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Two Women by the Shore, Mediterranean by Henri-Edmond Cross

Two Women by the Shore, Mediterranean

Henri-Edmond Cross·1896

Historical Context

Two Women by the Shore, Mediterranean, painted in 1896 and now at the Barnes Foundation in Philadelphia, belongs to the critical period when Cross had fully mastered Divisionism and was producing his most ambitious figure-in-landscape compositions. Albert Barnes's acquisition of this work for his Merion, Pennsylvania foundation — now among the world's great collections of Post-Impressionist painting — placed it in the company of major Renoirs, Matisses, and Cézannes, reflecting Barnes's belief that Cross was a central figure in the tradition that led from Impressionism to early modernism. The subject of women in a southern coastal landscape connects to both the classical tradition of figures in arcadian landscape and to a contemporary Mediterranean idyll that Cross and Signac cultivated — an image of the south of France as a paradise of light and leisure distinct from the industrializing north. By 1896 Cross had moved to his permanent home on the Var coast and the Mediterranean was his exclusive visual world.

Technical Analysis

The Divisionist technique deploys complementary color contrasts between the warm flesh of the figures, the blue-green of the Mediterranean, and the gold of sun on the shore. Each stroke is discrete, building up surface richness through accumulated touches rather than blended paint.

Look Closer

  • ◆The two figures are built from discrete mosaic strokes of divided flesh tones — the Divisionist method applied to human bodies basking in Mediterranean light.
  • ◆The sea's blue-green is calibrated as a chromatic complement to the warm ochres and pinks of the figures and beach, maximizing luminous contrast.
  • ◆The composition evokes a contemporary Mediterranean arcadia — leisure, sunlight, and the south — as a deliberately constructed alternative to industrial modernity.
  • ◆Barnes's placement of this work among his Renoirs and Cézannes reflects a historical argument about its role in the lineage from Impressionism to Matisse.

See It In Person

Barnes Foundation

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Quick Facts

Medium
canvas
Era
Post-Impressionism
Genre
Genre
Location
Barnes Foundation, undefined
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More by Henri-Edmond Cross

Ponte San Trovaso (Venice) by Henri-Edmond Cross

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Henri-Edmond Cross·1902

Regatta in Venice by Henri-Edmond Cross

Regatta in Venice

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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

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

Fruit on a Table (Fruits sur la table)

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Gardener (Le Jardinier) by Paul Cézanne

Gardener (Le Jardinier)

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