Landscape With Stars
Technique: Giclée quality print
Recommended by our customers
More about this artwork
This painting, titled "Landscape with Stars" by Henri Edmond Cross, is a remarkable example of the Pointillist style, a technique that is characterized by the application of small, distinct dots of color that are meant to blend together visually when seen from a distance.In this work, the sky is depicted with a myriad of tiny blue and yellow dots, creating a vibrant and dynamic mosaic that suggests a star-studded night sky. The yellow dots stand out brightly against the blue, resembling stars in the darkness of the night. This use of contrasting colors enhances the luminosity and depth of the sky, bringing it to vivid life.Below this starry spectacle, there is a dark, silhouetted landscape. A row of trees stretches across the painting, their forms simplified and stylized into dark shapes. These trees create a horizon line that grounds the composition and contrasts starkly with the lightness and complexity of the sky above. Beneath the trees, the land seems to be reflected in water, suggested by a smoother, darker area that mirrors the darkness of the trees and adds a sense of calm and stillness to the scene.Cross's painting captures a sense of the vastness and beauty of the night sky, contrasting it with the dark, quiet earth below. His use of pointillism not only defines the technique but also evokes a mood and atmosphere that resonate deeply with the observer, inviting them to contemplate the natural world in its varied forms.
Delivery
Returns
Henri-Edmond Cross (1856-1910) was a French artist known for his Pointillism paintings of landscapes and still life. He co-founded Société des Artistes Indépendants in Paris, where he met and was inspired by the Neo-impressionist painter Seurat. Due to rheumatism, Cross moved to the south of France, where Signac was also based. Together they abandoned the tiny colored dots of Pointillism for orderly brushstrokes in the style of mosaic. This was second generation Neo-Impressionism, and laid a path for Fauvism.