
Harlequin (Arlequin)
Paul Cézanne·1880
Historical Context
Harlequin (Arlequin), painted around 1880 and now in the National Gallery of Art in Washington, belongs to Cézanne's recurring engagement with the commedia dell'arte figure of the harlequin — the masked trickster in diamond-patterned costume. He painted harlequins and pierrots both early and late in his career, perhaps drawn to the figure's theatrical unreality as a counterweight to his intense observation of the empirical world. The harlequin allowed him to paint a human figure in highly patterned clothing — the diamond costume a grid of color analogous to the geometric structures he found in landscape and still life. The NGA's version dates to a period when Cézanne was developing his most systematic analytical approach.
Technical Analysis
Oil on canvas with the harlequin's diamond-patterned costume providing a geometric color structure that suits Cézanne's analytical method. The figure's form is built through the same parallel strokes he applied to apples and Mont Sainte-Victoire, treating the costumed human as an opportunity for rigorous color-plane construction.
Look Closer
- ◆The harlequin's diamond costume is painted in blue-grey against a blue-grey background — the figure almost dissolves into the space behind it.
- ◆The figure stands at the canvas's edge without any ground plane indicated — Cézanne has stripped away spatial cues to focus on the costumed form.
- ◆The mask is absent — Cézanne depicted an unmasked harlequin, leaving the performer's identity exposed beneath the theatrical disguise.
- ◆The sleeve's diamond patterning is rendered in flat, unmodulated patches of alternating tone rather than modelled fabric.
- ◆The pose is frontal and hieratic — a standing figure almost like an icon — giving this carnival figure an unexpected gravity.
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