Road Leading To The Lake by Paul Cézanne - c. 1888 - 92 x 75 cm Kröller-Müller Museum Road Leading To The Lake by Paul Cézanne - c. 1888 - 92 x 75 cm Kröller-Müller Museum

Road Leading To The Lake

oil on canvas • 92 x 75 cm
  • Paul Cézanne - January 19, 1839 - October 22, 1906 Paul Cézanne c. 1888

Today we present another art piece from the magnificent collection of Kröller-Müller Museum in Otterlo, Netherlands. Please enjoy!

At first glance, this looks like a classical landscape, with a winding dirt road that leads through the tall trees, past a field with corn sheaves to a lake. However, a closer inspection reveals that the painting is composed of horizontal and vertical elements and surfaces. This largely counteracts the traditional perspective, with lines leading into the distance and colours gradually fading. The depth effect of the road is interrupted by the horizontal lines of the low bushes, the edge of the water and the hills behind. The buildings stand like flat boxes in the landscape. All of this focuses attention on the ‘construction’ of the painting: the forms and surfaces, each with its own colour applied in forceful, parallel brushstrokes. With this working method, Cézanne becomes a major influence in modern painting and sets out in a direction that would ultimately lead to abstraction. His ‘constructive brushstrokes’ and use of colour make a deep impression on younger painters, such as Maurice Denis, Paul Gauguin and Paul Signac, who will follow his example.