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At the Water's Edge

Paul Cézannec. 1890

National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

National Gallery of Art, Washington DC
Washington, DC, United States

<p>Cézanne’s work, especially landscape paintings, increasingly verged on abstraction in the artist’s last two decades. In this study of light and reflection, structures on the bank and on the river are simplified into geometric shapes that contrast with the organic lushness surrounding them. The composition threatens to dissolve into patches of color, and pictorial space is flattened. Only near the end of his life did Cézanne’s critical reception, once so derisive, become more open to this aesthetic, which also had an enormous impact on successive generations of painters.


The painting also suggests Cézanne’s working method. The concentration of color in the central motif of the blue house, in the boat with a blue cabin, and in the green houseboat next to it indicate that the artist started in the middle of the composition and moved outward. Landscape and architectural elements are formed more solidly than their reflections in the river, which are composed of paint thinly applied with fluid brushstrokes, almost as though in watercolor. Extremely loose brushwork, seemingly random touches of color—such as a curious red daub found above the roof of the large house—and unpainted areas of canvas convey the impression that Cézanne may still have been considering the next stroke of _At the Water’s Edge_ when he set it aside.

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  • Title: At the Water's Edge
  • Creator: Paul Cézanne
  • Date Created: c. 1890
  • Physical Dimensions: overall: 73 x 92.5 cm (28 3/4 x 36 7/16 in.) framed: 102.9 x 121.9 x 11.4 cm (40 1/2 x 48 x 4 1/2 in.)
  • Provenance: Probably purchased through (Ambroise Vollard [1867-1939], Paris) by Egisto Fabbri [1866-1933], Florence; acquired through (Paul Rosenberg, Paris) February 1938 by Marie N. Harriman [1903-1970] and W. Averell Harriman [1891-1986], New York [Marie Harriman Gallery]; W. Averell Harriman Foundation; gift 1972 to NGA.[1] [1] According to Harriman collection records in NGA curatorial files.
  • Medium: oil on canvas
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

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