Гоген Поль - Варварские поэмы 1896

Paul Gauguin - The child 1895 Paul Gauguin - A Canoe. Tahitian Family. Te vaa 1896 Paul Gauguin - Baby. Nativity of Tahitian Christ 1896 Paul Gauguin - Barbarian poems 1896 Paul Gauguin - Eiaha Ohipa or Tahitians in a Room 1896 Paul Gauguin - Nativity 1896 Paul Gauguin - Perfect days 1896
Гоген Поль - Варварские поэмы 1896

Варварские поэмы 1896
63x47см холст/масло
Fogg Art Museum, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
The image is only being used for informational and educational purposes

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From Fogg Art Museum, Cambridge:
Gauguin painted this enigmatic composition of an animal god and angel during his second trip to French Polynesia. He borrowed the title from a collection of poems by Charles Leconte de Lisle, whose Poèmes Barbares (Barbaric Poems), 1862, is full of creatures inspired by the author’s imagination of Tahiti. Gauguin’s knowledge of local customs and beliefs was more extensive and informed than the poet’s, though his composition displays a similar fusion of different mythologies. The animal has been identified as Ta’aroa, the Tahitian deity who is the creator of the universe, but the winged, female figure who gestures and looks away combines elements of both Christian and Buddhist traditions.