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Topic - Paul Cézanne

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  • BOOK REVIEW: ‘Cezanne: A Life’

    Virtually all the impressionists revered Cezanne. Renoir said he couldn't "put two strokes of paint on a canvas without it already being very good." He made a point of working with Cezanne, and he owned several of Cezanne's paintings. He and Degas once competed to buy a Cezanne still life of pears.

  • Rare Cezanne watercolor fetches $19M at NY auction

    A rare watercolor study by Paul Cezanne believed lost for nearly 60 years fetched over $19 million at a New York City auction on Tuesday.

  • Rare Cezanne watercolor study at NY auction

    A rare watercolor study by Paul Cezanne believed lost for nearly 60 years is being auctioned in New York City where it's expected to sell for up to $20 million.

  • Swiss say Cezanne damaged in heist can be restored

    A Swiss art expert says a $110 million painting by Paul Cezanne damaged following a robbery four years ago can be restored.

  • Stolen Cezanne handed over to Switzerland

    A Serbian police chief says a stolen Paul Cezanne painting worth (EURO)100 million ($130 million) has been handed back to Switzerland.

  • Serb police find painting believed stolen Cezanne

    Serbian police have found a painting believed to be by French impressionist Paul Cezanne, which was stolen from a private Swiss museum in 2008 in one of the biggest art thefts in Europe at the time.

  • Swiss confirm seized painting is stolen Cezanne

    Swiss prosecutors say a painting seized in Serbia has been confirmed as a stolen masterpiece by French impressionist Paul Cezanne.

  • Rare Cezanne watercolor study coming to NY auction

    A rare watercolor study by Paul Cezanne believed lost and last seen in 1953 will be auctioned in New York City where it's expected to fetch up to $20 million.

  • Handlers hang paintings in the National Gallery of Art's newly re-installed 19th-century French galleries. (Photograph courtesy National Gallery of Art)

    National Gallery of Art to reopen French exhibits with overhauled display

    Where is everything? That could well be the first reaction of visitors to the renovated galleries of impressionist and post-impressionist paintings at the National Gallery of Art when they reopen to the public Jan 29.

  • Spain's Prado museum hosts large Hermitage exhibit

    Spain's Prado museum is hosting a large exhibition of European art lent by Russia's Hermitage, a rare opportunity to see such work outside the vast St. Petersburg museum.

  • Mass. plaintiff awarded $3.1M in art heist lawsuit

    A Massachusetts jury has found in favor of the plaintiff in a lawsuit filed in connection with a 1978 art heist.

  • This photograph released Sept. 14, 2010 by the Seaport Museum New York shows a photo by Alfred Stieglitz titled "From the Back-Window--291."  A new exhibition of iconic images by Stieglitz offers a view of New York City at the turn of the 20th century through the eyes of one of the world's most celebrated photographers. "Alfred Stieglitz New York" opens Wednesday, Sept. 15 and continues through Jan. 10, 2011. (AP Photo/Seaport Museum New York, Alfred Stieglitz Collection, Courtesy of the Board of Trustees, National Gallery of Art, Washington) NO SALES

    NYC exhibit captures photog's vision of the city

    A new exhibition of photographs by Alfred Stieglitz offers a view of New York City at the turn of the 20th century through the eyes of one of the world's most celebrated photographers.

  • Impressionism: Monet in the bank for cash-hungry museums

    Mount an impressionism show, and they will come. The light-dappled paintings produced by the artists of this 19th-century French movement and their stylistic offspring have become a safety net for museums. Beloved by the public, they are guaranteed to boost attendance and revenues from ticket sales, catalogs and gift-shop merchandise. As a result, impressionism exhibitions have become predictable, all-too-regular fixtures on museum calendars to the exclusion of more challenging art.

  • Works show van Gogh's final days

    MADRID, SPAIN -- When Vincent van Gogh arrived in the French village of Auvers-sur-Oise in late May 1890, seeking a new life after a year in a mental asylum, he embarked on an explosion of creativity, producing more than 70 paintings within two months.

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