
Groupe de maisons – Les Toits
Paul Cézanne·1876
Historical Context
Groupe de maisons — Les Toits, at the Villa Flora in Switzerland, is one of Cézanne's roofscape paintings from around 1876 — a view of clustered houses and their tiled roofs that reduces the built environment to geometric essentials. The rooftop subject allowed Cézanne to explore the relationship between flat planes and atmospheric recession without the compositional demands of conventional landscape or figure painting, and these architectural studies were important exercises in the formal analysis that would define his mature work. The Villa Flora's collection reflects Swiss collecting of Post-Impressionist art from the early twentieth century.
Technical Analysis
The house roofs are rendered as geometric planes of warm red and ochre tile against the blue of sky and the green of surrounding vegetation, each surface analysed in terms of its orientation to the light source. Cézanne's parallel brushstrokes build the planes with a structural rigour that reveals his underlying concern with the architecture of the picture surface as much as the architecture of the houses depicted.
Look Closer
- ◆The rooftops are shown from above — an elevated viewpoint that reduces the houses to their geometric roof planes alone, walls invisible.
- ◆Red, orange, and warm grey tiles are rendered in small parallel strokes — a mosaic of roof material that anticipates his later faceted approach to all surfaces.
- ◆Chimney stacks rise between the roofs as dark punctuation marks — vertical forms that interrupt the horizontal tile planes.
- ◆The sky is visible only at the very top — the composition is almost entirely architectural surface with minimal atmospheric space.
- ◆The grouping of the houses is informal — each roof at a slightly different angle — giving the cityscape the irregular variation of actual inhabited building rather than planned urban form.
 - BF286 - Barnes Foundation.jpg&width=600)
 - BF1179 - Barnes Foundation.jpg&width=600)
 - BF577 - Barnes Foundation.jpg&width=600)
 - BF534 - Barnes Foundation.jpg&width=600)



