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On the Banks of a River
Paul Cézanne·1904
Historical Context
On the Banks of a River (c.1904), at the Rhode Island School of Design Museum, is a late Cézanne waterside landscape that brings his mature analytical approach to a subject type he had explored throughout his career. Rivers and their banks offered specific formal challenges: the horizontal plane of water contrasting with the vertical forms of trees and banks, the reflection creating a doubled image below the actual world above, the movement of water requiring a different analytical response from the stable forms of rock and vegetation. By 1904 his technique was capable of addressing these challenges with the same systematic colour analysis he applied to all subjects, producing results of extraordinary formal density.
Technical Analysis
The riverbank composition likely organises itself into horizontal bands—water below, bank and vegetation at the middle, sky above—that Cézanne articulates through modulated colour planes. The water's reflections create an inverted mirror of the forms above, handled with the same directional brushstrokes that describe the actual trees and banks reflected in it. The late palette of rich greens, blues, and ochres is applied with the systematic parallel strokes of his fully mature technique.
Look Closer
- ◆The water's surface is painted in long horizontal strokes of blue and green that create a screen across the lower quarter of the composition.
- ◆The riverbank foliage is described in dense overlapping patches of blue-green and yellow-green without distinguishing individual species.
- ◆A single red-roofed building glimpsed through the trees at right is the warmest note in an otherwise cool palette.
- ◆Cézanne left the transition between sky and foliage deliberately unresolved — colour patches overlapping without a defined edge.
- ◆The canvas texture shows through the paint in several passages — the weave creating its own horizontal rhythm beneath the applied strokes.
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