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Marronniers et ferme du Jas de Bouffan by Paul Cézanne

Marronniers et ferme du Jas de Bouffan

Paul Cézanne·1885

Historical Context

Paul Cézanne's Marronniers et ferme du Jas de Bouffan (Chestnut Trees and Farmhouse at Jas de Bouffan, 1885) depicts the estate his father had purchased in 1859 that provided his primary working environment for many years. The Jas de Bouffan's parkland, with its chestnut trees and farmhouse buildings, was among Cézanne's most painted subjects — a familiar environment studied repeatedly under different light conditions and seasonal variations. The chestnut trees, with their distinctive palmate leaves and seasonal fruit, offered specific botanical challenges that Cézanne welcomed as part of his ongoing investigation of how to render nature on canvas.

Technical Analysis

Cézanne organizes the Jas de Bouffan subject through his characteristic systematic construction: the chestnut trees rendered through accumulated directional strokes that build their volumetric presence, the farmhouse providing geometric counterpoint to the organic tree forms. His palette combines the warm ochres of the farmhouse with the deep greens of summer chestnut foliage, the sky visible in patches through the canopy. Every element is treated with equal deliberate attention, refusing the traditional hierarchy of foreground interest and atmospheric recession.

Look Closer

  • ◆The chestnut trees' trunks are dark vertical columns that create a rhythmic screen through which the farmhouse behind is partially visible.
  • ◆Cézanne distinguishes the heavy summer foliage of the chestnuts from the lighter canopy of other trees by using denser, more opaque green strokes.
  • ◆The farmhouse seen between the trunks is rendered in warm ochre that glows against the cooler greens surrounding it.
  • ◆The ground beneath the chestnuts is in deep shade — a cool blue-green that records the specific light quality of sitting under a summer tree canopy.
  • ◆The 1885 date places this at the moment Cézanne was consolidating his mature method — each element treated as equivalent building blocks of a single surface.

See It In Person

New York City

New York,

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Quick Facts

Medium
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
65.5 × 81.3 cm
Era
Post-Impressionism
Style
Post-Impressionism
Genre
Landscape
Location
New York City, New York
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Fruit on a Table (Fruits sur la table) by Paul Cézanne

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Paul Cézanne·1891

Gardener (Le Jardinier) by Paul Cézanne

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