ArtvestigeArtvestige
PaintingsArtistsEras
Artvestige

Artvestige

The most comprehensive free reference for European painting. 40,000+ works across ten eras, every one with expert analysis.

Explore

PaintingsArtistsErasData Sources & CreditsContactPrivacy Policy

About

Artvestige is an independent reference and is not affiliated with any museum. All images courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

© 2026 Artvestige. All painting images are public domain / open access.

The Glade by Henri-Edmond Cross

The Glade

Henri-Edmond Cross·1907

Historical Context

The Glade, painted in 1907 and now at the Wallraf-Richartz Museum in Cologne, depicts a sun-filled woodland clearing in the Provençal or Var landscape near Cross's Saint-Clair home. The glade — a space of concentrated natural light surrounded by the cool shade of trees — was a subject Cross returned to across his mature and late career, finding in its contained luminosity a perfect expression of his aspirations for Divisionist color. The Wallraf-Richartz Museum's holding situates the painting in a German collection that had been systematically acquiring French Post-Impressionist work since the late nineteenth century; German collectors and institutions were among the most enthusiastic early advocates of Seurat, Signac, and Cross. The 1907 date places this among Cross's late works, when his technique had evolved toward the broad, expressive stroke that was influencing Matisse and other Fauves. The glade's enclosed quality — warm golden light gathered within a circle of cool trees — encapsulates Cross's understanding of landscape as a structure for organizing chromatic experience.

Technical Analysis

The woodland clearing demands a particularly complex management of complementary warm and cool zones: sunlit grass floor in ochre and yellow, surrounding tree masses in deep blue-green shadow, with the sky opening above in brilliant blue. Cross's broad late strokes build this structure with maximum chromatic intensity.

Look Closer

  • ◆The glade's spatial structure — warm golden clearing enclosed by cool blue-green tree shadow — is a naturally occurring complementary contrast, ideal for Divisionism.
  • ◆The surrounding tree masses are constructed from broad blue-green strokes that frame and intensify the golden warmth of the clearing floor.
  • ◆The sky opening above the clearing creates a vertical axis of intense blue that anchors the otherwise enclosed composition.
  • ◆Cross's 1907 brushstroke is at its broadest and most expressive here — each mark a substantial gesture rather than a disciplined dot.

See It In Person

Wallraf–Richartz Museum

,

Visit museum website →

Quick Facts

Medium
canvas
Era
Post-Impressionism
Genre
Genre
Location
Wallraf–Richartz Museum, undefined
View on museum website →

More by Henri-Edmond Cross

Ponte San Trovaso (Venice) by Henri-Edmond Cross

Ponte San Trovaso (Venice)

Henri-Edmond Cross·1902

Regatta in Venice by Henri-Edmond Cross

Regatta in Venice

Henri-Edmond Cross·1903

On the River by Henri-Edmond Cross

On the River

Henri-Edmond Cross·1900

Marine Scene (Boats near Venice) by Henri-Edmond Cross

Marine Scene (Boats near Venice)

Henri-Edmond Cross·1903

More from the Post-Impressionism Period

Rocks and Trees (Rochers et arbres) by Paul Cézanne

Rocks and Trees (Rochers et arbres)

Paul Cézanne·1904

Bathers (Baigneurs) by Paul Cézanne

Bathers (Baigneurs)

Paul Cézanne·1903

Fruit on a Table (Fruits sur la table) by Paul Cézanne

Fruit on a Table (Fruits sur la table)

Paul Cézanne·1891

Gardener (Le Jardinier) by Paul Cézanne

Gardener (Le Jardinier)

Paul Cézanne·1885