This painting represents an avenue on the grounds of Paul Cézanne's family estate in southern France in Aix-en-Provence. In the 1880s, Cézanne set an unusual challenge for himself. He wanted to portray his native landscape with all its specifics of weather, light, and atmosphere, but he also wished to reveal the immutable geometries of nature.
Here, Cézanne carefully recorded the color and light of the wintry scene, with its tracery of bare branches against the sky. To create an ordered pictorial design, he selected this particular view, emphasizing its rigorous horizontal and vertical structures. In depicting the chestnut trees, he employed multiple viewpoints; this collapses depth, meshing the two parallel rows of trees into a web that seems to exist in one plane. This characteristic innovation produced a rhythmic synthesis of form in both two and three dimensions.
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<P>This painting represents an avenue on the grounds of Paul Cézanne's family estate in southern France in Aix-en-Provence. In the 1880s, Cézanne set an unusual challenge for himself. He wanted to portray his native landscape with all its specifics of weather, light, and atmosphere, but he also wished to reveal the immutable geometries of nature.</P><P>Here, Cézanne carefully recorded the color and light of the wintry scene, with its tracery of bare branches against the sky. To create an ordered pictorial design, he selected this particular view, emphasizing its rigorous horizontal and vertical structures. In depicting the chestnut trees, he employed multiple viewpoints; this collapses depth, meshing the two parallel rows of trees into a web that seems to exist in one plane. This characteristic innovation produced a rhythmic synthesis of form in both two and three dimensions.</P>
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