
Neige fondante à Fontainebleau (Melting Snow, Fontainebleau)
Paul Cézanne·1879
Historical Context
This MOMA canvas of melting snow in the Fontainebleau forest, painted around 1879-1880, is among Cézanne's most atmospheric early landscapes. The Fontainebleau forest had a long tradition in French art — the Barbizon painters had worked there for decades — but Cézanne's approach strips away their Romantic sentiment. The melting snow offers a subject of transitional beauty: the hard geometry of winter giving way to the softer forms of spring, ice dissolving into earth, permanence into flux. The painting shows his ability to capture a specific meteorological moment while building toward the structural permanence his mature landscapes would achieve.
Technical Analysis
The snow and bare trees are rendered in a cool, restrained palette of whites, grays, and muted greens. Cézanne's brushwork is already directional and constructive even at this relatively early date. The patches of remaining snow among dark earth create a strong value contrast that organizes the composition.
Look Closer
- ◆The Fontainebleau forest is rendered in winter greys and cool blues — a palette that strips out the warm browns of his Provence work and replaces them with northern cool.
- ◆Melting snow is indicated by patches of white on the dark forest floor alternating with exposed earth — the in-between season's specific optical complexity.
- ◆The forest interior here is more open than Van Ruisdael's enclosed woodlands — the Fontainebleau trees are spaced and the floor relatively clear.
- ◆Bare tree trunks provide the vertical structure — dark marks that organize the horizontal white snow passages into a compositional grid.
- ◆The atmosphere is thick with winter moisture — Cézanne gives the far trees a slight haziness that suggests the specific cold damp of northern winter rather than the clear dry air of Provence.
 - BF286 - Barnes Foundation.jpg&width=600)
 - BF1179 - Barnes Foundation.jpg&width=600)
 - BF577 - Barnes Foundation.jpg&width=600)
 - BF534 - Barnes Foundation.jpg&width=600)



