Alex Danchev is Professor of International Relations at Nottingham University. His biography of Basil Liddell Hart was listed for the Whitbread Prize for Biography and the Samuel Johnson Prize for Non-Fiction in 1998, and his edition of the Alanbrooke Diaries was listed for the WH Smith Prize for Biography in 2001. In 2009 he published On Art and War and Terror, and his most recent book, 100 Artists' Manifestos was published in 2011. He is a literary reviewer for the Times Higher and TLS.
Danchev's Cezanne has... virtues of imaginative sympathy, independence of mind, and wide scholarship. He writes as if Cezanne's life and character are as immediately present before him as is the art -- Julian Barnes * TLS * A brave new life of Cezanne ... much of this new material successfully illuminates Cezanne's inner life. An important book * Sunday Times * Enlightening . . . Accomplished and subtle -- Michael Prodger * Mail on Sunday * This is a great book - possibly the best - on one of the most respected impressionists * Bookseller * The most engrossing biography of an artist that I have read for years. With lightness of touch, depth of thought, a vast cultural hinterland and an assured understanding of painting, Danchev marvellously brings to life Cezanne the man, as well as the pioneering artist called the father of us all by Picasso. -- Jackie Wullschlager * FT * A magisterial biography -- Jonathan Lopez * Wall Street Journal * A new view of an old subject ... an impressive achievement -- Christian House * Independent on Sunday * This is the best account of [Cezanne's] astonishing career and Danchev responds to the challenge with great sensitivity and genuine brio. This is a book which will survive the test of time. -- John Golding CBE, Emeritus Professor of the Royal Academy Alex Danchev compellingly guides us through Paul Cezanne's much mythologized life from his over-bearing father and early days in the South, as a school friend of Emile Zola, to his position as one of the revered creators of modern painting. The development of Cezanne's thinking and the construction of his paintings are explored alongside his complex relationship with other painters and the Parisian art establishment. Danchev has a great ability to weave his research and analysis into a compelling narrative: understanding what was required for Cezanne to make art modern. -- Sandy Nairne, National Portrait Gallery A fantastically multidimensional Cezanne. . . . reads much like . . . one of Paul Cezanne's paintings . . . Mr. Danchev's portrait of Cezanne's life is heavy, thick with deceptively simple detail, and unendingly rich in offering context and detail for the reader to make sense of what contexts surrounded Cezanne, how Cezanne understood himself, and how the surrounding artistic milieu and climate informed Cezanne's paintings . . . Cezanne, A Life is a compelling and well-written biography of an enduring, enigmatic and complex figure in the changing world of turn-of-the-20th-century modernist art. -- Dr Lydia Pyne * New York Journal of Books * An enchanting literary exercise... exquisite in style... romantic, intense, affectionate and occasionally wry... a masterpiece. -- Brian Sewell * Evening Standard *