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Art & Creativity Quote by Paul Cezanne

"For an Impressionist to paint from nature is not to paint the subject, but to realize sensations"

About this Quote

Cezanne’s line is a polite detonation under the old contract between painter and world. “Paint from nature” sounds like faithful transcription, but he flips it: nature isn’t a set of objects to be copied, it’s a trigger for perception. The real subject is what happens inside the eye and nervous system when light hits a hillside or a face. That pivot is the Impressionist wager: reality is not a still life waiting to be recorded; it’s an ongoing event you can only catch as sensation.

The phrasing matters. “Not to paint the subject” is a refusal of academic hierarchy, where the subject (myth, history, portraiture) guaranteed meaning. Cezanne suggests meaning comes from attention itself: color relationships, shifting planes, the vibration between tones. “Realize” does double duty - to make real on canvas, and to become aware. Painting becomes a method of cognition, not illustration.

Context sharpens the stakes. Cezanne admired the Impressionists’ commitment to direct observation while distrusting their tendency toward the fleeting. He wanted something “solid and durable,” which is why the quote reads like both allegiance and critique: yes, start from nature, but don’t confuse nature with the noun in front of you. Chase the sensation that reorganizes the scene, and you get the deeper structure - the way an apple occupies space, the way a mountain becomes a set of pressures and colors. It’s an artist arguing that the modern world requires a modern kind of truth: experiential, constructed, and honest about its own mediation.

Quote Details

TopicArt
Source
Later attribution: 50 Art Ideas You Really Need to Know (Susie Hodge, 2023) modern compilationISBN: 9781529429275 · ID: cxeWEAAAQBAJ
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Google Books
Evidence:
... For an Impressionist to paint from nature is not to paint the subject, but to realize sensations.' Paul Cézanne Sincere art Rejecting any academic training they had experienced, Monet and the other Impressionists believed that their art ...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Cezanne, Paul. (2026, March 21). For an Impressionist to paint from nature is not to paint the subject, but to realize sensations. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/for-an-impressionist-to-paint-from-nature-is-not-70826/

Chicago Style
Cezanne, Paul. "For an Impressionist to paint from nature is not to paint the subject, but to realize sensations." FixQuotes. March 21, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/for-an-impressionist-to-paint-from-nature-is-not-70826/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"For an Impressionist to paint from nature is not to paint the subject, but to realize sensations." FixQuotes, 21 Mar. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/for-an-impressionist-to-paint-from-nature-is-not-70826/. Accessed 1 Apr. 2026.

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Cezanne on Impressionism: Painting Sensations from Nature
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About the Author

Paul Cezanne

Paul Cezanne (January 19, 1839 - October 22, 1906) was a Artist from France.

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