
Le Cabanon de Jourdan
Paul Cézanne·1906
Historical Context
Le Cabanon de Jourdan was painted in 1906 — the last year of Cézanne's life — showing a simple stone farm building near Aix. This late canvas has a trembling, unfinished quality that is in fact characteristic of his very late work: patches of bare canvas visible, the structure built from transparent overlapping strokes rather than fully covered impasto. Cézanne died in October 1906 after collapsing while painting outdoors in a rainstorm, and works like Le Cabanon de Jourdan have an elegiac quality — the stone building observed with the same patient intensity as all the motifs of his long career, but the execution showing the urgency of an artist aware of limited time.
Technical Analysis
The late style is evident in the transparency of the brushwork — strokes of color laid over bare or thinly primed canvas create a flickering, luminous surface. The stone building is described with directional parallel strokes in warm ochres and grays. The surrounding vegetation is handled even more loosely, almost dissolved into pure color.
Look Closer
- ◆Bare canvas shows through in multiple patches, especially around the building's walls — left deliberately to function as a light tone rather than indicating incompletion.
- ◆The stone farm building is rendered almost without detail: Cézanne uses colour modulation alone — warm ochre, cool grey — to suggest mass and shadow.
- ◆The surrounding vegetation dissolves into loose strokes of green and blue that refuse to resolve into individual leaves or branches.
- ◆A faint pencil underdrawing is visible in areas, showing Cézanne's structural grid before paint was applied over it.
- ◆The sky is barely differentiated from the lightest roof areas — the division between built form and atmosphere is nearly lost.
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