
Landscape in the South (Le Cannet)
Pierre Bonnard·1947
Historical Context
Bonnard moved permanently to Le Cannet, a hillside town above Cannes, in 1926, and it dominated his late work until his death in 1947. The landscape there—its terraced gardens, mimosa and olive trees, and the intense Mediterranean light—became one of the most obsessively reworked subjects in his career. Unlike his Nabis contemporaries who moved away from purely visual concerns, Bonnard intensified his focus on sensation, memory, and the subjective experience of color. His Le Cannet landscapes often depict the view from his villa Le Bosquet, combining a high viewpoint with cascading vegetation that disrupts conventional depth cues. This work belongs to his late period when his palette became increasingly saturated and the division between foreground, middle ground, and sky was subordinated to overall chromatic fields.
Technical Analysis
Bonnard builds the surface with small dabs and strokes of intense, non-naturalistic color—acid yellows, vermilions, and violet shadows—applied with deliberate unevenness that creates a vibrating, mosaic-like effect. There is no clear linear perspective; depth is suggested through color temperature and tonal shifts rather than diminution of scale. The brushwork is varied in direction, with no dominant stroke pattern.
Look Closer
- ◆Bonnard's late Le Cannet palette reaches its most intensely chromatic in this composition — the Mediterranean landscape rendered in acid yellow, deep violet, and saturated orange.
- ◆The terrace garden foreground is rendered as overlapping flat bands of colour that do not describe depth through perspective but through colour temperature.
- ◆The bay of Cannes visible in the distance is painted in a luminous blue that seems to glow from within — Bonnard's late chromatic intensity at its fullest.
- ◆A mimosa or flowering tree in the composition provides bright yellow that anchors the warm end of the palette.
- ◆This 1947 canvas — painted in the year of his death — shows no sign of diminished colour ambition: Bonnard pushed his palette further in his eighties than he had in his forties.




 - BF286 - Barnes Foundation.jpg&width=600)
 - BF1179 - Barnes Foundation.jpg&width=600)
 - BF577 - Barnes Foundation.jpg&width=600)
 - BF534 - Barnes Foundation.jpg&width=600)