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Gauguin, Paul. (1848 - 1903). Mahana Atua [The Day of God]. Woodcut, 1894-5, on Chine volant, a proof apart from the signed and numbered edition of 100 published by the artist's son, Pola Gauguin in Copenhagen in 1921. Monogram "PGO" in plate lower left, title "Mahana Atua" lower right. Image size 7 1/8" x 8", sight 7 3/4" x 8 3/4", frame 15 1/2" x 16 1/2". In very good condition, not examined out of the frame. Mongan/Kornfeld/Joachim 31.


Paul Gauguin began to paint in his late 20s. A restless man, he traveled and worked in the French regions of Brittany and Provence as well as South and Central Americas. In 1891, he moved to the French colony of Tahiti in search of "ecstasy, calm, and art." He spent all but two of the remaining years of his life in the South Seas. When he returned to France in 1893, he spent most of his time in Paris promoting his work and writing and illustrating Noa Noa, a fictionalized account of his Tahitian experience.


Set in a Tahitian landscape by the sea, the composition is divided into three horizontal bands. At the top, islanders perform a ritual near a towering sculpture. Like many figures in Gauguin’s Tahitian images, the monumental sculpture was derived not from local religion but from photographs of carved reliefs adorning the Buddhist temple complex at Borobudur (Java). In the middle band, three symmetrically arranged figures are placed against a field of pink earth in poses that may signify birth, life, and death. The woman in the center, formally linked to the sculpture at the top, is similar in appearance to other depictions of Tahitian females who Gauguin used to suggest the Christian figure of Eve in paradise. The lower portion of the composition evokes contrasting hues reflected in the water. Gauguin’s Post-Impressionist style, defined by a decreasing tendency to depict real objects and the expressive use of flat, curving shapes, influenced many abstract painters of the early 20th century.

Gauguin, Paul. (1848 - 1903) Mahana Atua [The Day of God]

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Gauguin, Paul. (1848 - 1903). Mahana Atua [The Day of God]. Woodcut, 1894-5, on Chine volant, a proof apart from the signed and numbered edition of 100 published by the artist's son, Pola Gauguin in Copenhagen in 1921. Monogram "PGO" in plate lower left, title "Mahana Atua" lower right. Image size 7 1/8" x 8", sight 7 3/4" x 8 3/4", frame 15 1/2" x 16 1/2". In very good condition, not examined out of the frame. Mongan/Kornfeld/Joachim 31.


Paul Gauguin began to paint in his late 20s. A restless man, he traveled and worked in the French regions of Brittany and Provence as well as South and Central Americas. In 1891, he moved to the French colony of Tahiti in search of "ecstasy, calm, and art." He spent all but two of the remaining years of his life in the South Seas. When he returned to France in 1893, he spent most of his time in Paris promoting his work and writing and illustrating Noa Noa, a fictionalized account of his Tahitian experience.


Set in a Tahitian landscape by the sea, the composition is divided into three horizontal bands. At the top, islanders perform a ritual near a towering sculpture. Like many figures in Gauguin’s Tahitian images, the monumental sculpture was derived not from local religion but from photographs of carved reliefs adorning the Buddhist temple complex at Borobudur (Java). In the middle band, three symmetrically arranged figures are placed against a field of pink earth in poses that may signify birth, life, and death. The woman in the center, formally linked to the sculpture at the top, is similar in appearance to other depictions of Tahitian females who Gauguin used to suggest the Christian figure of Eve in paradise. The lower portion of the composition evokes contrasting hues reflected in the water. Gauguin’s Post-Impressionist style, defined by a decreasing tendency to depict real objects and the expressive use of flat, curving shapes, influenced many abstract painters of the early 20th century.