Art requires philosophy, just
as philosophy requires art.
Otherwise, what would become of beauty?
Paul Gauguin
If the famous French artist Paul Gauguin were alive
today he would most likely be in jail. In his 40’s and 50’s whilst living in
Tahiti, Gauguin had a series of mistresses who were barely in their teens when
they first started cohabiting together. Even for the two years when he was in
Paris, between his two sojourns to the South Seas, his mistress was a teenager.
They were also his models with his painting Annah the Javanese, see below, being his Parisian
mistress.
Known as one of history’s most sensual and spiritual of painters, not
only for his choice of subject but also his adventurous use of color, Gauguin’s
life was as tumultuous as paintings. A sailor in his early twenties, a highly
successful stock broker during his late twenties and thirties Gauguin became a
fulltime painter at the age of 39. The Paris stock market crash of 1882 saw him
turn his back on a comfortable middle class existence and embrace the precarious
life of an artist.
It was not until the last three years of his life that Gauguin could live
from his art. Prior to that, his life was a rollercoaster ride between financial
stability and poverty. Gauguin funded his first South Seas sojourn from a
successful auction of his work only to return to Paris two years later penniless.
A second auction of his works in 1895, although not as successful as the first,
provided sufficient funds to facilitate his return to Polynesia where he lived for the rest of his life.
Gauguin’s temperament was robust
to say the least, from breaking his ankle in a drunken brawl at the age of 46
to picking fights with the government and the Catholic Church over their
treatment of Polynesians, Gauguin lived the myth of the artist as a free
spirit.
And all the while he was creating
a body of work that influenced not only Vincent van Gogh, Henri Matisse and Pablo Picasso, but also had a profound effect the
20th Century’s Fauvism and Cubism art
movements and is still influencing artists today.
Universally recognized as one of the world’s great artist’s,
Gauguin was also something of a legend in his own lifetime. As his friend and
collector, the painter George-Daniel de Monfreid, wrote to Gauguin in the year before his death,
“At present you are a
unique and legendary artist, sending to us from the remote South Seas
disconcerting and inimitable works which are the definitive creations of a
great man who, in a way, has already gone from this world.... You are already
as unassailable as all the great dead; you already belong to the history of art.”
Switzerland’s Fondation Beyeler has an
exhibition of his work simply titled Paul
Gauguin on show until the 28th of June.
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