Поль Сезанн - Молодая итальянская девушка, опираясь на локоть 1896

Self-portrait 1896 The card players 1896 The Lac d'Annecy 1896 Young italian girl resting on her elbow 1896 Bibemus the red rock 1897 Henry Gasquet McNay 1897 Montagne Sainte-Victoire 1897
Поль Сезанн - Молодая итальянская девушка, опираясь на локоть 1896

Молодая итальянская девушка, опираясь на локоть 1896
92x73см холст/масло
Getty Museum, Los Angeles, California, USA

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From Getty Museum, Los Angeles:
Leaning on a fabric-covered table and resting her head in her hand, this young woman looks out with an enigmatic expression. Since the Renaissance, artists have used this pose to portray melancholy. The pose, combined with her hauntingly unreadable face, gives a human poignancy and psychological tension to the figure.
Juxtaposing bold, individual strokes of color, Paul Cézanne built up the woman's powerful physical presence and the space she occupies. As a twentieth-century painter and admirer of Cézanne observed, his later works, such as Young Italian Woman have "an enormous sense of volume, breathing, pulsating, expanding, contracting, through his use of colors." While the woman's form is convincing, the space behind and around her can appear contradictory and even confusing. How far away is the wall? Is the tabletop flat underneath the cloth? Does she sit or stand? These questions give tension and movement to an otherwise stable composition.
From the 1890s until the end of his life, Cézanne painted a number of these grand figure studies, usually relying upon local workers or residents for his models.