Variations on Cezanne's Still Life with a Plaster Cast
30 x 24 Oil on Linen
The idea of variations on a theme has always fascinated me.
In music there are variations on an original theme like Bach's Goldberg
Variations. There are also variations on a theme by another composer like
Rachmaninoff's variation on a theme by Paganinni or Beethoven's variations on
Mozart's duet from Don Giovanni "là ci darem la mano." These
variations generally begin with simple changes in key or tempo and then go off
into marvelous and ingeniously complex manipulations of the original theme. In
painting there is a tradition of one artist copying another's work like Rubens'
copies of works by Titian or Picasso's interpretations of paintings by
Velazquez. But these are wholesale reinventions not variations. So I assigned
myself the task of doing multiple variations within a single work by another
artist. A theme by Cezanne seemed like a good choice, I chose his Still Life
with a Plaster Cast (now in the Courtauld Institute of Art, London). I could
have approached the problem by playing with technical elements such as color
and composition but instead decided that my variations would be stylistic. The
plaster cast, for example, is a more classical rendering than Cezanne's
version. The blue draped chair on the left (part of a painting in Cezanne's
version but a real object in mine) is painted the way Matisse might have
handled it and the floor is reminiscent of Van Gogh's approach. The deep
shadows in the upper left hand corner are rendered with multiple glazes à la Titian. The apples on the table
represent various artistic styles while the onions return to the way Cezanne
himself rendered them. For the paintings stacked on the floor I've introduced
cubist, abstract expressionist and religious themes. All of these variations
are held together by my own artistic hand and philosophy. I've never seen a
painting approached this way before, perhaps I've invented a whole new genre of
painting.....
2 comments:
Love this painting! What a great idea.
Good evening Sir,
I have compared the Cezanne painting (original) and your
Interpretation. Your painting is more colored and more alive.
Your colors are shimmering. I want to hang the apples and bite them.
Exellent idea to reinterpret a work in a more contemporain style
Congratulations.
Martine
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