Antibes
Technique: Giclée quality print
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This painting by Henri Edmond Cross, titled "Antibes," captures a vivid and bright scene using a Pointillist style, characterized by small, distinct dots of color applied in patterns to form an image. What is shown is a coastal landscape, presumably depicting a view of the Mediterranean town of Antibes.The foreground is filled with a wild and lush garden, marked by a profusion of green tones interspersed with patches of blue, yellow, and warmer hues, suggesting flowers and leafy shrubs. The middle ground features slender, tall trees—potentially cypresses—standing erect and contrasting sharply with the softer shapes of the surrounding flora.Further behind, the composition opens to a brilliant seascape, where lighter blues represent calm waters that mirror the sky. On the horizon, there's a hint of land or a cityscape indicated by more structured, block-like shapes in muted red and orange, perhaps buildings of the town itself under a sky painted in gentle strokes of blues, yellows, and whites.Overall, the painting has a vibrant yet tranquil feel, utilizing a rich tapestry of colors and light to evoke the beauty of the Mediterranean coast. Cross’s technique gives the scene an almost mosaic-like texture, inviting the viewer to absorb the details gradually and enjoy the overall atmosphere of serenity and natural beauty.
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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.