Where Do We come From? What Are We? Where Are We
Going?Buy it at Art.com
The
sumptuousness of the materials in the exhibition Gauguin Tahiti embodies the
richness of Paul Gauguins creativity and vision. Deceptively simple, the exhibition
is organized chronologically. Curators George Shackelford and Claire Frèches-Thory and
colleagues have laid out the gallery almost like the twelve stations of the Cross, with
representative, singular, and key oil paintings by Gauguin supplemented at each step with
cultural artifacts, such as indigenous wood carvings and tools, ethnographic photographs,
original letters and artist notebooks, ceramic pottery and myriad woodcut prints by
Gauguin. Everything in the show contributes to deepening the viewers understanding
and physical experience of Gauguins masterpiece (owned by the Museum of Fine Arts), Where
Do We come From? What Are We? Where Are We Going?
Near the start of the exhibition are two carved and painted linden wood
panels--Be in Love and You Will Be Happy (1889) and Be Mysterious (1890).
The panels mix art nouveau and Polynesian florid style. Eash presents a nude woman, one in
side profile, the other from behind. In the former the woman holds her arms raised, one
hand clasping the wrist of the other, as if warding off the threatening figures of death,
of anguish or sadness, tormented souls we recognize from Dante or Delacroix. In the latter
panel, the female figure appears to be swallowing her own fist and staring at a mirror
image of herself reflected back to her and the viewer, a cowled woman with her palm raised
in admonition, a shadowy presence of death. The shrouded figure of death appears
frequently in Gauguins works, most famously in The Spirit of the Dead (1894),
where it is the cloaked figure sitting next to the young Polynesian girl lying awake in
the middle of the night, the girl supine and in a state of great terror.
Gauguins figurative paintings--the nudes, the portraits, the
stylized pairings and clusters of Tahitiansoften draws upon the austere nobility of
indigenous New World art. The Woman with a Flower (1891), a portrait of the first
native Tahitian woman to pose for him, bears a terra cotta face, blunt, noble, chunky,
suggesting Peruvian pottery. Gauguin employs a primary color palette of bright yellow,
fiery red, and thick blue. He had already rehearsed his vision of savage
nobility in rustic studies of Brittany.
The jarring, deliberate mix of European and exotic is found in the
telling imaginary scene There Lays the Temple (1892). This is a simple secondary
color composition of yellow field with purple mountains and a medium blue sky in the
background. A vermilion and lavender jumble of bushes spill out of the foreground, which
is otherwise hedged in by a zigzag-patterned fence, ornamented with skull heads. Gauguin
reconstructed this sacred pasture from ruins he had seen, of a culture and belief system
which western missionaries had already purged from native collective memory by the time he
had arrived.
Art is an abstraction, Gauguin wrote, as you dream
amid nature, extrapolate art from it. Gauguin sought to re-enchant the world through
his art. In Matamoe(Death or Landscape with Peacocks) (1892) he creates
an exotic Garden of Eden, verdant shades of greenery rise layer upon layer from the
foreground up the sky, a fruit-bearing palm tree crowning the scene and a lush,
impenetrable forest growth surging in from the left. Earthy yellows and oranges break up
the verdure, like almost living lava flows. In the middle ground, a hippie-like vision of
a toiling native appears to be chopping twisting, serpentine-shaped tree limbs. Behind the
figure a nearby fire sends up a thick white cloud of smoke. Further up and back, two
figures (Gauguin typically placed women in stylized pairs) walk past a thatched native
hut. The image is oddly still, yet pregnant with invisible South Sea heat.
In the foreground a pair of peacocks walk past. The painting has also
been called Sleeping Eyes, possibly weaving a connection between the male
peacocks tail feathers and the symbolic presence of death. The image states many of
the contradictory and enigmatic tendencies in Gauguins art: the rich, complex color
palettes, the blending of savage (non-European native) and Christian symbolism
(jungle as garden of Eden) in visual rhythms, the pictorial idealization of
happinessnoble, self-unaware, sexually self-possessed natives. Gauguin identified
himself as a savage, neither at home in metropolitan Paris nor in the
relatively un-Europeanized native settlements, and he painted dreamscapes, seeking less to
find than to create a vision of earthly paradise in the French Pacific.
To classify Paul Gauguin merely as an artist, even as the
chief exponent of Symbolist art, transformer of the nude genre, master of the exotic
landscape, the creator of his visual summa Where Do We come From? What Are We/ Where
Are We Going? (1897-1898), or the champion of color, does not do him justice. Born
into a family of rebellious misfits, Gauguin was a man of profound internal conflict and
lived a highly contradictory life. His father, a leftist journalist, fled with his young
family to Peru after the failure of the Revolution of 1848. Gauguins mother,
suddenly widowed and with two young children, returned to France to a newly impoverished
existence. The artist Gauguin, burdened by childhood memories both serene and terrifying,
would spend a lifetime obsessively chasing, escaping and attempting to transcend the
visions it instilled within him.
Like a hippie precursor, Gauguin pursued women, drink, and artistic
creativity. In his self-portraits he poses taut-jawed, cocksure, and triumphant. A
Lebenskunstler of the first order, Gauguin clearly took his own advicebe mysterious
and be in love. The apparent inability--or unwillingnessto differentiate between
fantasy and reality both doomed his tragic bohemian experiment in living (he died poor,
alcoholic, and probably from complications of syphilis) and guided his re-enchantment of
the world through his art.