ГДЗ по английскому языку 11 Класс класс упражнение - 150 р. 5
Use the Internet and/or other available sources to find two more paintings by Paul Cézanne. Then, write a short article analysing his use of colour, shapes and perspective.
In The Card Players, the artist uses color to create a sense of depth and form. The palette is muted, dominated by earthy tones of brown and ochre for the figures, contrasted with cool blues and grays in the background. The limited color range contributes to the overall mood of contemplation and quiet intensity.
The shapes are simplified, with the figures rendered in blocky, geometric forms rather than precise detail. The artist prioritizes mass and volume, creating a solid and weighty presence for the card players.
We can see that the figures and table are depicted with a subtle flattening effect, and the spatial relationships are deliberately ambiguous, inviting the viewer to engage actively with the composition. For example, the table appears tilted, and the background lacks a clear sense of receding space.
Cezanne’s colour palette in The Large Bathers is restrained, relying primarily on blues, greens, ochres, and whites. The skin tones of the figures are rendered with a subtle range of these hues, rather than the realistic flesh tones of traditional painting. This creates a sense of unity and interconnectedness between the figures and their surroundings.
The shapes are simplified and abstracted too. The figures are not idealized but rather are rendered as collections of rounded, geometrical forms. Cylindrical limbs, spherical heads, and cone-like torsos create a sense of mass and volume. The trees are similarly reduced to their basic forms: vertical, slightly curved structures.
Cezanne creates a flattened, ambiguous sense of space, where the foreground and background seem to collapse together. The positioning of the figures also contributes to this effect. They are arranged in a shallow plane, almost as if they are arranged on a stage. This enhances the two-dimensionality of the canvas and emphasizes the painting as an object in itself.