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A key figure in the impressionist and post-impressionist movements, Paul Cézanne is widely recognized today as one of the founders of modern art. Cézanne spent some formative time in Paris, Pontoise, and Auvers, where he was especially influenced in the 1870s by the impressionist style, lighter palette, and open-air approach of Camille Pissarro. But Cézanne repeatedly returned to his native Provence, spending the last twenty years of his life almost exclusively there. It was in his studio in Aix-en-Provence, and on frequent painting excursions into the surrounding countryside, that Cézanne created some of his most original and compelling landscapes.
The images collected here are from the exhibition Cézanne in Provence—organized by the National Gallery of Art, Washington, the Musée Granet and the Communauté du Pays d’Aix, Aix-en-Provence, and the Réunion des musées nationaux, Paris—the principal international exhibition marking 2006 as the centenary of the death of Paul Cézanne (1839–1906).
Twenty 5 x 7" blank notecards (five each of four styles) with white envelopes in a decorative box. ISBN: 0-7649-3623-9.
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 | Montagne Sainte-Victoire Notecard 5 x 7" blank note card with envelope.

|  | Houses in Provence Notecard 5 x 7" blank note card with envelope.

|  |  | House with the Red Roof Notecard 5 x 7" blank note card with envelope.

|  | L'Estaque: Rocks, Pines and Sea Notecard 5 x 7" blank note card with envelope.

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