The Promenade (Landscape with Cypresses), La Promenade (Paysage aux cyprès), Henri-Edmond Cross, 189
The Promenade (Landscape with Cypresses), La Promenade (Paysage aux cyprès), Henri-Edmond Cross, 1897, Cleveland Museum of Art: PrintsIn 1891, Cross adopted a Neo-Impressionist technique and began painting in a pointillist manner influenced by Georges Seurat and Paul Signac. In that same year, Cross left Paris and moved to the south of France, settling in Saint-Clair, a small hamlet near Saint-Tropez. There he concentrated on seascapes and scenes of peasants in harmony with the landscape. The sensuous silhouettes of the cypresses and the swaying circle of figures by the water’s edge exemplify Cross’s decorative treatment of the landscape, also recalling the Japanese color woodcuts and Art Nouveau designs that inspired other Neo-Impressionists at the time.Medium: color lithograph on chine colléhttps://clevelandart.org/art/1952.209 -- source link
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