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CTyankee

(68,202 posts)
55. I know it wasn't easy...
Fri Mar 8, 2013, 10:00 PM
Mar 2013

my bad

When the aging Cezanne was asked by a young aspiring artist when they should be painting, he said "paint your stovepipe."

I just love that quote...

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I look forward to this every week and am clueless. Oh well, I enjoy it..Thanks CT Yankee ..n/t monmouth3 Mar 2013 #1
I'm glad you like it! Art history can be lots of fun...I just love doing this stuff... CTyankee Mar 2013 #2
Same here malaise Mar 2013 #27
I'm so glad you like this. It is such a pleasure to hear from folks that they like this stuff... CTyankee Mar 2013 #46
I'm here to learn malaise Mar 2013 #50
Thanks. I keep learning all the time...it's a real journey... CTyankee Mar 2013 #52
Make that three of us Aerows Mar 2013 #44
I don't see any similarity between 1a and 1b Kingofalldems Mar 2013 #3
Oh, sure there is. Artists study everything about other artists. And that includes CTyankee Mar 2013 #4
Ooo! I know #1 longship Mar 2013 #5
Yep. Isn't it wonderful how an college course involving art can linger so long in your CTyankee Mar 2013 #6
I have no idea, but it it's a lot earlier than Seurat. longship Mar 2013 #7
yes, the predecessor is a famous Renaissance artist. Seurat studied copies of his work CTyankee Mar 2013 #8
Piero della Francesca reteachinwi Mar 2013 #9
are you familiar with this work? Just wondering, since this is just a detail from it... CTyankee Mar 2013 #10
No, I recognized the Seurat reteachinwi Mar 2013 #15
Hey, my Master's degree is in Liberal Studies! CTyankee Mar 2013 #25
Madison is marvelous reteachinwi Mar 2013 #62
so happy to hear from outposts of liberalism abroad in the land! CTyankee Mar 2013 #64
I could tell it was the artist who does the itsy bitsy dot painting, Honeycombe8 Mar 2013 #31
2a and 2b horseshoecrab Mar 2013 #11
amazed it took this long to get the Turner...he is so familiar to folks... CTyankee Mar 2013 #14
I found 4b right off the bat, but still stumped on 4a pinboy3niner Mar 2013 #12
It is a different event. Look more to style... CTyankee Mar 2013 #13
Reading about 4b, I've just learned that painters were often paid... countryjake Mar 2013 #16
Try including "Banquet" in your search... countryjake Mar 2013 #17
4a and 4b are by Tiepolo and Veronese, respectively pinboy3niner Mar 2013 #18
wonderful research, Pinboy! Congratulations! CTyankee Mar 2013 #20
3b by Chardin countryjake Mar 2013 #19
Tell me how you came to this... CTyankee Mar 2013 #21
I haven't been able to find 3a. countryjake Mar 2013 #28
that is because it isn't an "exact" copy of a Chardin work. It is more of a genre CTyankee Mar 2013 #32
Just love your posts! burrowowl Mar 2013 #22
Hey, thanks! Take a guess on 3a! CTyankee Mar 2013 #23
van Gogh, Cezanne, Pisarro marions ghost Mar 2013 #24
hmm, then you'd be wrong... CTyankee Mar 2013 #26
sorry marions ghost Mar 2013 #29
yup...guess away... CTyankee Mar 2013 #30
18th century Dutch marions ghost Mar 2013 #33
no, there isn't a Dutch painting here...wrong century, actually... CTyankee Mar 2013 #34
Well I thought 19th century marions ghost Mar 2013 #38
I know absolutely NOTHING about art Ratty Mar 2013 #35
Oh, thanks! Aren't they all beautiful? CTyankee Mar 2013 #36
My guess for 3a is Cezanne. DanTex Mar 2013 #37
what makes you think it is a Cezanne? CTyankee Mar 2013 #39
Because it looks "Cezanne-y"? DanTex Mar 2013 #40
well, well, you are correct...and the work is...??? CTyankee Mar 2013 #41
Cool! The work I can't tell you. DanTex Mar 2013 #42
I already guessed Cezanne marions ghost Mar 2013 #43
Yes, you did! Sorry if I didn't credit you...my bad...urk... CTyankee Mar 2013 #45
OMG--here it is!!!! marions ghost Mar 2013 #48
"Paint your stovepipe." How did you get there? CTyankee Mar 2013 #49
I googled marions ghost Mar 2013 #53
I know it wasn't easy... CTyankee Mar 2013 #55
that flame is the heartbeat of the painting but I couldn't include it because it would CTyankee Mar 2013 #58
Yes and the stark contrast of the canvas marions ghost Mar 2013 #68
Wow, that's really neat Aerows Mar 2013 #47
I have to credit Erika Langmuir of the National Gallery in London for her remarkable CTyankee Mar 2013 #51
I like Cezanne's use of color in those Aerows Mar 2013 #54
The "black" in "Stove in the Studio" is quite interesting...an amalgam of color and a CTyankee Mar 2013 #56
It's really fascinating Aerows Mar 2013 #57
that is a good point! I never thought of it that way... CTyankee Mar 2013 #59
Probably a goofy way of putting it Aerows Mar 2013 #61
I know what you mean. the big paintings make you lose your focus because so much CTyankee Mar 2013 #65
I'm still getting kicks looking at Chardin's works, haven't even started Cezanne yet. countryjake Mar 2013 #69
maybe he sketched them first and then finished them in the painting? It does seem strange... CTyankee Mar 2013 #70
I Got Nuthin... WillyT Mar 2013 #60
Hey, WillT! So nice to see you! CTyankee Mar 2013 #63
I Had A Great Humanities Professor, And Thought I Knew A Thing Or Two About Art, But... WillyT Mar 2013 #66
awww...you are sweet...but CTyankee Mar 2013 #67
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