
Landscape by Henri Edmond Cross
Cross's landscape is built from thousands of deliberate mosaic-like strokes, each one a distinct unit of colour that, at a distance, resolves into shimmering Mediterranean light. The composition is both methodical and radiant — a southern scene where olive trees, water, and open sky become pure chromatic experience. His palette pushes beyond naturalism into something closer to sensation: cobalt, violet, warm amber, each hue placed to vibrate against its neighbour in a way that anticipates Fauvism's full arrival.
As a fine art print, Cross's intricate broken-colour technique is rendered with exceptional clarity — individual strokes remain distinct, colour relationships stay true, and the luminous quality of the original Neo-Impressionist surface is faithfully preserved.
Cross's landscape is built from thousands of deliberate mosaic-like strokes, each one a distinct unit of colour that, at a distance, resolves into shimmering Mediterranean light. The composition is both methodical and radiant — a southern scene where olive trees, water, and open sky become pure chromatic experience. His palette pushes beyond naturalism into something closer to sensation: cobalt, violet, warm amber, each hue placed to vibrate against its neighbour in a way that anticipates Fauvism's full arrival.
As a fine art print, Cross's intricate broken-colour technique is rendered with exceptional clarity — individual strokes remain distinct, colour relationships stay true, and the luminous quality of the original Neo-Impressionist surface is faithfully preserved.
Original: $20.93
-65%$20.93
$7.33Description
Cross's landscape is built from thousands of deliberate mosaic-like strokes, each one a distinct unit of colour that, at a distance, resolves into shimmering Mediterranean light. The composition is both methodical and radiant — a southern scene where olive trees, water, and open sky become pure chromatic experience. His palette pushes beyond naturalism into something closer to sensation: cobalt, violet, warm amber, each hue placed to vibrate against its neighbour in a way that anticipates Fauvism's full arrival.
As a fine art print, Cross's intricate broken-colour technique is rendered with exceptional clarity — individual strokes remain distinct, colour relationships stay true, and the luminous quality of the original Neo-Impressionist surface is faithfully preserved.























