Paul Cézanne - Portrait of uncle Dominique in profile 1866

Portrait of Antoine Valabregue 1866 Portrait of uncle Dominique as a monk 1866 Portrait of uncle Dominique in a turban 1866 Portrait of uncle Dominique in profile 1866 Portrait of uncle Dominique 1866 Portrait_of uncle Dominique 1866 Promenade 1866
Portrait of uncle Dominique in profile 1866

Portrait of uncle Dominique in profile 1866
39x30cm oil/canvas
Fitzwilliam Museum, England

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From Fitzwilliam Museum:
Cézanne maintained that ‘the goal of all art [was] the human face’. He painted portraits throughout his career, and over fifty self-portraits in various media between around 1866 and 1906.
Between October 1866 and January 1867, he painted at least ten portraits of his maternal uncle, Dominique Aubert, a local bailiff. Like others in the series, this was probably painted in a single afternoon session, the oil paint vigorously applied with a palette knife. Another of Cézanne’s models, the writer Antoine Valabrègue, marvelled at Aubert’s tenacity in modelling so frequently; Cézanne was, he wrote, ‘a horrible painter as regards the poses he gives people … Every time he paints one of his friends, it seems as though he were revenging himself on him for some hidden injury’.
Lent by the Provost and Fellows of King’s College (Keynes collection)