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Notes
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Around 200 of Cézanne’s works depict male and female nude bathers, either singly or in groups, in a landscape. This large painting is one of three pictures of female bathers that Cézanne worked on during the final decade of his life. They represent the culmination of his lifelong investigation of this subject and the climax of his entire career, and were hugely influential on early twentieth-century art. The subject of women relaxing in a woodland glade beneath an azure sky draws on a classical tradition of pastoral scenes of nude or semi-nude figures in an idealised landscape. More particularly, it recalls pictures of bathing nymphs and goddesses, especially the mythological scenes of Venetian Renaissance art. However, Cézanne’s painting has no clear narrative or literary source.
Title
Bathers (Les Grandes Baigneuses)
Date
about 1894-1905
Medium
Oil on canvas
Measurements
H 127.2 x W 196.1 cm
Accession number
NG6359
Acquisition method
Purchased with a special grant and the aid of the Max Rayne Foundation, 1964
Work type
Painting