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Paysage à Ganagobie
Historical Context
Painted in 1872, Paysage à Ganagobie is a work by Adolphe Joseph Thomas Monticelli, now in the collection of Wallraf–Richartz Museum, that reflects the artistic concerns of the late 19th century — an era of fundamental transformation in both the methods and purposes of European and American painting. Adolphe Monticelli was a Marseille-born painter whose wildly impastoed late Romantic figure scenes exercised a powerful influence on Van Gogh, who collected his work and explicitly modeled certain paintings on Monticelli's technique.
Technical Analysis
Monticelli applied paint with extraordinary impasto thickness — sometimes inches deep — building richly encrusted surfaces that transform his romantic fête galante subjects into glittering tapestries of color.



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