In a quiet corner on Lauves Hill lies a place where time seems to have stood still in the early 20th century. Cézanne's Studio is not just a museum, but a genuine creative laboratory of the famous painter Paul Cézanne, located in the charming city of Aix-en-Provence, France. It was here that the master spent the last years of his life, creating masterpieces that would later transform the world of art.

The main feature of this place is its striking authenticity. Inside the workshop, the "creative clutter" that once surrounded the artist is still preserved: his easels, brushes, tubes of paint, Provencal ceramics, and even personal items like his hat and work smock. The sunlight streaming through the tall windows creates the very atmosphere that Cézanne sought to capture in his still lifes and landscapes.
A visit to the studio offers a behind-the-scenes look at the creative process of the great Post-Impressionist. The windows offer a panoramic view of the garden and the surrounding countryside, which served as an endless source of inspiration for the master's final works, becoming the foundation for the development of modern art.