● On view now — Gallery 248
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
In the course of making an artwork, Paul Cezanne often significantly altered his original design. Someone, perhaps the artist, cut this canvas from a larger painting, retaining remnants of the other composition. In the lower-left corner, a series of blue lines can be read as the legs of a seated figure from knees to ankles; the body may have continued on an adjacent part of the canvas. These lines sit on top of the background foliage, indicating that Cezanne added this second figure after completing the first, presumably before changing his mind about the direction of the painting or moving on to another work.
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The Village of L'Estaque Seen from the Sea (Le village de l'
River Bend (Coin de rivière)
Auvers, Panoramic View
Two and a Half Apples (Deux pommes et demie)
The Bellevue Plain / The Red Earth (La plaine de Bellevue /
Madame Cézanne (Hortense Fiquet, 1850–1922) in the Conservat
The Fishermen (Fantastic Scene)
Autumn Landscape (Paysage d'automne)
Hilaire Germain Edgar Degas — The Morning Bath
Paul Cézanne — Group of Bathers (Groupe de baigneurs)
Edgar Degas — Woman Drying Her Arm
Pierre-Auguste Renoir — Standing Bather (Baigneuse debout)
Pierre-Auguste Renoir — Bather (Baigneuse)
Paul Cézanne — Bathers
Paul Cézanne — Bathers (recto); Landscape (verso)
Paul Cezanne (French, 1839–1906) — The Bathers
Auguste Renoir — Young Girl Bathing
Paul Cézanne — The Toilette (La Toilette)
Paul Cézanne — Bathers (Baigneurs)
Hilaire Germain Edgar Degas — Woman at Her Toilette