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Beach at Cabasson (Baigne-Cul) by Henri-Edmond Cross

Beach at Cabasson (Baigne-Cul)

Henri-Edmond Cross·1891

Historical Context

Beach at Cabasson (Baigne-Cul) is a pivotal early work in Henri-Edmond Cross's transition from dark-toned academic painting to the Neo-Impressionist technique he would fully adopt under the influence of Georges Seurat and Paul Signac. Painted in 1891, the year Cross officially joined the Neo-Impressionist circle and began exhibiting with the Société des Artistes Indépendants, this beach scene along the Provençal coast shows him beginning to experiment with divided colour and a brighter, more luminous palette. The Art Institute of Chicago, which holds this work, acquired it as part of its strong representation of Post-Impressionist colour theory in practice. Cabasson was a coastal village in the Var department that Cross visited repeatedly, and it became one of the primary locations where he developed his southern French landscape idiom. The bathing figures in the shallow water relate to a long tradition of leisure bathing scenes but are rendered with a fresh interest in how sunlight dissolves form through colour rather than defining it through shadow.

Technical Analysis

Cross applies paint in small, carefully separated touches of pure colour that work together optically at viewing distance, following Seurat's divisionist principles. The palette is high-keyed, with blues, greens, and warm flesh tones placed side by side to create vibrational luminosity. The technique is more systematic here than in his earlier work.

Look Closer

  • ◆Small, distinct touches of pure colour placed adjacently demonstrate Cross's early adoption of Seurat's divisionist method
  • ◆The blue-green water is built from separate strokes of cobalt, viridian, and white rather than blended tones
  • ◆Figures are simplified into form-shapes rather than individually described, subordinated to the overall colour structure
  • ◆The high horizon gives the shallow water and beach the dominant presence in the composition

See It In Person

Art Institute of Chicago

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Quick Facts

Medium
canvas
Era
Post-Impressionism
Genre
Genre
Location
Art Institute of Chicago, undefined
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More by Henri-Edmond Cross

Ponte San Trovaso (Venice) by Henri-Edmond Cross

Ponte San Trovaso (Venice)

Henri-Edmond Cross·1902

Regatta in Venice by Henri-Edmond Cross

Regatta in Venice

Henri-Edmond Cross·1903

On the River by Henri-Edmond Cross

On the River

Henri-Edmond Cross·1900

Marine Scene (Boats near Venice) by Henri-Edmond Cross

Marine Scene (Boats near Venice)

Henri-Edmond Cross·1903

More from the Post-Impressionism Period

Rocks and Trees (Rochers et arbres) by Paul Cézanne

Rocks and Trees (Rochers et arbres)

Paul Cézanne·1904

Bathers (Baigneurs) by Paul Cézanne

Bathers (Baigneurs)

Paul Cézanne·1903

Fruit on a Table (Fruits sur la table) by Paul Cézanne

Fruit on a Table (Fruits sur la table)

Paul Cézanne·1891

Gardener (Le Jardinier) by Paul Cézanne

Gardener (Le Jardinier)

Paul Cézanne·1885