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The artist has lately been derided as a colonizer and a pedophile, the creep of the Post-Impressionists. A new book ...
For much of his life, Paul Gauguin railed against the deadening effects of bourgeois domesticity. But as Sue Prideaux writes ...
Paul Gauguin's "Young Christian Girl (Bretonne en Priere) 1894, exemplifies the artist's love of yellow, a color he equated with modernity. (Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute) ...
For advance tickets to ”The Art of Paul Gauguin,” call Teletron at 853-3636. A limited number of same-day tickets may be available at the Art Institute. ———- ...
On an 18 1/2-inch ceramic sculpture of a faun in its collection since 1997, the Art Institute of Chicago had hung many theories about the artist Paul Gauguin (1848-1903) and his life in Paris in ...
Photos courtesy: Yale University Art GalleryPaul Gauguin's "Auti te pape (Women at the River)," from 1894, is a woodcut printed in orange and black over yellow, pink, orange, blue and green on ...
Paul Gauguin, "Femmes de Tahiti (Tahitian Women)," 1891, oil on canvas, Musée d’Orsay, Paris. On view at the Museum of Arts, Houston's "Gauguin in the World" exhibit. TMN-Grand Palais/Art Resource ...
Aside from what we learn through his own paintings and writings, little is known about Paul Gauguin’s time in Tahiti, clouding the artist’s exploits in the South Pacific in a self-eulogized ...
Gauguin’s infamous self-image as an exotic, unrepentant savage has been debunked, but what has not received its due is the breadth of the artist’s creative process—the radical experiments ...