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Prints, Drawings, and Photographs

Antique Crouching Venus
Page 11 (verso) from Sketchbook I

Made in France, Europe

After 1879

Paul Cézanne, French, 1839 - 1906

Graphite pencil on wove paper
Sheet: 9 11/16 x 7 3/16 inches (24.6 x 18.3 cm)

Currently not on view

1987-53-10b

Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Walter H. Annenberg, 1987

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Additional information:
  • PublicationPaul Cézanne: Two Sketchbooks

    This is the most precisely drawn but also the most sensual of Cézanne's three copies (see Chappuis, Adrien. The Drawings of Paul Cézanne. 2 vols. Greenwich, Conn., 1973, nos. 1096, 1098) after the Hellenistic marble known as the Venus of Vienne, which was discovered in that city in 1878 and put on view in the Louvre the following year. Cézanne's choice of it as a model reflects the same taste for full, fleshy female figures that informs his numerous copies after Rubens; the Crouching Venus has in fact been called "a type which might be compared to Rubens's nude women" (Bieber, Margarete. The Sculpture of the Hellenistic Age. Rev. ed. New York, 1981, p. 83). Theodore Reff, from Paul Cézanne: Two Sketchbooks (1989), p. 54.