
Portrait of Madame Cézanne
Paul Cézanne·1885
Historical Context
This Portrait of Madame Cézanne of 1885, in the Philadelphia Museum of Art, depicts Hortense Fiquet, who had been Cézanne's companion since 1869 and bore him a son in 1872 but whom his controlling father did not know about for years. Cézanne painted Hortense more than any other single figure — around 44 times — treating her with the same systematic attention he gave still life and landscape subjects, studying her face and form across different light conditions and compositional solutions. The Philadelphia portrait is among the most psychologically complex of the series: Hortense's expression carries a contained reserve that commentators have interpreted variously as patience, boredom, or the dignified endurance of a subject accustomed to long silent sittings. Cézanne's approach to portraiture as a formal problem equivalent to his apple studies makes the Madame Cézanne series exceptional in the history of conjugal portraiture.
Technical Analysis
Cézanne builds the face through parallel diagonal brushstrokes applied in multiple overlapping layers of slightly varying hue, creating a modelled surface that resolves at a distance into sculptural form. The background is applied with the same directional stroke consistency as the face, preventing any separation between figure and ground and creating the unified pictorial field that distinguishes his portraiture.
Look Closer
- ◆Hortense's expression is characteristically blank and resigned — she has posed for Cézanne many.
- ◆The high-backed chair behind her provides a strong vertical that frames the figure's upper body.
- ◆The construction of this face through parallel colour planes not tonal blending is clearly visible.
- ◆The hands in the lap are minimally described — Cézanne more interested in the face's structural.
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