Currently not on view
Cistern in the Park of Château Noir
More Context
Special Exhibition
<p>Between 1899 and 1902, Cézanne rented a storage room at the Château Noir estate, on the road from his native Aix-en-Provence to the nearby village of Le Tholonet, and often painted on the grounds. The neo-Gothic buildings of this peculiar country manor were unfinished, giving it the appearance of a ruin. The original owner, who manufactured lampblack (a type of pigment made from soot), had - according to rumor - painted the entire mansion black and practiced black magic, or sorcery, there, supplying the name "The Black Castle."</p> <p>The modern stone cistern at Château Noir seen at the left of this painting contrasts with the ancient boulder at the center; the rock's distinctive shape suggests the flint artifacts unearthed in the region. Local mythology also had it that the surrounding archaeological attractions and strange geological formations housed magical forces. </p> <p>The characteristic pine trees of Provence provided shade from the Mediterranean sun in this cool site in the deforested region, where only evergreens would grow.</p>
Information
ca. 1900
Jos Hessel (1859–1942), Paris, by 1914; [sold to Paul Cassirer, 31 Mar. 1914]; sold to Rudolph W. Vollmoeller, Vaihingen-Stuttgart, 18 May 1916; by descent to Hans R. Vollmoeller, Uster, Switzerland, by 1950; sold to Mr. Richard H. Zinser, Forest Hills, NY, Oct. 1950; sold to Henry Pearlman, 1 July 1952; Henry and Rose Pearlman Foundation, after 1974.
Cistern in the Grounds of Château Noir
Lionello Venturi, <em>Cézanne: son art, son oeuvre,</em> (Paris: Rosenberg éditeur, 1936)., No. 780 (illus.)
269 1936<em>A loan exhibition of paintings, watercolors and sculpture from the Collection of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Pearlman:for the benefit of Greenwich House</em>, (New York: M. Knoedler & Co., 1959)., Cat. 3 (illus.)
399 1959<em>The Henry Pearlman Collection, </em>(New York: Brooklyn Museum of Art, 1964)., No. 16
404 1964<em>Cézanne and his contemporaries: The Mr. and Mrs. Henry Pearlman Collection</em>, (Detroit, MI: Detroit Institute of Art, 1967)., Cat. 3
401 1967<em>Impressionism, Post-impressionism, Expressionism: The Mr. & Mrs. Henry Pearlman Collection of Works by Cézanne, Van Gogh, Degas, Toulouse-Lautrec, Manet, Modigliani, Soutine, and Others </em>(Hartford, CT: Wadsworth Atheneum, 1970)., Cat. 3
402 1970Linda Ferber and Leonore Sundberg<em>, An exhibition of paintings, watercolors, sculpture and drawings from the Collection of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Pearlman and Henry and Rose Pearlman Foundation</em>, (New York: Brooklyn Museum of Art, 1974)., Cat. 4 (illus.)
988 1974Richard Kendall, <em>Cézanne by Himself,</em> (Boston: Little, Brown, 1988)., 271 (Illus.)
1618 1988Rachael Z. DeLue et al., <em>Cézanne and the Modern: masterworks of European art from the Pearlman Collection,</em> (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Art Museum; New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2014)., Cat. 12, fig. 87
1696 2014