
Provençal Landscape
Paul Cézanne·1887
Historical Context
Paul Cézanne's Provençal landscape subjects of 1887 represent his sustained investigation of the terrain around Aix-en-Provence — a landscape he returned to throughout his career but with increasing systematic intensity in his mature period. The specific character of Provençal light, geology, and vegetation provided him with subjects quite different from his Paris and Normandy subjects: the limestone outcrops, the umbrella pines, the warm ochre earth, and the intense southern sun all demanded adjustment of his method. His Provençal landscapes were among the primary subjects through which he developed his mature systematic approach to pictorial structure.
Technical Analysis
Cézanne builds the Provençal landscape through his characteristic parallel, faceted brushstrokes that simultaneously model three-dimensional form and establish the two-dimensional surface's rhythm. His palette for the Provence subjects is warmer and more saturated than his northern work — the ochres and siennas of the limestone terrain, the blue-greens of maritime pines, and the vivid sky blue of the southern atmosphere. His compositional organization finds the underlying geometric structure within the landscape's apparent complexity.
Look Closer
- ◆The Provençal scrubland — garrigue — is rendered in dry warm strokes of ochre and grey-green that capture the specific drought-adapted vegetation's appearance.
- ◆Distant hills are shown in progressively cooler blue tones — the atmospheric perspective that Cézanne uses to give even small landscapes genuine spatial depth.
- ◆A few isolated pines break the flat scrubland with vertical dark forms — their specificity amid the general vegetation marking them as compositional anchors.
- ◆The sky carries horizontal cloud forms in warm grey-white — Cézanne in 1887 still includes weather in his skies, which his final canvases would largely eliminate.
- ◆The earth in the foreground is warm ochre — the specific limestone soil of the Aix region — making the palette as geologically accurate as it is formally beautiful.
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