
Les Baigneurs 1890
Paul Cézanne·1890
Historical Context
Painted c.1890 and held at the Galerie nationale du Jeu de Paume, this Baigneurs canvas belongs to the sustained middle phase of Cézanne's bather theme. By 1890 the bathing male figure had become a recurrent formal subject — a vehicle for investigating the human body within natural setting without the constraints of academic life drawing or portraiture. Cézanne worked from memory, old master prints, and earlier sketches to build these synthetic figures, which are emphatically not observed nudes but constructed ones. The Jeu de Paume collection, now subsumed into the Musée d'Orsay holdings, represented the heart of French national Post-Impressionist collecting.
Technical Analysis
The male figures are rendered with angular, abbreviated treatment of muscles and posture, their forms built through planes of blue, ochre, and flesh pink rather than anatomical modelling. The foliage canopy is applied in short, curved strokes of varied green, creating a rhythmic pattern that rhymes with the figures below. The paint surface has the spare, structural quality of Cézanne's mature method.
Look Closer
- ◆The male bathers are grouped in a loose triangle — a compositional geometry more explicitly visible in the smaller format than in the monumental late canvases.
- ◆Tree trunks frame the bathing group on both sides — a convention Cézanne borrows from the Venetian pastoral tradition but renders in flat, structural terms.
- ◆The water in which the bathers stand is barely indicated — a blue-green horizontal below the figures that suggests rather than depicts.
- ◆Each bather's pose is slightly different — reaching, standing, seated — giving the group movement without any single theatrical gesture.
- ◆The sky is warm rather than cool in this version — a golden atmospheric light that gives the group a classical, timeless quality unlike the cooler late bather canvases.
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