Gauguin and Polynesia

Hardback Published on: 01/02/2024
Price: €56.00
Online orders are coming soon, please use Click & Collect or visit us in shop today.
Make and edit your lists in your account
Low stock in Dublin - Hodges Figgis
Collect today: Pay in shop
Low stock in Dublin - Hodges Figgis
Collect today: Pay in shop

Synopsis

Paul Gauguin is commonly regarded as one of the greatest modern artists. He is renowned for resplendent, mythic imagery from Oceania, for a life of restless travel and for his supposed immersion in Polynesian life. But he has long been regarded ambivalently, and in recent years both Gauguin's sexual behaviour, and his paintings, have been considered exploitative.

Gauguin and Polynesia offers a fresh view on the artist, not from the perspective of European art history, but from the contemporary vantage point of the region – Oceania – which he so famously moved to. Gauguin's art is revealed, for the first time, to be richer and more eclectic than has been recognised. The artist indeed did invent enigmatic and symbolic images, but he also depicted Polynesia's colonial modernity, acknowledging the life of the time and the dignity and power of some of the Islanders he encountered.

Gauguin and Polynesia neither celebrates nor condemns an extraordinary painter, who at times denounced and at other times affirmed the French empire that shaped his own life and the places he moved between. It is a revelation, of a formative artist of modern life, and of multicultural worlds in the making.

Publisher information

  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • ISBN: 9781801105231
  • Number of pages: 464
  • Dimensions: 238 x 164 x 38 mm
  • Weight: 1120g
  • Languages: English