
Les Voleurs et l'âne
Paul Cézanne·1870
Historical Context
Painted c.1869-1870 and now in Milan at the Galleria d'arte moderna, Les Voleurs et l'âne belongs to Cézanne's dark, Romantic early period when he was working under the influence of Delacroix and Courbet rather than the Impressionists. The subject — thieves and a donkey — is drawn from the fable tradition and represents his early engagement with narrative painting, which he would later abandon entirely in favour of landscapes, still lifes, and figures in nature. The heavy impasto, dramatic tonal contrasts, and turbulent composition reflect a young painter in the throes of discovering his resources, not yet having found the systematic method of his maturity.
Technical Analysis
The paint is applied thickly with palette knife as well as brush, creating a heavily textured surface unlike the more measured later work. Dark tones dominate, with dramatic highlights of pale impasto suggesting lantern or moonlight. The composition is energetic and somewhat restless, reflecting Delacroix's influence rather than the still, structural approach of Cézanne's mature period.
Look Closer
- ◆The thieves are rendered as rough, dark figures typical of Cézanne's early melodramatic subjects — broad summary forms rather than individuated characters.
- ◆The donkey at the composition's centre is painted with almost affectionate specificity compared to the generalized thieves around it.
- ◆Heavy impasto and dark colour create the Courbet-influenced surface — thick, loaded strokes that feel physically weighted.
- ◆The fable's moralistic irony — thieves quarrelling over a donkey while it escapes — is not illustrated didactically but absorbed into the scene's general confusion.
- ◆The composition's violence is contained within a tight cluster of bodies — Cézanne uses compression as a formal device rather than opening the scene to landscape.
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