
La Maison du pendu, Auvers-sur-Oise
Paul Cézanne·1874
Historical Context
Cézanne exhibited La Maison du pendu at the first Impressionist exhibition of 1874, making it one of his earliest works to receive public attention — though critics responded with mockery. The house at Auvers-sur-Oise, where Cézanne stayed with Dr Gachet (later Van Gogh's physician), gave him a subject that seems to anticipate his mature structural programme: the way buildings, earth, and sky can be organised into interlocking planes of colour. The rough, unfinished quality that critics derided is now recognised as a crucial step toward his distinctive method of building form through modulated colour patches rather than conventional tonal gradation.
Technical Analysis
Paint is applied in thick, varied strokes that build up the wall surfaces and earth with material solidity. The palette of ochre, grey-green, and blue is relatively restricted, with colour modulation rather than tonal contrast creating the sense of volume. The composition is deliberately stable — weighted and anchored — resisting Impressionist atmospheric dissolution.
Look Closer
- ◆The so-called 'hanged man's house' shows no evidence of its grim reputation in the painting — it is an ordinary plaster farmhouse, the dark legend invisible in the brickwork.
- ◆Cézanne's handling of this subject, shown at the first Impressionist exhibition, is more structured than his contemporaries' work — the spatial organization is methodical.
- ◆The foreground path slopes down sharply — an unusually steep descent that gives the composition an off-balance energy.
- ◆Deep blue shadows in the hollow below the house suggest cool midday shade on a warm day — Auvers in summer rather than the typical gloomy association.
- ◆The rough plaster walls are rendered with dense impasto strokes that capture the specific texture of Provençal-style farm buildings in the Oise valley.
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