
House in Provence (Maison en Provence)
Paul Cézanne·1890
Historical Context
Painted c.1890, this view of a Provençal farmhouse belongs to Cézanne's sustained exploration of his home region around Aix. By this period he had settled permanently in the South of France, working outdoors and in his studio at Jas de Bouffan, the family estate his father had purchased in 1859. Provençal houses became central motifs for testing his system of representing three-dimensional space through parallel planes of colour. At the Barnes Foundation the painting joins other works that Albert C. Barnes collected specifically to demonstrate Cézanne's transition from representation toward abstraction — a transition that would prove foundational for Cubism.
Technical Analysis
Horizontals and verticals of the house are reinforced by the painting's compositional architecture, with foliage serving as counterpoint to rigid masonry. Cézanne's passage technique — leaving slight gaps between adjacent colour areas — creates a visual vibration that suggests both air and underlying geometry. The palette is warm, dominated by ochres, greens, and terre verte.
Look Closer
- ◆The Provençal farmhouse is depicted with just its most essential planes — warm ochre wall, dark window opening, red-tiled roof — without any ornamental detail.
- ◆A screen of dark trees to the left provides a vertical counterbalance to the horizontal farmhouse architecture.
- ◆The surrounding garden or garrigue is rendered in rough diagonal strokes of warm green — vegetation as structured surface rather than naturalistic plant life.
- ◆A path leading away from the house curves into the middle distance — Cézanne's typical compositional device for implying spatial depth.
- ◆The sky above is a simple warm blue-white — Provençal summer bleaching the atmosphere to near-white at the horizon.
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