Paul Gauguin (1848-1903)
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VA… 顯示更多 PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE FRENCH COLLECTION
Paul Gauguin (1848-1903)

Etude de végétation

細節
Paul Gauguin (1848-1903)
Etude de végétation
with an inscription by Pola Gauguin (the artist's son) dated 'sept. 1945' (on the reverse reverse of the frame).
watercolour and charcoal on paper
9 7/8 x 14 in. (24.7 x 35.5 cm.)
Executed in the 1880s
來源
Mitti Gauguin.
Martinius Nilssen, a gift from the above.
Ulla Nilsson, Lorenhagen.
Charles Nilsson, Stockholm, by 1954.
Acquired by the grandmother of the present owner, and thence by descent.
展覽
Stockholm, Liljevalchs Konsthall, Frøan Cézanne till Picasso, September 1954, no. 143.
注意事項
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 15% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

拍品專文

This work will be included in the forthcoming Paul Gauguin catalogue raisonné being prepared by the Wildenstein Institute.

Executed during the 1880s, Etude de végétation is a lush landscape that perfectly demonstrates Gauguin's intense love of nature as well as reflecting the importance of two of his fellow artists on his development: Pissarro and Cézanne. It was almost certainly through his guardian, Gustave Arosa, himself a great patron of the artists of his day, that Gauguin had met Pissarro, and for several years he painted in his company, both in studios and in the open landscape. This led to a fascination and great support on the part of Gauguin for the Impressionists; this enthusiasm was reflected both in his collecting works by the artists of the movement, especially Cézanne, and in his adoption of more and more of their techniques.

In Etude de végétation, the attention paid to the varied vegetation appears to speak of the influence of Pissarro, yet the structured manner in which he has eked out a highly three-dimensional landscape with his angled brushstrokes speaks of the influence of Cézanne, one of the great masters of the watercolour medium. This is especially evident in the foreground, where the various surfaces and angles of the ground, especially around the stream that flows through the dip, have been rendered through a strategic construction of strokes that hint at the planar.

It was in part Gauguin's love of nature, his desire to rediscover and return to a simple, honest, even 'savage' in his own words, state that led him to seek out places far from the ravages of the industrial revolution. This would lead to his famous years in Pont-Aven, in Brittany, as well as to his later more exotic travels to Martinique, Tahiti and the Marquesas. It is his love of nature also that has resulted in the rich texture especially evident in the sumptuous foliage that is clumped together to the left. Regardless of whether he was in France or in more exotic climes, Gauguin's love of and immersion in nature was of primary importance-- he explained that 'Wherever I go I need a certain period of incubation, so that I may learn every time the essence of the plants and trees, of all nature, in short, which never wishes to be understood or yield herself' (P. Gauguin, Paul Gauguin's Intimate Journals, trans. Van Wyck Books, New York, 1936, p. 31).