This artist can be compared with the Japanese painters, who could all his life from time to time draw one of the most famous mountains of the world - Fujiyama. In Japan, quite a few artists and photographers, who all their lives gave to display this sacred for the Japanese mountains. They draw it, and it is never the same. There is even an artist who has written a mountain all his life only from one point and for all this time there is not a single repetitive picture.
So it's the same with Cezanne. The thing is that Paul Cezanne was born in these places, in the city of Essex, and so learning to hold a brush in his hands, he sketched the only landmark of the town - Mount St. Victoria. And I did it all my conscious life. Therefore, among his works, one can often see an image of the same terrain and the same mountain, from different points and heights. But, the truth, he did it practically in different styles. This allowed him to do his masterful possession of a brush and pencils. In this canvas the mountain is depicted in the beginning of autumn, just a lot of golden yellow around, and this is most likely autumn.
Let's pay attention to how he portrays the mountain: soft smooth lines. There are no abrupt transitions, but everything is somehow smooth and elegant. Rough houses look, they are somehow solidly rectangular unduly stressed.
The author also gives us to understand that the action is, most likely, before sunset, because the shadows from the trees and from the houses, and therefore a completely different illumination of the mountain. But at the same time everything in soft golden-green colors and therefore nothing disturbing - one positive feeling - peace. And such a calm that pacifies, which inspires positive thinking. On the canvas there is still no special autumn melancholy, which means that Cezanne then thought about something good. After all, they say, the artist writes only what he thinks about.
![IMG_8541-21-04-18-02-11.JPG](https://steemitimages.com/DQmQMV3wj3XhPFW8hjpmJWLHKtAU6VrmuxRBeWNwo8Dz9CQ/IMG_8541-21-04-18-02-11.JPG)