
Pop Art and Street Art
See the artworks

Photography
See the artworks

Works on paper
See the artworks

Art objects
See the artworks
 Nathalie Laurie Suzie - Bathers
Nathalie Laurie Suzie - Bathers 	 Cycling on water - 20x30
Cycling on water - 20x30 	 City Hall
City Hall 	 Rachel Yvonne Ursula Noëlle - Bathers
Rachel Yvonne Ursula Noëlle - Bathers 	 Grindstone Surfer - 20x30
Grindstone Surfer - 20x30 	 Marttine Laurette Julie - Bathers
Marttine Laurette Julie - Bathers 	 The Zola Dam and Mont Sainte-Victoire
The Zola Dam and Mont Sainte-Victoire 	 Nathalie Laurie Suzie - Bathers
Nathalie Laurie Suzie - Bathers 	 Cycling on water - 20x30
Cycling on water - 20x30 	 City Hall
City Hall 	 Rachel Yvonne Ursula Noëlle - Bathers
Rachel Yvonne Ursula Noëlle - Bathers 	 Grindstone Surfer - 20x30
Grindstone Surfer - 20x30 	 Marttine Laurette Julie - Bathers
Marttine Laurette Julie - Bathers 	 The Zola Dam and Mont Sainte-Victoire
The Zola Dam and Mont Sainte-Victoire 	“Sainte-Victoire Autumn”, on the threshold of winter.
“Sainte-Victoire Autumn” is a painting from the Sainte-Victoire series by the contemporary artist Clotilde Philipon. In this series of paintings, the artist pays tribute to Paul Cézanne and his stone muse.
The artist’s figurative compositions often incorporate a rigorous geometric dimension. Four zones can be distinguished, isolated from each other by lines that delimit the different parts of the landscape. In the foreground, a large triangle responds in shape and colour to the mountain in the background. In the middle two other triangles, separated by an oblique line, show the vegetation on one side and the houses on the other. The colours are autumnal. The warm tones of the vines contrast with the white sky which announces the first cold spells of winter.
“Sainte-Victoire Autumn” is a small painting with harmonious colours and composition, a look at nature in Provence at rest.
Discover the artist"Calanque with orange sky", panoramic window for an immobile journey.
"The south face of Mount Sainte Victoire", between figuration and abstraction.



