
Paul Gauguin
1848–1903 · France · Post-impressionism
The story
Until he was in his mid-thirties, Paul Gauguin was a Paris stockbroker with a good salary, a Danish wife, and five children. He collected Impressionist paintings as a rich man's hobby and dabbled at making his own. Then in 1882 the Paris stock exchange crashed, the firm he worked for came apart, and the comfortable life went with it. Gauguin decided the disaster was permission: he would paint full time. His family, appalled, eventually left him.
He drifted to Pont-Aven, a cheap artists' village in Brittany, and there worked out the style that made him. In 1888 he painted a group of Breton women in white bonnets seeing a vision after church, Jacob wrestling an angel on a flat field of pure red. There was no attempt at real space or natural colour; the picture was built from bold outlines and blocks of flat tone, an idea rather than a scene. This way of painting from imagination and symbol, which he called Synthetism, fed straight into modern art.
That autumn Vincent van Gogh coaxed him south to Arles to share a house and start an artists' colony. It lasted nine weeks. The two men painted furiously and argued worse, and just before Christmas 1888 the quarrel ended with van Gogh cutting off part of his own ear and Gauguin fleeing back to Paris. Gauguin wanted somewhere further from Europe altogether, and in 1891 he sailed to Tahiti, a French colony in the Pacific, looking for a paradise he had half-invented in his own head. He found a Papeete already colonised and Catholic, painted some of the most famous canvases of his life there anyway, and died poor on the remoter Marquesas Islands in 1903.
Works
99 works
The Bunch of FlowersPaul Gauguin, 1891
The Moon and the EarthPaul Gauguin, 1893
The WavePaul Gauguin, 1888
Vairumati tei oaPaul Gauguin, 1892
We Shall Not Go to the Market TodayPaul Gauguin, 1892
Woman of the MangoPaul Gauguin, 1892
Barbarian TalesPaul Gauguin, 1902
Breton Village under the SnowPaul Gauguin, 1894
Fatata Te Moua (At the Foot of a Mountain)Paul Gauguin, 1892
Parau na te Varua ino (Words of the Devil)Paul Gauguin, 1892
Self-portrait (Near Golgotha)Paul Gauguin, 1896
Still life with parrotsPaul Gauguin, 1902
Tahitian Woman and BoyPaul Gauguin, 1899
The Great BuddhaPaul Gauguin, 1899
The White HorsePaul Gauguin, 1898
AlonePaul Gauguin, 1893
Annah the Javanese, or The Child-woman Judith Is Not Yet BreachedPaul Gauguin, 1894
Delightful Land (Te Nave Nave Fenua)Paul Gauguin, 1892
Four Breton WomenPaul Gauguin, 1886
Fruit on a Table with a Small DogPaul Gauguin, 1889
Martinique LandscapePaul Gauguin, 1887
Mata MuaPaul Gauguin, 1892
Pastorales tahitiennesPaul Gauguin, 1892
Piti TeinaPaul Gauguin, 1892
Portrait of Madeleine BernardPaul Gauguin, 1888