Tahitian Landscape - Paul Gauguin

Tahitian Landscape - Paul Gauguin
Gift of Edward McCormick Blair
"Tahitian Landscape" by Paul Gauguin (1894) Watercolor monotype from a glass matrix, with touches of gouache on cream wove paper laid down on ivory Japanese paper.

Commentary

Commentary

"Tahitian Landscape" by Paul Gauguin (1894) invites a close look at how form and feeling work together. Its painted surface guides your eye through color, brushwork, and contrast rather than through narrative alone. Themes to notice include watercolor. This piece is held in the source collection's Prints and Drawings collection. Paul Gauguin is the artist behind this work. A useful anchor for reading the piece: Paul Gauguin French, 1848-1903. The work is cataloged within a France cultural context. How to look at this work: It is cataloged as watercolor, which gives a clue to how the museum frames the object. Its medium (Watercolor monotype from a glass matrix, with touches of gouache on cream wove paper laid down on ivory Japanese paper) affects texture, durability, and how detail reads at different distances. Its listed dimensions (Primary/secondary support: 21.7 × 24.7 cm (8 9/16 × 9 3/4 in.)) suggest how intimate or monumental it may feel in person. Subject cues from the catalog include watercolor. Compare this reading with the museum record at the source collection: https://www.artic.edu/artworks/159083