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Paul Gauguin

Paul Gauguin

By (author) Stephen Eisenman

£16.99

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  • A monograph dedicated to one of the central figures of early Impressionism, Paul Gauguin
  • Experts make links between Gauguin and later important names in twentieth century art, such as Picasso
Full Description

Paul Gauguin (1848-1903) was one of the most important artists of the late nineteenth century, and one whose work was to have a profound influence on the development of art in the twentieth century. He began as an Impressionist, contributing with major works to five of the eight Impressionist exhibitions between 1879 and 1886, but went on to develop a most richly-coloured style in his constant search for pristine originality and unadulterated nature.

Both David Sweetman and John Richardson, his main biographers, remark that Gauguin’s posthumous retrospective exhibition at the Salon d’Automne in Paris in 1903, and the even larger one in 1906, had a stunning and powerful influence on the French avant-garde, in particular on Pablo Picasso’s paintings. “He [Picasso] was always loath to admit Gauguin’s role in setting him on the road to primitivism”, Richardson claims.

This concise monograph collects the most important works by Gauguin, not only of his best known paintings of Tahiti in which the artist attempted to reconstruct the perfect life which he had failed to find in reality, but also of many powerful works that reflect the artist’s contact with other seminal early modern masters like Van Gogh or Cézanne.

Specifications
Publisher
Poligrafa
ISBN
9788434312494
Published
20th Feb 2017
Binding
Hardback
Size
280 mm x 200 mm
Pages
96 Pages
Illustrations
85 color, b&w
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