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Trees Forming an Arch
Trees Forming an Arch
LOCATION

LOCATION

Fontainebleau, France

Forests of Fontainbleu

Trees Forming an Arch, ca. 1904-05 (verso: 1900, or later)
Paul Cézanne (French, 1839–1906)

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Trees Forming an Arch, ca. 1904-05 (verso: 1900, or later)
(Arbres Formant une Voûte) Paul Cézanne (French, 1839–1906)

Watercolor and graphite on buff wove paper
60.2 x 45.8 cm. (23 11/16 x 18 1/16 in.)
L.1988.62.45

In graphite, lower left edge on verso: A(?) Voll...

Provenance

[Ambroise Vollard (1867–1939), Paris]. Private collection, Germany. Paul Brame (1898–1971), Paris. Henry Pearlman, New York, by 1959; Henry and Rose Pearlman Foundation, after 1974.

Conservator’s Note

Evident from the many tackholes around the edges and in the corners, it is likely that Cézanne worked on this watercolor in several stages, allowing the moist strokes to dry completely before overlapping them with additional strokes of translucent paint.

Critical Perspective

One of a number of Cézanne’s double-sided watercolors. On the recto: This watercolor is thought to depict a scene in or near the forest of Fontainebleau, near Paris, where Cézanne spent part of the summers of 1904 and 1905. Although he clearly sketched the scene before beginning to paint, and later reworked part of the composition in graphite, Cézanne’s many layers of watercolor predominate.

verso: Sketches of rooftops are rare in Cézanne’s work, and, when they do occur, the angular roofs and vertical chimneys are almost always set in contrast to trees or in the context of a landscape. In this monochromatic watercolor, which may have been executed in Paris, the absent foliage is conveyed by the curving scrollwork, clearly differentiated from the slanting roofs by the horizontal rail.

Paul Cézanne

Paul Cézanne (1839-1906)

Cézanne is recognized as one of the great innovators of late 19th- and early 20th-century art, whose work has influenced countless modern artists. With an introverted temperament and generally anti-establishment stance, Cézanne forged a new approach to painting that sought not only to reflect nature but also to express his own response to it. Although during his formative years he exhibited with the Impressionists, he ultimately felt at odds with their emphasis on fleeting experience, seeking greater solidity through painterly form and structure.

Born in Aix-en-Provence, Cézanne studied drawing early on, but, fulfilling his father’s wishes, he later enrolled in university to study law. In 1861, however, he left for Paris, where he studied at the Académie Suisse and copied Romantic and Baroque art at the Louvre. Failing to gain entrance to the École des Beaux-Arts, and constantly rejected by the official Salon, Cézanne rebelliously painted in an intense, even violent, manner, with thickly encrusted paint. Finding a mentor in the Impressionist painter Camille Pissarro, in the 1870s Cézanne lightened his palette and started working directly from the landscape. He was influenced by the solidity of Pissarro’s brushwork and compositional structure, yet, like Paul Gauguin, whom he met in 1880, he sought to express his own personal perceptions and sensations through his views of nature.

By the late 1870s, Cézanne’s paintings showed increasing emphasis on mass and structure, and he developed a system of parallel brushstrokes, known as his “constructive stroke,” that conveyed the volume of both form and space. With mind and eye working in concert, Cézanne built up his pictures slowly and deliberately, often while directly confronting his motif, whether a landscape, still-life, or portrait. In Aix, the prominent form of Mont Sainte-Victoire became one of his dominant motifs from the mid-1880s until the end of his life. Attracted to its enduring geometric form and the changing views offered by different light and angles, Cézanne created more than thirty paintings in oil and watercolor that conveyed his intense examination of the subject’s underlying structures as well as the shifting nature of perception.

Cézanne used the medium of watercolor to experiment with form and structure, creating a wide range of effects through transparent planes of color and strokes of pencil. The exceptional luminosity of watercolor allowed him to play with light as a constructive element, while often using blank passages of paper to heighten the sense of space and form. Cézanne’s watercolors thus had a great influence on his oil paintings, seen particularly in his use of exposed areas of blank canvas as a constitutive element and passages that reveal open compositional structures, as exemplified in Route to Le Tholonet. Many successive generations of artists, from the Cubists and Fauvists to Abstract Expressionists, would be influenced by Cézanne’s experimental legacy.