ArtvestigeArtvestige
PaintingsArtistsEras
Artvestige

Artvestige

The most comprehensive free reference for European painting. 40,000+ works across ten eras, every one with expert analysis.

Explore

PaintingsArtistsErasData Sources & CreditsContactPrivacy Policy

About

Artvestige is an independent reference and is not affiliated with any museum. All images courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

© 2026 Artvestige. All painting images are public domain / open access.

La Ferme, matin by Henri-Edmond Cross

La Ferme, matin

Henri-Edmond Cross·1893

Historical Context

La Ferme, matin (The Farm, Morning) of 1893, now in the Museum of Fine Arts of Nancy, was painted during a transitional moment in Cross's career — he had recently converted fully to Neo-Impressionism and was experimenting with morning light, a time of day that offered softer tonal contrasts than the blazing midday Mediterranean sun he would later favor. In 1891, Cross had moved to Saint-Clair in the Var, a village that provided him with direct access to the agricultural landscape of rural Provence. Farm subjects allowed him to explore the interaction of built structures — their ochre walls and terracotta tiles — with the natural rhythms of vegetation and morning mist. The year 1893 coincided with a period of theoretical intensity within the Neo-Impressionist group: Signac was writing the essays that would become D'Eugène Delacroix au Néo-Impressionnisme (1899), and discussions of color science, influenced by Ogden Rood and Michel Eugène Chevreul's color wheel, were at the center of the group's correspondence. Cross's choice to depict rural labor and agricultural space also reflects the anarchist sympathies he shared with Signac and several Neo-Impressionist colleagues, who associated the peasant landscape with ideas of communal self-sufficiency.

Technical Analysis

The morning light is captured through a restrained palette of warm ochres and cool mauves, with the divisionist touch kept delicate to suggest early-hour softness. Architectural planes receive flat-toned passages while organic elements — trees, grass — are built from varied strokes.

Look Closer

  • ◆The farmhouse walls glow with ochre and pale pink strokes suggesting the warm morning light striking stone
  • ◆Trees are treated as sculptural masses built from individual color touches rather than blended passages
  • ◆Look for long horizontal strokes in the foreground ground that evoke the stillness of early morning
  • ◆The sky shows Cross's control of tone — lighter, softer, and more muted than his later Mediterranean canvases

See It In Person

Museum of Fine Arts of Nancy

,

Visit museum website →

Quick Facts

Medium
oil paint
Era
Post-Impressionism
Genre
Genre
Location
Museum of Fine Arts of Nancy, undefined
View on museum website →

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