
The
Château at Médan
(oil on canvas, 1880)
Burrell
Collection, Glasgow
The
art of Paul Cézanne was very influential in the development
of modern painting.
Cézanne
was a Post
Impressionist artist. This was a vague term used to describe
certain artists who were influenced by the color and vitality
of Impressionism
but dissatisfied with the limitations of the style.
In traditional painting, one of the techniques that artists used
create the illusion of depth was to apply larger brushstrokes
in the foreground of a picture, which gradually decrease in size
towards the background in order to convey the distant details.
What
was modern about Cézanne's painting was that he did not
try to deny the two-dimensional quality of a painting's surface.
Instead, he liked to emphasise the surface quality of a painting
and to make it an essential element in the way we read a picture.
He did this by applying regular sized strokes of paint to construct
abstract patterns of color across the work. His fluid brushstrokes
force the viewer to read the surface of a painting as a unified
plane. He called his pictures 'constructions after nature' in
which elements from the three-dimensional world were translated
into patterns of color on a flat canvas.
The
Château at Médan is a good example of this style.
It portrays the summer house of his friend, the writer Emile Zola.
This is a flat, frontal view of the house which is situated on
the banks of the River Seine. Cézanne's use of parallel
oblong brushstrokes gives the surface a distinctly woven appearance
which emphasises its flatness. This effect is strengthened by
the horizontal and vertical lines of the houses, trees and riverbank
that bind the composition together. It is a three-dimensional
scene which has been deliberately arranged as a flat pattern on
a two-dimensional surface. Any suggestion of depth is conveyed
by aerial
perspective: using the natural properties of warm
and cool colors to respectively advance and recede.
Paul
Cézanne Notes
