
Montagne Sainte-Victoire, from near Gardanne
Paul Cézanne·1887
Historical Context
Cézanne's repeated studies of Montagne Sainte-Victoire are among the most consequential series in Western painting, representing his lifelong investigation of how solid form and atmospheric space can be simultaneously expressed through color alone. This 1887 view from near Gardanne, now at the National Gallery of Art, shows the mountain from an unusual southern approach, with the geometric cluster of Gardanne's buildings in the middle ground. It demonstrates Cézanne's method of building forms through parallel planes of color rather than line or tonal modeling — a discovery that would prove foundational to Cubism and virtually all subsequent geometric abstraction.
Technical Analysis
Cézanne constructs the landscape through carefully modulated passages of warm ochre, cool blue-green, and grey, applied in his characteristic parallel hatch-like strokes. The distinction between near and far is achieved through color temperature rather than conventional perspective.
Look Closer
- ◆The mountain is seen across a wide pine-forested valley — its silhouette broken by geological ridges that Cézanne carefully follows in the paint.
- ◆In this 1887 view, the palette is more naturalistic than his final Sainte-Victoire canvases — greens are greener, blues more atmospheric.
- ◆The foreground pines are rendered as simplified vertical trunks with compressed foliage masses, their forms repeated rhythmically across the valley sides.
- ◆A farmhouse or agricultural building appears among the trees in the middle distance — the human occupation of the landscape that would disappear from his final versions.
- ◆The mountain's peak catches warmer light than the shadowed slopes — Cézanne distinguishes geological surfaces through colour temperature rather than tonal shading.
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