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Paul
Cézanne, Claude Lantier and Artistic Impotence
by Aruna D'Souza |
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Much ink has been spilled on the
extent to which Claude Lantier, protagonist of Zola's L'Oeuvre,
was modeled on Paul Cézanne. Scholars argue over whether the
novel is a thinly-disguised and unflattering biography of a single
artist, Cézanne; whether its protagonist, Claude Lantier, is
an amalgam of a number of artists including Cézanne, Édouard
Manet and Claude Monet; or whether it is a work of pure fiction.1
One must, of course, be careful in treating L'Oeuvre
as anything but a powerful, inventive fabrication. And yet how tempting
it is to read into Cézanne's work and life some part of the
character so compellingly described by Zola! Zola's novel seems to
provide one of the few real insights into this most inscrutable artist,
not only in terms of the early biography of Lantier, for which Zola
clearly mined his boyhood friendship with Baptistin Baille and Cézanne,
but also in the kind of anguished frustration with which Lantier faces
the very act of painting, in which we hear echoes of Cézanne's
own doubts. The "match" between Cézanne and Lantier
seems too perfect, too potentially revealing, to discard wholesale. |
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Previous
commentators have tried to account for the apparent similarities between
Cézanne and Lantier by enumerating the ways in which the details
of the life of the fictional character Claude Lantier were culled
from the details of the biography of the artist Paul Cézanne.
However, they crafted their accounts first, without recognizing that
Cézanne's biography is itself a textual construction, and second,
without acknowledging that to an equal extent it was Zola's fiction
which provided the model for Cézanne's biographers. There is
a circularity, then, in the logic which compels the endless comparison
of Lantier and Cézanne. Is there a way to use L'Oeuvre
to gain insight into our picture of Cézanne, without reducing
it to a kind of flawed biographical sketch of the real artist? I propose
instead to understand the two textsthat of the biographical "Paul
Cézanne" and that of Zola's description of anguished creativity,
elaborated in all of L'Oeuvre's characters, but
most profoundly in Lantieras parallel but interrelated constructions,
forming crucial links in a new notion of the artistic genius that
developed in the nineteenth century. |
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I. "How did we believe
that this man who was frightened of other men and who hid himself
from women was virile enough to leave a fruitful legacy [féconder
l'avenir]?"2 |
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Despite the fact that Cézanne
was possibly the most reticent of late nineteenth century French artists,
art historians seem to feel relatively certain of at least the following:
first, that Cézanne was an artist plagued by doubt, by a fear
of failure, by an almost paralyzing anxiety about making his painting
adequate to the representation of nature; and second, that he was
a man deeply troubled in his relation to women, and perhaps even to
his own masculinity. If there is relatively little documentary evidence
from Cézanne's own hand to support these assumptionsCézanne's
letters are curiously sparse and characteristically tight-lipped,
and almost all of our other biographical information about the artist
descends from the not entirely objective reminiscences of others3there
can be no doubt that both ideas have been thoroughly incorporated
into our contemporary myth of the artist. |
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Cézanne's artistic paralysis
is avowed in Zola's shocking pronouncement that Cézanne was
"a great aborted genius,"4 in Bernard's overly emphatic
denial of Cézanne's resemblance to Claude Lantier while at
the same time describing Cézanne in terms of failure and impotence,5
in Vollard's tale of the excruciating experience of sitting for a
portrait for this artist whose innate "inability to complete"
required endless reworkings of the canvas and ultimately resulted
in that famous spot on his knuckle left bare,6 in Merleau-Ponty's
important analysis of "Cézanne's doubt",7 and in
countless other stories and judgments more often than not recounted
by his greatest admirers and supporters. All of these images of Cézanne
find witness in the painfully built up surfaces, reworked contours,
and patches of untouched canvas out of which Cézanne's pictures
are composed; the idea of doubt structures not only our image of Cézanne,
but structures the order of his painting as well, it seems. |
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It is not merely these familiar articulations
of Cézanne's doubt, however, but the connection that is often
drawn between his artistic anxieties, and his more troubling sexual
anxieties, in the narratives of his genius, that is most interesting.
He is consistently presented, in the literature that emerged after
the great Vollard exhibition of 1895, as a man whose fears and uneasiness
about women not only affected his relationships with flesh-and-blood
females, but also appeared in every brushstroke that he laid on canvas.
Elie Faure, for example, claimed that "this great sensualist
feared women more than anything else,"8 while Georges Rivière
alarmingly found Cézanne's self-imposed distance from women
the result of a "ferocious misogyny," born of the fact that
"Cézanne saw woman as the traditional enemy of man,"
possessing a "satanic beauty."9 Most telling, perhaps, is
Émile Bernard's Souvenirs sur Paul Cézanne
of 1907, one of the most influential texts to appear on the artist
in the early years of commentary. In a text full of ambivalence towards
Cézanne's art in general and his images of the nudehis baigneusesin
particular, Bernard explains the insufficiencies or gaucheries
of the artist's engagement with the female form as the result of his
sexual anxieties: Cézanne's nudes are eccentric and deformed
because he did not work from the female model, and this because "he
didn't trust himself with women."10 Suggesting as it does an
almost uncontrollable, or even violent, passion, the phrase signals
an important conjunction in Cézanne criticism: the bringing
together of artistic doubt with a physical deviancy. |
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While most recent commentators would
reject the determinism of Bernard's formulation, the idea that, at
base, these paintings of female bathers contain a sublimated, excessive
eroticism born from a deep discomfort with women is almost canonical.
It is precisely the notion of sublimation, a term deployed repeatedly
by post-Freudian critics of Cézanne's work,11 that links the
artist's sexual anxieties or thwarted desires with his "failure
to realize" in painting. In fact, as Roger Cranshaw and Adrian
Lewis have pointed out, this psychoanalytic concept leads to a familiar
narrative in the scholarship, whereby Cézanne finally brings
his youthful passions under control by transforming or redirecting
them into an aesthetic practice, taming them via the cool detachment
of Impressionist naturalism. Such an account allows art historians
to salvage some sort of continuity from the radical stylistic and
thematic disjunction of the artist's early, "couillard"
or "ballsy" style and later work; the interdependence of
sexual and artistic anxiety, expressed through the notion of sublimation,
is thus structurally or discursively
necessary to Cézanne's biography in most art historical accounts,
or at least those which rely upon a humanist notion of the creative
subject.12 One only has to turn to Meyer Schapiro's classic essay,
"The Apples of Cézanne", to find the consummate elaboration
of the idea of Cézanne's work as sublimation and displacement
of erotic interest. Schapiro reads the artist's still life paintings,
those seemingly mute exercises in formal discovery, as part of a continued,
buried dialogue with the erotic violence of Cézanne's images
of the 1860s.13 Likewise, Theodore Reff understands both the rigidly
structured compositions of Cézanne's late bather painting14
and his systematic, constructive brushstrokes, as attempts to master
his turbulent desires,15 while John Rewald insists that Impressionism
was the means by which Cézanne controlled his earlier, unbridled
"emotional ejaculations" (the phrase is Lawrence Gowing's)
on the canvas.16 |
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Through the proximity of these two
realmsthwarted artistic ambitions and sublimated desireemerges
an image of Cézanne as an artist plagued by "artistic impotence,"
a charge repeatedly leveled at the artist in the early years of writing
on his work, the opposite term of the heroic masculinity that was
represented in the later nineteenth century by figures like Gauguin
and Renoir, and which was most famously and libidinally embodied by
Picasso in the twentieth century.17 Instead, Cézanne, Degas, perhaps
even Van Gogh and Toulouse-Lautrec, were artists whose legends are
structured not by creative fecundity but by an uneasy relation to
their masculinity, and to their own representations of femininity.18
For Cézanne, artistic impotence incorporates both scholarly "givens"
which I have elaborated: his post-Romantic doubt, his anguished frustrations
over "realizing" his sensations and his desire to reach that near-impossible
goal of transcribing nature, all these are somehow intrinsically linked
to this other, sexual inadequacy. Cézanne's doubt, then, seems less
existential than physical, and one is led to wonder at the source
of this particular formulation of Cezanne's artistic genius. |
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II. "Ah! there is a big difference
between this Frenhofer, impotent by his genius, and this Claude, impotent
by his birth, that Zola has unfortunately seen in [Cézanne]!"19 |
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It is here that I would like to reintroduce
Emile Zola, whose elaboration of Claude Lantier is crucial to the
story I want to tell. Often read as a condemnationwhether of
Impressionism in general or of specific painters in particularthe
protagonist of Zola's story has come, over the years, to be closely
identified with Paul Cézanne.20 It is telling that
none of Cézanne's artist-contemporaries who commented on L'Oeuvre
(notably Monet and Pissarro) recognized Cézanne in it at all;21
even John Rewald, whose biography of Cézanne relies in great
part on the "evidence" contained in L'Oeuvre, acknowledged
that the public, in searching for the model for Zola's portrait of
an impotent Impressionist on the verge of madness, thought first,
and perhaps exclusively, of Manet, for Cézanne was at that
time still little known.22 Identifications between Cézanne
and Lantier only came years after the book's publication, by a subsequent
generation of artists and biographers for whom the Provençal
artist was a legend of isolated genius.23 In fact, almost
all of our biographical information on Cézanne comes from the
1890s, well after the publication of L'Oeuvre, when Cézanne's
self-imposed isolation from the Parisian art world was beginning to
wane and a new generation of artists began to have access to him,
and most writers on Cézanne from this period relied to some
degree on Zola's text to provide their information.24 |
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In other words, if there is a compelling
similarity between Cézanne and Lantier, it may be because Cézanne's
early commentators used Zola's novel as the source for their own writings.
Emile Bernard's telegraphic description of Cézanne's youth,
to cite but one example, is culled almost directly from Zola's novel:
"In Provence. A romantic youth, with poems, with poetic promenades
with Zola, his schoolmate, by his side; Hugo, Musset, scattered in
the leaves of the trees on the banks of the Arc; an excited arrival
in Paris, late-night conversations in front of the great cityunder
the stars. Then a little misery from his surly but rich family; a
marriage; public failures, failures next to impotent artists; the
paroxysm of theories (his best period thanks to his solitude and search
for the absolute)."25 Joachim Gasquet's influential biography
of the artist borrows freely from L'Oeuvre, not
merely for biographical detail but, often, for dialogue as well, in
some cases taking Cézanne's words directly out of Lantier's
mouth.26 Maurice Denis's journal entry, recounting his meeting with
the Provençal artist, epitomizes this borrowing. He describes
Aix, the Jas de Bouffan, the paintings he sees on the wall, and then
goes on to describe his encounter like this: "My mind is filled
with visions of Claude in L'Oeuvre (by Zola). Cézanne.
At the door...."27 Just as Denis's first meeting with
Cézanne was prefaced by thoughts of Claude Lantier, we, too,
have very little picture of Cézanne outside of L'Oeuvre,
in the sense that most of what was written on him during his life
was inevitably marked by Zola's novel. |
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Most curious about this phenomenon
of writers borrowing from Zola's description of Claude Lantier in
their own descriptions of Cézanne is the fact that, while most
of the commentators quoted above were the latter's most devoted apologists,
Zola's Lantier is, on the surface, hardly the most likely figure on
whom to model their idol. How to account for the willingness of commentators
to accept Zola's portrayal of artistic impotence in their view of
Cézanne? In order to address this question, one must first
begin to understand that Zola's novel is far from a morality tale,
a condemnation of the failed genius, but rather it reveals an empathy
towards him28; and second, one must recognize Zola's text as participating
in a larger discourse on the nature of creativity and genius that
developed in the nineteenth century, a discourse which hinged on degeneration
and the pathologization of genius. For Zola as for others in the later
nineteenth century, failure was not the result of moral weakness in
spite of the male artist's genius, but was an inevitable outcome of
it, perhaps even a sign of artistic authenticity. |
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Zola wrote L'Oeuvre between 1885 and 1886,
and he took exactly nine months to do soan apocryphal detail,
perhaps, considering the novel's theme explicitly links artistic creation
with the procreative act. L'Oeuvre provides a panorama of artistic
genius, or rather of the failure of artistic genius, since not one
of its characters manages to be an authentic artist and a well-adjusted
individual at the same time. Claude Lantier, with his "lesion
of the eye," is the most dramatic of these artistes manqués;
he is plagued by an ultimately fatal "inability to complete"
his paintings. Lantier's hereditary deficiency means that he is an
incomplete genius, condemned to creative and physical impotence: we
see Lantier "slumped on a chair, tortured by his own impotence,
his inability to decide where to place his own brushstroke, and at
the same time trying to make bold resolutions"(121), or "[refusing]
to acknowledge his impotence, burning with the desire to do something,
to create something in spite of it"(56). This creative impotence
has decidedly sexual overtones, for Lantier, "chaste as he was,
. . . had a passion for the physical beauty of women, and insane love
for nudity desired but never possessed, but was powerless to satisfy
himself or to create enough of the beauty he dreamed of enfolding
in an ecstatic embrace" (49). He falls in love with Christine,
a young woman who for a time seems to calm his restlessness, for she
is both an outlet for his repressed sexual desires as well as a facilitator
of his paintingshe is at once lover, wife, mother and model.
The two conceive a child on the day Claude's painting is mocked mercilessly
by the crowds at the Salon des Refusés. This child, "the
child of suffering and pity, scorned from conception by the brainless
mockery of the crowd" (168), a sign of Claude's creative potential,
is born a cretin, whose head grows larger and larger in inverse proportion
to his declining intelligence, and who eventually withers and dies.
The young boy is a living testimony to Claude's degeneracy. After
a period of frustrated artistic inactivity due to the stability of
domestic life, Lantier returns to painting with all of his thwarted
passion, and there occurs a horrible struggle between Claude's monumental
canvas, his living and breathing wife, and Claude himselfa struggle
that ends in Claude's suicide. |
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Zola completely collapses physical
insufficiency with artistic insufficiency, such that the one is not
simply a metaphor for the other, but its cause and simultaneous effect:
Claude struggles valiantly against his own artistic impotence in the
creation of Plein-Air, a work which is ultimately
marred by his endless reworking and doubt; Claude's son is conceived
in the depressed aftermath of the failure of his father's painting
at the Salon des Refusés and is thus evidence of Claude's degeneracy
(or hereditary lack) as well as the product of his artistic sterility
(vis-à-vis the occasion of his conception); the child eventually
dies, whereupon Claude paints him and submits this painting to the
Salon, where it is accepted as someone's "charity." Claude's
painting, Dead Child, the only work he ever exhibited
at the Salon, is thus doubly sterileit is a painting that represents
his physical failings as well as gives evidence as to his artistic
ones. It is, needless to say, another failure. |
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However, while Lantier's story may
be the focus of the novel, all the authentic artists experience the
same paralysis as Lantier, and describe it in the same terms of sterility,
impotence, and deformed procreation. In fact, for Zola, the lack of
such artistic paralysis was precisely the sign of artistic inauthenticity.
The three most authentic artists in Zola's inferno,
Lantier, Pierre Sandoz, and Bongrand (a painter of the generation
of 1848, who was modeled on Zola's close friend and mentor, Flaubert)
all suffer from artistic paralysis, and describe it in similar terms.
Impotence haunts them in other ways, toofor Lantier, in the deformed
child he fathers, for Sandoz, in his childless marriage, for Bongrand,
in his bachelorhood, and for all three, in the failure to leave behind
(in the sense of the French féconder) an
artistic following or school. In contrast, Chambouvard, a self-satisfied
sculptor based on Courbet and Hugo, in his lack of self-consciousness
or self-examination before the creative task, and thus his lack of
doubt or feelings of failure and inadequacy, is the epitome of the
inauthentic artist. |
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Even Pierre Sandoz, the author's
alter ego and the most "well-adjusted" of the novel's charactersthe
one interpreted by most readers of L'Oeuvre as representing Zola's
idea of the "correct" path of genius distinguished by sexual
and creative moderationis an artist for whom failure, and indeed
impotence, is a constant presence in the creative process. His complaint,
though not fraught with as much tortured passion, mirrors Lantier's
own struggles: "When I bring forth I need forceps, and even then
the child always looks to me like a monster. Is it possible for anyone
to be so devoid of doubt as to have absolute faith in himself?"
(304) At Lantier's funeral, Bongrand repeats the same notion, claiming
Claude is "lucky to be away from it all, instead of wearing himself
out, as we do, producing offspring who are either headless or limbless
and never really alive" (425). Sandoz's last words to usuttered
in response to Bongrand's frustrationare thus filled with bitter
irony: "And now, back to work!" he says, as if there was
any possibility of productive work in the bleak universe which Zola
presents. |
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Claude Lantier's failure, Zola tells
us, is not solely the result of his hereditary
lack, but is also a function of the time in which he lives: in a sort
of backhanded eulogy at Lantier's funeral, Sandoz claims that "his
trouble was not all personal by any means; he was the victim of his
period. The generation we belong to was brought up on Romanticism;
it is soaked into us and we can do nothing about it. It is all very
well our plunging head first into violent reality, the stain remains
and all the scrubbing in the world will never remove it."(419)
And indeed, Zola might well be talking about his own struggles with
a Romantic legacy, for his fictional creation of the artiste
manqué has for his ancestors a host of Romantic forefathers
who themselves struggled before the creative taskthink, for example,
of Delacroix's description of the young Michelangelo paralyzed in
his studio,29 or Balzac's Frenhofer, descending into the madness of
self-deception as he progressively obliterates the near-perfect image
of his Belle-Noiseuse in an attempt to bring her to life.30 |
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However, whatever the Romantic heritage
of Zola's conception of artistic genius, it is precisely in rooting
the creative struggle in the physical body of the artist that Zola
declares his modernity. Lantier no longer struggles exclusively with
the psychic tortures of creativity, but also with the physical effects
of degeneracy; his artistic impotence is not just a psychological
despair but is an actual physical deficiency, marked by sterility
and impotence. |
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III. "Genius of the very
highest order never, probably, succeeds in completely realizing its
conceptions, because its conceptions are unrealizable."31 |
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It is in Zola's dual authorial role
as positivist scientist and as creative artist in this installment
of his Rougon-Macquart series that the real ambivalence of his Naturalist
project is revealed,32 because of course Zola's meditations on the
nature of artistic genius are not solely objective observations on
the history of degeneration, nor simply condemnatory, but are also
self-reflexive. While Zola most clearly identifies with Sandoz, he
identifies, too, with other of the novel's characters, not least with
Claude himself, whose character has an autobiographical component:
the title of Zola's early, frankly autobiographical novel was La
Confession de Claude, and Zola also used the name as a pseudonym
for his early Salon reviews. In fact, even in his identification with
Sandoz, one gets the sense that Zola, who was being stung by criticisms
of his work by a younger generation of writers who found him becoming
complacent in his success, was trying to identify with artistic failure
and impotence as a sign of his own continuing authenticity. It is
not difficult to hear Zola's own lament in the following passage,
for example: '"Oh, yes, I certainly work,' replied Sandoz, rising
from his table as if in sudden pain, 'to the very last page of every
book I write. But if you only knew, if I could only tell you the torment,
the despair . . . and now those idiotic critics have got the notion
that I'm self-satisfied! I, who am haunted even in my sleep by the
imperfections of my work! I, who have never read over what I wrote
yesterday for fear of finding it so deplorably bad that I shan't have
the courage to carry on!"' (216) |
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Contemporary readers were hardly
insensible to Zola's identification with artistic failure and self-doubt,
or with his identification with his damned character, Lantier. Gustave
Geffroy, for one, saw the novel as confessional, and wrote: "It
is not only through Sandoz that Zola has represented himself. We also
see him in the artist who toils courageously without knowing for sure
the outcome or significance of his effort… Passionately devoted
to their tasks, furious in their desire to create, devastated by the
results, [Lantier and Sandoz] are both les damnés
de l'art [the victims of art]. Are Sandoz's laments not
as painful as Claude's miscarriages? Is Zola, who called himself,
astonishingly, 'a perpetual beginner,' not as sad, as disillusioned
as the suicide he portrays?"33 |
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Geffroy was correct in pointing out
the ambivalence of Zola's message in L'Oeuvre:
the opposition of Lantier and Sandoz is not a simple matter of right
versus wrong, success versus failure, moderation of passion versus
excess of desire. Rather, Zola's novel takes pains to reveal the failure
and frustration inevitable in the sincerity of the artistic process.
And if Zola presents an inevitable link between artistic authenticity
and artistic impotence in L'Oeuvre, he does not
exempt himself from this fate precisely because of its inescapability. |
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The inevitability of artistic
failure for Zola has two roots. The first is physical, relating
to the medicalization of genius in the later nineteenth century.
In a period when doctors and scientists were identifying any deviation
from the norm as evidence of pathology, creative talent came under
scrutiny as a sign of disease or perversion. The crucial treatises
on degeneration that appeared after the mid-nineteenth centuryincluding
works by Moreau de la Tour, Benedicte Augustine Morel, Césare
Lombroso and Max Nordau, among others with which Zola was familiar34identified
the excessive intellect of the genius, and specifically of the artistic
genius, as the sign and source of their potential degeneracy, a
degeneracy that may include as its symptoms sexual irritability,
sterility, precocity, one-sided talents, eccentricity, and impotence.
In Cézare Lombroso's formulation, articulated in his 1897
book Genio e degenerazione, "Like men, nature
abominates and sterilizes … those animals who dare to think
a little more than their fellow members of the species." An
excessive development of one part of the bodythe mindmust necessarily
be accompanied by the diminishment or decay of anotherthe reproductive
organs; this excessive development that may lead to sterility or
impotence, but equally to other forms of sexual "perversions,"
including "unrestrained and irregular development."35
Lombroso's follower, the physician Max Nordau, was more shrill in
his assessment of the literary and artistic figures of his time;
his portrait of Verlaine, for example, is terrifying in its description
of genius-induced degeneracy:
We see a repulsive degenerate subject with asymmetric skull and
Mongolian face, an impulsive vagabond and dipsomaniac, who, under
the most disgraceful circumstances, was placed in jail; an emotional
dreamer of feeble intellect, who painfully fights against his
bad impulses…, and a dotard who manifests the absence of
any definite though in his mind by incoherent speech, meaningless
expressions, and motley images. In lunatic asylums there are many
patients whose disease is less deep-seated and incurable than
is that of this irresponsible circulaire at
large, whom only ignorant judges would have condemned for his
epileptoid crimes.36
Nordau did not limit the physical symptoms of disease to facial
and cranial abnormalities, as Lombroso did; he in fact identified
the Impressionist painters' "nystagmus, or trembling of the
eyeball" as the source of their unique style of painting.37 |
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Zola's Rougon-Macquart novels
join these pseudo-scientific texts in presenting a panorama of deviancy,
and his portrait of Lantier in L'Oeuvre includes the salient
traits of the degenerate genius that were being elaborated in the
medical discourse. Lantier's son, Jacques, representing the end of
the degenerate line, almost caricatures the predicted outcome of the
degenerate genius: his overdeveloped brain (in his case, overdeveloped
only in terms of size, and not intelligence) necessitates a compensatory
lack of physical capabilities, resulting in fatal weakness and loss
of vital energy. |
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In light of these attempts to medicalize the
figure of the creative genius, Zola's own identification with the
universe of failure that he presents goes far beyond mere psychological
anguish at the creative act. Rather, Zola was writing this novel from
the point of view of an awareness of, or belief in, his own physical
deficiencies, which he believed to be an essential component of his
genius. The novelist was intensely sensible to physical ailments,
and from an early age seemed to associate this lack of robust health
with the pursuits of the mind.38 It is this coincidence of intellect
and ill-health (or perhaps hypochondria) that the Goncourts noted
in their Journal on 3 June 1872: "Zola came
to lunch and said: 'look at the way my fingers tremble!' And he told
me of an incipient heart disease, of a possible bladder ailment, of
a threat of rheumatism in the joints. Never have men of letters seemed
more stillborn than in our day, and yet never have they worked harder
or more incessantly. Sickly and neurotic as he is, Zola works every
day from nine until half past twelve and from three until eight."39 |
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The notion that there is some sort of coincidence
between ill-health and genius appears again when, after the publication
of the novel, Zola submitted to an examination by Doctor Édouard
Toulouse, the results of which were presented in the Annales
medico-psychologiques in 1897.40 This attempt to study
Zola's "genius and pathology" linked his fascination with
science to a degenerative hereditary condition; Zola agreed to the
study, he said, to prove to his detractors that he, as a true genius,
suffered for his art with his various nervous conditions. In a letter
to Dr. Toulouse, which appeared in Le Figaro
on October 31, 1896 and was subsequently published as the preface
to Toulouse's study of Zola's degeneracy, he writes,
In the end, I do not give you this authorization without some
evil pleasure. Do you know that your study victoriously battles
the legend of my imbecility? You cannot ignore the fact that for
thirty years I was made out to be a boor, a thick-skinned ox with
gross tastes, accomplishing my task heavily, in the single-minded
and villainous pursuit of riches. Good God! me, who scorns money,
me, who has only led my life according to the idealism of my youth!
Ah! the poor écorché that I am,
trembling and suffering at the least breath of wind, only sitting
down each morning to my daily work with anguish, only succeeding
in doing my work through the continual battle of my will against
my doubt! It made me, the famous ox, laugh and cry at times! And,
if I am happy today, it's because it seems to me that you have
buried him, this famous ox, and that there will no longer be any
question [of my sincerity] for fair-minded people.
Therefore I thank you, my dear doctor. Thank you for having
studied and labeled my bag of bones [ma guenille].
I think that I have profited from it. [My body] is not perfect,
but it is the body of a man who has given his life to his work
and who has put, for and into the work, all of his physical, intellectual,
and moral forces.41
The physical marks of Zola's artistic struggles, the effects on
his battered flesh, are precisely the signs of the authenticity
and sincerity of his vocation and his writings. Given this evidence
of Zola's own identification of his physical deficiencies with his
artistic genius, it seems fair to say that if he was linking the
two in L'Oeuvre, it was not to condemn Cézanne/Lantier
out of a profound misunderstanding of his art, but was rather, to
an equal extent, to put himself under the positivist microscope. |
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Zola's willingness to picture himself in these
terms of degenerative failure becomes clearer when one considers what
was for him the second root of inevitable artistic impotence. This
second cause is the ultimate impossibility of achieving the idealistic
goal which, according to Zola, any authentic avant-garde sets for
itself: to represent nature. It is the ultimate task, and one doomed
to failureand it is here we see most clearly Zola's Romantic heritage,
for this is a common theme in writings of that period.42 That the
novel was to explore the theme of the excessive ambition of progressive
artists, was elucidated by Zola in his preparatory notes for the book:
"It is a question of knowing what rendered [Lantier] incapable
of satisfying his aims: him more than anyone, his psychology, his
heritage, the lesion of his eye; but I would also like to see our
modern art in this, our fever to want everything, our disequilibrium
in a word."43 |
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If Sandoz escapes Lantier's fate in L'Oeuvre,
it is not because he always lacked this prideful ambitiona drive
that proves the sincerity of the authentic artistbut because he
has by the end of the novel given up any hope of realizing it. Sandoz
had, from his youth, wanted to compose a series of novels whose conception
was not unlike Zola's original vision of the Rougon-Macquart
series. That he finally renounces his quest for the absolute in art
is the very thing that marks his failure at the same time as it saves
him from an end as horrible as Lantier's.44 Sandoz's capitulation
to pragmatism is itself a retreat from artistic authenticity and success;
he, too, makes manifest Zola's belief that there is failure inherent
in the authentic artist's impossible goal of artistic perfection.
This results, according to Zola, in artists who are only able to point
out the way, without ever arriving there. |
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Zola's judgment on this issue was not only made
in the realm of fiction; thus he could avow in 1882: "This is
why the Impressionist's struggle is not yet over: they remain unequal
to the work which they attempt, they stutter without being able to
find the word. But their influence is no less profound, because they
follow the only possible course, they march towards the future."45
Zola's disappointment at the failure of Impressionism to realize its
potential is tempered by a belief, still, in its goals. The Impressionists
remain the most important artists on the scene for Zola; it is the
worthinessand unattainabilityof their goal which proves the depth
of their talent. Their failure, then, is the mark of their genius. |
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IV. "The sign of impotence and the
sign of genius, these are the two extremes that we must reconcile
if we want to appreciate Cézanne fairly and productively. Is
it such a rarity, or is it not the case for almost all of the great
inventors?"46 |
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It is in the conjunction of these two roots of
the inevitability of artistic failurethe medical and the Romanticthat
one can begin to understand the link Zola makes between degeneration
and genius, between artistic impotence and cultural regeneration.
For Lantier may be the laughing stock at the Salon, with his doubly
sterile painting, Dead Child, but he has fully
transformed the practice of painting, nonetheless: "'The Salon's
your victory this year,' says Sandoz. 'Fagerolles
isn't the only one to plagiarize you, far from it! They're all doing
it. They all got a good laugh out of Plein-Air,
but it nevertheless caused a revolution! Look around you. Look, there's
another Plein-Air, and there's another, and another,
the whole Salon's Plein-Air!' . . . He was right;
broad daylight, after gradually filtering into contemporary painting,
had at last come into its own." (344) Lantier's artistic impotence
begets a Salon-full of mongrel creations, hybrids of avant-garde and
academic ideas, but it is an ultimately productive legacy in Zola's
mind. Claude's aborted genius is posited, ultimately, as a source
of cultural regeneration. |
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This notion of the link between generation and
degeneration in the genius was echoed in the scientific literature
of the day, specifically in the writings of Lombroso, who argued that
the artistic genius represented at once the highest evolutionary development
and the most atavistic throwback of the species, since sterility was
the inevitable outcome of an evolving intelligence.47 In the subsequent
debate over Doctor Toulouse's study of Zola's névrosité,
or nervous condition, a certain Dr. Marandon de Montyel cited the
necessary link between degeneracy and progress, and argued for the
crucial figure of the deviant genius for cultural regeneration: "This
doctrine of a close relationship between genius and degeneracy explains
how, at the beginning of civilization, in the first appearances of
man on earth, his first advances were so long in coming, whereas today
great discovery follows great discovery, and in our days there is
no country which lacks some men of genius."48 For these scientists,
as for Zola, there would be no evolution without devolution, no progression
without regression, no generation without degeneration. In this cultural
transformation, the artist was a crucial symbol of the health or decayor
of both at onceof a society. |
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This is the context in which I would like
to place Zola's construction of Claude Lantier, and his assessment
of Paul Cézanne, both of which have slowly penetrated our
contemporary view of the artist. For Zola's assessment of Cézanne
not as a great but aborted genius as some would have it, but rather
as a great aborted genius, the two terms linked as if mutually dependent
and not mutually contradictory, is tied to Zola's conception of
artistic authenticity. There is artistic impotence, a failure rooted
in the body of the artist itself, inherent in creation at the end
of the nineteenth century. Huysmans cites it when he praises Cézanne
as "an artist with diseased retinas who…discovered the
premonitory symptoms of a new art;"49 Arsène Alexander
acknowledges it when he describes the artist as the "discoverer
who doesn't profit from what he discovers…an artist without
issue but not without utility;"50 Bernard feels it, when he
writes his Souvenirs de Cézanne, in which
he was "unable to break free of Zola's Cézanne, or rather
of the figure of Claude Lantier,...consistently [picturing] Cézanne
as an artist bordering on failure, although in pursuit of the highest
goal;"51 Rilke's early observations on the painter suggest
it in his description of Cézanne's masochistic relationship
with the creative task.52 |
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For Zola, and indeed for subsequent commentators,
this artistic impotence was perfectly embodied by Cézanne.
And no wonder, when Cézanne himself recalled his earlier, essentially
Romantic identification with Frenhofer very late in his life, in the
famous questionnaire and in reported comments to Bernard ("Frenhofer,
c'est moi!"),53 and when he was lamenting not being able to achieve
his goal of making his painting adequate to nature ("I am the
primitive of the way which I've discovered").54 No wonder, too,
when disciples primed by L'Oeuvre met their hero,
and saw an old man whose body was in a state of decay due to the ravages
of diabetes, whose eyesight was failing him in his attempts to penetrate
nature (a sexualized operation thwarted, needless to say). By the
time commentators like Arsène Alexandre, Emile Bernard and
Ambroise Vollard were making their own judgments about Cézanne,
testing the validity of Zola's alleged portrait of the artist as Claude
Lantier, Cézanne himself was interrogating old age and impotence,
as Linda Nochlin has pointed out, in his pictures of elderly peasants,
in "the contrast between the sheer energy of the peasant's bloated
bottom as opposed to the implications of impotence of the material
referentactual sagging balls."55 |
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If the persona of Cézanne seemed to invite
his biographers to portray him as an artist plagued by both artistic
doubt and sexual anxiety, as incomplete or as impuissant,
in the varied senses of those words, it was also because a new notion
of artistic genius was developing at the end of the nineteenth century
for which these notions were crucial. By virtue of being incomplete,
Cézanne joins a pantheon of the troubled masculinity of genius
of the fin-de-siècle, an illustrious group that includes the
likes of Edgar Degas and Vincent Van Gogh, and perhaps even Emile
Zola himself. What I would like to suggest, then, is that if there
has been a failure of biography to deal adequately
with Cézanne's oeuvre, it is because we have not sufficiently
recognized that Cézanne's is one of many biographies
of failurestories suffuse with notions of degeneration
and cultural evolutionto have been written in the later part of
the nineteenth century. |
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This paper was first presented at the College Art Association Annual
Meeting which took place in New York in 1997, as part of a panel
chaired by Nina Athanassoglou-Kallmyer, "Decadence and Degeneration
in 19th Century Art." I would like to thank the panel's respondents,
James Rubin and the late Charles Bernheimer, for their comments.
Professor John McCoubrey was generous with his remarks and suggestions,
as was the anonymous reader at the journal; Jason Rosenfeld, Linda
Nochlin and Tom McDonough also provided helpful criticism. Research
for this paper was carried out in Paris thanks to the support of
the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, and
recent revisions received the support of faculty grants from Purchase
College, State University of New York, and Binghamton University.
The ideas presented in this essay are further explored and elaborated
in my book, Cézanne's Bathers, Biography and the
Erotics of Paint, forthcoming from Penn State University
Press.
1. Emile Zola, L'Oeuvre, Paris, 1886. I refer
in this text to the Oxford Classics translation (The Masterpiece,
London: Oxford University Press, 1993); page references appear in
parentheses in the text. The classic study of the Lantier-Cézanne
connection is Robert J. Niess, Zola, Cézanne, and
Manet: A Study of "L'Oeuvre" (Ann Arbor: University
of Michigan Press, 1968). See also Patrick Brady, "L'Oeuvre"
de Emile Zola: Roman sur les arts. Manifesto, autobiographie, roman
à clef (Geneva: Librarie Droz, 1967); John A. Frey,
"The Artist as FailureTwo Brands of Naturalism: Madame
Sourdis and L'Oeuvre," Emile
Zola and the Arts, ed. Jean-Max Guieu and Alison Hilton
(Georgetown: Georgetown University Press, 1988); and Jean-Luc Steinmetz,
"L'Oeuvre." Le Naturalisme: Colloque de Cerisy,
ed. Pierre Cogny (Cerisy-la-Salle: Centre Culturel Internationale,
1978).
2. "Comment eût-on pu croire que cet homme à
qui les hommes faisaient peur et qui se cachaient des femmes eût
assez de virilité pour féconder l'avenir?" Elie
Faure, "Paul Cézanne," Portraits d'hier,
vol. 2, no. 28, 1 May 1910. All translations, unless otherwise noted,
are by the author.
3. John Rewald's Cézanne, Geffroy et Gasquet
(Paris: Quatre Chemins-Editart, 1959), provides an explanation of
the faults of one of the foundational biographical sources for Cézanne,
the writings of Joachim Gasquet.
4. Emile Zola, "Peinture," Le Figaro,
2 May 1896. Quoted in Françoise Cachin and Joseph Rishel,
Cézanne, trans. John Goodman (Philadelphia:
Philadelphia Museum of Art, 1996)
5. Emile Bernard, Souvenirs sur Paul Cézanne, et
Lettres (Paris: La Renovation Ésthetique, 1924?).
6. Ambroise Vollard, En écoutant Cézanne,
Degas, Renoir (Paris: Bernard Grasset, 1985), pp. 56-64.
Originally published in 1938.
7. M. Merleau-Ponty, "Cezanne's Doubt," in Sense
and Non-Sense, trans. H.Dreyfus and P. Allen Dreyfus (Evanston:
Northwestern University Press, 1964). Originally published 1948.
8. Faure, "Paul Cézanne," p. 119.
9. Georges Rivière, Le Maître Paul Cézanne
(Paris: H. Floury, 1923).
10. Emile Bernard, Souvenirs sur Paul Cézanne
(Paris: Société des Trente, 1912), p. 28. Originally
appeared in Mércure de France, no. 247
(1 October 1907) and no. 248 (15 October 1907). Translated in Cachin
and Rishel, Cézanne, p. 498.
11. See T. J. Clark, "Freud's Cézanne," Representations,
vol. 52 (Fall 1995), as well as the chapter in his book Farewell
to an Idea: Episodes from a History of Modernism (New
Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1999), for an attempt to
interpret Cézanne's bather pictures via a set of terms that
pre-date Freud's notion of sublimation.
12. See Roger Cranshaw and Adrian Lewis, "Wilful Ineptitude,"
Art History, vol. 12, no. 1, March 1989, p. 132.
13. Meyer Schapiro, "The Apples of Cézanne: An Essay
on the Meaning of Still-life," Modern Art 19th and
20th Centuries: Selected Papers (New York: George Braziller,
1979). Originally published 1968.
14. Theodore Reff, "Painting and Theory in the Final Decade,"
in Cézanne: The Late Work, ed. William
Rubin (New York: Museum of Modern Art), 1978, pp. 13-54.
15. Theodore Reff, "Cézanne's Constructive Stroke,"
Art Quarterly, vol. 25, no. 3, Autumn 1962, pp.
214-27.
16. See, for example, John Rewald, Cézanne: A Biography
(New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1990). Rewald's claim for Impressionism's
sobering influence on Cézanne's work is hinged on the notion
that pictorial structure and erotic desire were somehow mutually
exclusive an idea that, oddly enough, has never seemed to be an
issue in Picasso scholarship, for example. John Elderfield, in "The
Whole World: Color in Cézanne," Arts Magazine,
vol. 52, April 1978, pp. 148-53, attempts to modify, to an extent,
this idea of Impressionism as sublimation in Cézanne's work.
17. Carol Duncan, "Virility and Domination in Early Twentieth-Century
Vanguard Painting," Artforum, vol. 12, no.
4 (December 1973), pp. 30-39.
18. On Degas's purported "artistic impotence," see Roy
McMullen, Degas: Life, Times, and Art (Boston:
Macmillan, 1984), and Carol Armstrong, Odd Man Out: Readings
of the Work and Reputation of Edgar Degas (Chicago and
London: University of Chicago Press, 1991). A point of clarification
here: I am not trying to argue that these identifications are stable,
nor that artist's like Cézanne and Degas have not been portrayed
simultaneously as fecund, powerful men with phallic paintbrush in
hand ready to createalthough I would, in the case of these two
artists, suggest that these latter, heroic images are less common.
Rather, these images have no problem existing parallel to each other.
For an interesting example of the other, hypermasculinized representation
of Degas for his British contemporaries, please see Andrew Stephenson's
review of the Sickert exhibition, "Buttressing Bohemian Mystiques
and Bandaging Masculine Anxieties," Art History,
vol. 17, no. 2, June 1994, pp. 269-78.
19. "Ah! il y avait loin de ce Frenhofer impuissant par génie
à ce Claude impuissant par naissance que Zola avait vu malencontreusement
en [Cézanne]!" Bernard, Souvenirs,
p. 44.
20. On L'Oeuvre as a condemnation of Impressionism,
see William J. Berg, The Visual Novel: Emile Zola and the
Art of his Times (University Park, Penn.: Pennsylvania
State University Press, 1992), p. 40-44; and Brady, "L'Oeuvre"
d'Emile Zola. For a study of L'Oeuvre
as a roman à clef, see Neiss, Zola,
Cézanne, and Manet.
21. Neiss, Zola, Cézanne, and Manet,
p. 82.
22. Rewald, Cézanne: A Biography, p.
166. While Rewald explains the lack of recognition to be the result
of Cézanne's being relatively unknown, a review that appeared
in La Revue indépendante late in 1886,
the year of L'Oeuvre's publication, suggests
that Cézanne had, by this time, been acknowledged as a central
figure in Impressionism. See Teodor de Wyzewa, "L'Art contemporain,"
in La Revue indépendante, November-December
1886, quoted in Rewald's own Seurat (New York:
Harry N. Abrams, 1990), p. 104.
23. Cézanne was identified as the source of Claude Lantier
by the following writers: Louis Vauxcelles, "Salon d'Automne,
le vernissage," Gil Blas, 15 October 1904;
Arsène Alexandre, "Claude Lantier," Le Figaro,
9 December 1895; Georges Lecomte, "Paul Cézanne,"
in the catalogue of the Collection Blot, Hôtel Drouot, Paris,
May 1900, quoted in Rewald, Cézanne: A Biography,
p. 166.
24. Neiss, Zola, Cézanne, and Manet,
p. 90: "Everything written on Cézanne of the years before
1890 has been based either on L'Oeuvre as a direct
biographical source, on his letters to Zola, on Zola's letters,
or on a small handful of testimonies written by men who knew him
more or less well and who left descriptions of him, factual or fictional,
which may perhapsbut do not surelyrender some or part of the
truth."
25. Emile Bernard, "Paul Cézanne," Les
Hommes d'aujourd'hui vol. 8, no. 387 (1891). Quoted in
Cachin and Rishel, Cézanne, p. 29.
26. Joachim Gasquet, Joachim Gasquet's Cézanne:
A Memoir with Conversations, trans. Christopher Pemberton,
intro. Richard Shiff (London: Thames and Hudson, 1991), p. 68. Gasquet's
liberal borrowings from Zola's text are all the more significant
considering the fact that his biography was used as a source by
such influential writers as Roger Fry, Merleau-Ponty, and Meyer
Schapiro. See Shiff's introduction, pp. 15-16.
27. Maurice Denis, Journal entry from 1906,
in P. M. Doran, ed., Conversations avec Cézanne
(Paris: Macula, 1978), p. 93.
28. I use the masculine pronoun throughout the rest of this discussion
advisedly: the discourses of genius to which I refer were inseparable
from discourses of masculinity and virility. According to these
terms, the very possibility of feminine or female genius was inconceivable.
29. Eugène Delacroix, "Michel-Ange," Revue
de Paris, vol. 15, May 1830, p. 41, and vol. 16, July
1830, p. 165. Reprinted in Écrits sur l'art,
eds. François-Marie Deyrolle and Christophe Denissel (Paris:
Séguier, 1988), pp. 89-124.
30. Honoré de Balzac, Le Chef-d'oeuvre inconnu
(Paris, 1845).
31. Clive Bell, Since Cézanne (London:
Chatto and Windus, 1922), p. 58.
32. That Zola approached positivist science with ambivalence is
a view not generally held in the scholarship. However, if one looks
in particular at the character of the examining magistrate-cum-detective
in Zola's La Bête humaine, it is clear
that Zola effects a scathing parody of the very scientific method
around which he structured his novels: M. Denizet's reliance on
the "scientific" methods of forensics and criminology,
modified by an ardent belief in theoretical analysis and logical
conclusions, lead him so far away from the truth behind the murder
he investigates as to provide an almost farcical counterpoint to
the otherwise oppressive atmosphere of guilt and inevitable retribution
that suffuses the rest of the novel. In another context, Daniel
Pick discusses the way in which the final novel in Zola's Rougon-Maquart
series, Dr. Pascal, "dramatizes the contradictions,
indeed even the disintegration, of the positivism which had hitherto
partially structured Zola's own project." See Daniel Pick,
Faces of Degeneration: A European Disorder, c.1848-c.1918
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989), p. 4.
33. Quoted in Frederick Brown, Zola: A Life
(London: Macmillan, 1997), pp. 559-60.
34. The works in question are these: Joseph Moreau de la Tours'
La Psychologie morbide dans ses rapports avec la philosophie
de l'histoire, ou de l'influence des névropathies sur le
dynamisme intellectuel (Paris : V. Masson, 1859), Bénédict
Augustin Morel's Traité des dégénérescences
physiques, intellectueles, et morales de l'espèce humaine
(Paris : J. B. Ballière, 1857), Césare Lombroso's
Genio e follio (1864) and Max Nordau's Dégénérescence
(Paris : Alcan, 1894).
35. Quoted in Barbara Spackman, Decadent Geneaologies:
The Rhetoric of Sickness from Baudelaire to D'Annunzio
(Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press, 1989), p. 20.
36. Max Nordau, Degeneration, 6th ed. (New York:
D. Appleton, 1895), p. 128; translation of Entartung,
2nd ed. (Berlin: C. Duncker, 1892-93). Quoted in Spackman, Decadent
Genealogies, pp. 10-11.
37. Nordau, Degeneration, 6th ed., 1895, p.
27; quoted in Spackman, p. 11.
38. See Brown, Zola.
39. Quoted in Pick, Faces of Degeneration, p.
77.
40. Dr. Edouard Toulouse, Enquête medico-psychologique
sur la superiorité intellectuelle (Paris: Masson
et Cie., 1910). The results of Toulouse's study were widely available
before this date, however, through their publication in Annales
medico-psychologiques, 8th series, vol. 5 (Paris: Masson
et Cie., 1897). Pick discusses Toulouse's examination of Zola in
Faces of Degeneration, pp. 76-8.
41. "Enfin, cette autorisation, je ne vous la donne pas sans
quelque malin plaisir. Savez-vous que votre étude combat
victorieusement l'imbécile légende? Vous ne pouvez
ignorer que, depuis trente ans, on fait de moi un malotru, un boeuf
de labour, de cuir épais, de sense grossiers, accomplissant
sa tâche lourdement, dans l'unique et vilain besoin du lucre.
Grand Dieu! moi qui méprise l'argent, qui n'ai jamais marché
dans la vie qu'à l'idéal de ma jeunesse! Ah! le pauvre
écorché que je suis, frémissant et souffrant
au moindre souffle d'air, ne s'assayent chaque matin à sa
tâche quotidienne que dans l'angoisse, ne parvenant à
faire son oeuvre que dans le continuel combat de sa volonté
sur son doute! Qu'il m'a fait rire et pluerer des fois, le fameux
boeuf de labour! Et, si je ris aujourd'hui, c'est qu'il me semble
que vous l'enterrez, ce boeuf-là, et qu'il n'en sera plus
question, pour les gens de quelque bonne foi.
Donc, merci, mon cher docteur. Merci d'avoir étudié
et étiqueté ?ma guenille. Je crois bien que j'y ai
gagné. Si elle n'est pointe parfaite, elle est celle d'un
homme qui a donné sa vie au travail et qui a mis, pour et
dans le travail, toutes ses forces physiques, intellectuelles, et
morales." Emile Zola, letter to Dr. Edouard Toulouse, published
in La Figaro, 31 October 1896, in Dr. Edouard
Toulouse, Enquête medico-psychologique,
and in Emile Zola, Correspondance, ed. B.H. Bakker
(Montreal: Les Presses de l'Université de Montréal,
1983), vol. 8, pp. 357-58.
42. Most important, of course, is Balzac's Chef-d'oeuvre
inconnu.
43. From Emile Zola, Ébauche ?[Preparatory notes for L'Oeuvre],
Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris, MS N.A.f., fol. 265. Quoted
in Brady, "L'Oeuvre" d'Emile Zola,
p. 19.
44. Thomas Zamperelli, "Zola and the Quest for the Absolute
in Art," Yale French Studies, vol. 43, 1969,
p. 147.
45. Emile Zola, "Le Naturalisme au Salon," Voltaire,
Saturday 19 June 1880, p. 3: "Voilà pourquoi la lutte
des impressionistes n'a pas encore abouti: ils restent inférieurs
à l'oeuvre qu'ils tentent, ils bégayent sans pouvoir
trouver le mot. Mais leur influence n'en reste pas moins énorme,
car ils sont dans la seule évolution possible, ils marchent
à l'avenir."
46. "L'évidence de l'impuissance et l'évidence
du génie, voilà les deux termes extrèmes qu'il
faut concilier si l'on veut équitablement, si l'on prétend
utilement apprécier Paul Cézanne. Le cas est-il si
rare, ou n'est-ce pas celui de presque tous les grands inventeurs?"
Charles Morice, "Paul Cézanne," Mercure
de France, 15 February 1907, pp. 37.
47. Spackman, Decadent Genealogies, p. 21.
48. Response to Dr. Édouard-Gaston Dominique Toulouse, "Enquête
médico-psychologique sur les rapports de la supériorité
intellectuelle avec la névropathie," Annales
Médico-Psychologiques, 8th series, vol. 6 (Paris:
Masson et Cie., 1897), p. 124.
49. Joris-Karl Huysmans, "Trois peintres," La
Cravache, 4 August 1888. Republished in Certains (Paris,
1889).
50. Arsène Alexandre, "Le Mouvement artistique: Claude
Lantier," Le Figaro (9 December 1895), p.
5.
51. Joseph Rishel, "A Century of Criticism II: From 1907 to
the Present," in Cachin and Rishel, Cézanne,
p. 47.
52. Rainer Maria Rilke, Letters on Cézanne,
trans. Joel Agee (New York: Fromm International Pub. Corp., 1985).
53. Cézanne was asked to respond to a questionnaire sent
to a number of artists by a Parisian art periodical. Answering the
question, "Which literary character do you most identify with?",
Cézanne responded, "Frenhofer." On the questionnaire,
see Jean-Claude Lebensztejn, "Les Couilles de Cézanne,"
Critique, vol. 44, no. 499, December 1988, pp. 1031-47. The full
questionnaire ("Mes confidences") is reproduced in Adrien
Chappius, The Drawings of Paul Cézanne: A Catalogue
Raisonné (Greenwich, Conn.: New York Graphic Society,
1973), vol. 1, pp. 25-28.
54. Paul Cézanne, Letters, ed. John Rewald,
trans. Marguerite Kay (New York: Da Capo Press, 1976).
55. Linda Nochlin, "Cézanne: Studies in Contrast,"
Art in America, vol. 84 (June 1996), p. 67.
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