Maisons sur la colline
Paul Cézanne·1904
Historical Context
Maisons sur la colline (Houses on the Hill, c.1904), at the McNay Art Museum, is among Cézanne's final landscape studies—works in which the architectural forms of Provençal buildings and the natural forms of the surrounding hillside are treated as equivalent elements in a unified analysis of visual structure. By 1904 his late style had reached its fullest development, and these landscapes demonstrate the systematic approach to colour-as-form that directly influenced the Cubists in the following decade. The specific view of houses on a hillside gave him the opportunity to explore how architectural geometry and natural topography could be rendered through the same analytical language of interlocking colour planes.
Technical Analysis
Houses and hillside are rendered with the same vocabulary of parallel, directional brushstrokes that build form through colour modulation rather than outline and shading. The architectural geometry of roofs and walls creates a structural armature within the landscape that reinforces the painting's analytical character. Cool blues, warm ochres, and the green of vegetation are orchestrated into a coherent chromatic structure that unifies the entire surface.
Look Closer
- ◆The houses dissolve into their hillside setting — Cézanne's brushwork treating rooftile, stone wall, and vegetation as equivalent painted surfaces.
- ◆A single Provençal cypress at the right is described in vertical dark strokes — the tree as an upward-reaching accent against the horizontal landscape.
- ◆The sky is articulated in deliberate parallel strokes of pale blue and white — Cézanne's sky is as structural as his earth.
- ◆The shadow sides of the houses are cool blue-grey while the sunlit faces are warm ochre — a consistent colour-temperature analysis throughout.
- ◆Several passages of bare canvas are left — not unfinished negligence but part of Cézanne's method of allowing breath between colour planes.
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