength makes us modest.
French painter (1839-1906)
We must not be content to memorize the beautiful formulas of our illustrious predecessors. Let us go out and study beautiful nature.
French painter (1839-1906)
My nervous system is enfeebled, only work in oils can sustain me.
French painter (1839-1906)
The artist makes things concrete and gives them individuality.
French painter (1839-1906)
The day is coming when a single carrot, freshly observed, will set off a revolution.
French painter (1839-1906)
Is it the factitious and the conventional that most surely succeed on earth and in the course of life?
French painter (1839-1906)
I could paint for a hundred years, a thousand years without stopping and I would still feel as though I knew nothing.
French painter (1839-1906)
The most seductive thing about art is the personality of the artist himself.
French painter (1839-1906)
It’s so fine and yet so terrible to stand in front of a blank canvas.
French painter (1839-1906)
I allow no one to touch me.
French painter (1839-1906)
I have nothing to hide in art. The initial force alone can bring anyone to the end he must attain.
French painter (1839-1906)
The painter must enclose himself within his work; he must respond not with words, but with paintings.
French painter (1839-1906)
Shadow is a colour as light is, but less brilliant; light and shadow are only the relation of two tones.
French painter (1839-1906)
I paint as if I were Rothschild.
French painter (1839-1906)
We live in a rainbow of chaos.
French painter (1839-1906)
Painting is damned difficult – you always think you’ve got it, but you haven’t.
French painter (1839-1906)
I am a pupil of Pissarro.
French painter (1839-1906)
One does not substitute oneself for the past, one merely adds to it a new link.
French painter (1839-1906)
A work of art which did not begin in emotion is not art.
French painter (1839-1906)
Is art really the priesthood that demands the pure in heart who belong to it wholly?
French painter (1839-1906)
Here, on the river’s verge, I could be busy for months without changing my place, simply leaning a little more to right or left.
French painter (1839-1906)
Art is a harmony parallel with nature.
French painter (1839-1906)
For an Impressionist to paint from nature is not to paint the subject, but to realize sensations.
French painter (1839-1906)
I’ll always be grateful to the public of intelligent amateurs.
French painter (1839-1906)
A puny body weakens the soul.
French painter (1839-1906)
I’ve come to the conclusion that it’s not really possible to help others.
French painter (1839-1906)
I am the primitive of the method I have invented.
French painter (1839-1906)
Optics, developing in us through study, teach us to see.
French painter (1839-1906)
With an apple I will astonish Paris.
French painter (1839-1906)
People think how a sugar basin has no physiognomy, no soul. But it changes every day.
French painter (1839-1906)
My age and health will never allow me to realize the dream of art I’ve been pursuing all my life.
French painter (1839-1906)
When I judge art, I take my painting and put it next to a God made object like a tree or flower. If it clashes, it is not art.
French painter (1839-1906)
Doubtless there are things in nature which have not yet been seen. If an artist discovers them, he opens the way for his successors.
French painter (1839-1906)
The clear French landscape is as pure as a verse of Racine.
French painter (1839-1906)
An art which isn’t based on feeling isn’t an art at all.
French painter (1839-1906)
I must be more sensible and realize that at my age, illusions are hardly permitted and they will always destroy me.
French painter (1839-1906)
Two sittings a day of my models and I’m totally exhausted.
French painter (1839-1906)
I am more a friend of art than a producer of painting.
French painter (1839-1906)
The truth is in nature, and I shall prove it.
French painter (1839-1906)
You say a new era in art is preparing; you sensed it coming; continue your studies without weakening. God will do the rest.
French painter (1839-1906)
With a painter’s temperament, all that’s needed are the means of expression sufficient to be intelligible to the wide public.
French painter (1839-1906)
A thousand painters ought to be killed yearly. Say what you like: I’m every inch a painter.
French painter (1839-1906)