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Andrew O'Hagan The Twilight Saga: New Moon Theatre

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Henry Hitchings Cock Restaurants

David Sexton

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David Sexton Kitchen W8

Reader reviews

Film

Adam, Harrow

quoteToo long and drawn out but very entertaining with excellent special effectsquote

2012 Theatre

Rob, London

quoteThis is a peculiar play and does not work for me. Some of it is very funny but there are real flawsquote

The Habit Of Art Music

Bernard, London

quoteAlex has a strong powerful voice and was faultless, she is far better now than she was on the X-Factorquote

Alexandra Burke

Sensational Cezanne

By Tom Teodorczuk, Evening Standard 03.10.06

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The National Gallery today unveiled its stunning Cezanne exhibition that marks the centenary of the master's death.

Forty-five oil paintings, watercolours, drawings and prints will trace the development of Cezanne's art from the 1860s.

The show, which is free to enter, includes portraits, still lifes and landscapes. They all come from collections in Britain and include world-renowned paintings such as The Bathers, The Abduction and The Card Players.

Those being displayed in public for the first time include a smaller prototype, worked on between 1890 and 1895, of Cezanne's famous painting The Bathers (Les Grand Baigneuses).

The major work, completed sometime during the following 10 years, hangs in the National.

The Railway Cutting (1867-70), a drawing in graphite on paper of a stunning view of Sainte-Victoire mountain in Provence, has also never been shown in public.

Paul Cezanne, who was born in Aix-en-Provence in 1839 and died in the same town in 1906 aged 67, is hailed by many as the father of modern painting but during his lifetime his work was largely ignored.

Reclusive and shy, he remained an outsider in the art world.

After the First World War, the National Gallery turned down the opportunity to buy his work Mountains In Provence (Near L'Estaque), saying it did not have enough space.

In 1964, its purchase of Les Grandes Baigneuses for £500,000 caused such a furore the painting had to be displayed behind perspex.

Anne Robbins, curator of the National Gallery show, said: "Cezanne hardly ever went abroad. His work was hardly known here in his lifetime and only a handful of pictures by him were shown in Britain.

"But the UK has one of the greatest collections of Cezanne in the world. This will be a powerful and stunning retrospective."

. Cezanne In Britain opens to the public tomorrow and closes on 7 January.

Other autumn blockbusters

Holbein In England
Tate Britain exhibition devoted to the master Tudor portraitist, the first in Britain for 50 years. See Henry VIII along with three of his wives.

Rodin
Long-awaited Royal Academy show featuring more than 200 works by the French sculptor. Get up close to The Gates Of Hell and The Kiss.

How To Improve The World
Cream of the Arts Council's collection from the past 60 years at the Hayward Gallery. Includes David Hockney, Damien Hirst, Francis Bacon and Lucian Freud.

Leonardo da Vinci: Experience, Experiment, Design
See how da Vinci drew up his dreams and inventions on paper at the Victoria and Albert Museum.


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Reader views (1)

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I love Cezanne and all the different variations of his work: oil paintings, watercolours, drawings and prints are fabulous, a must-see. I love Cezanne's country views, and the way he uses colour. He really was a master, and I feel luck to have seen this exhibition.

- Debbie, Dulwich


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