Cézanne: Portraits of a Life

Movie Information

With expert commentary, the artist’s correspondence in voiceover by Brian Cox and lovely travel photography, this documentary is a complete package for art lovers.
Score:

Genre: Documentary
Director: Phil Grabsky
Starring: Brian Cox
Rated: NR

Known primarily as a painter of still lifes and landscapes, Paul Cézanne (1839-1906) also created a remarkable number of portraits. These works provide the gateway to his life and art in this documentary based on the first portrait-focused Cézanne retrospective, held at the National Portrait Gallery in London in 2017.

The painter’s life offers little drama, leaving director Phil Grabsky with just Cézanne’s occasional money problems and one illegitimate son out of which to weave a narrative. He’s aided by Cézanne’s letters to childhood friend Emile Zola and other acquaintances, read with feeling by actor Brian Cox (HBO‘s “Succession”). But the great passions they reveal are chiefly about his art, appropriately enough.

Perhaps the most important figure to bridge the Impressionists, who came before him, with the 20th century modernists (such as Picasso, whom he inspired), Cézanne was nevertheless a rather open book artistically — it’s all right there on the canvas, the distinctive brush strokes, slightly off-kilter compositions and juxtaposed curls of color. The experts here do their best to explain how and why this seemingly simple style works so magically, but the paintings themselves speak the loudest.

Of course, the whole point of the Exhibition on Screen series is to highlight each featured artist’s works and to give those of us unable to attend the actual shows long, close looks at the paintings. Combined with the biographical commentary, correspondence in voiceover, historic photos and lovely cinematography of the places Cézanne lived and worked — Aix-en-Provence and Paris — Portraits of a Life is a complete package for art lovers. The cost of streaming the film is just a fraction of what admission to the exhibition would have cost, and you can sit home and sip wine and even eat a pear or two while browsing, without any museum guards to stop you.

Available to rent May 15-21 via fineartstheatre.com

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