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elleng

(130,980 posts)
Mon Oct 8, 2018, 11:31 PM Oct 2018

Illuminating Gauguin's 'Decisive Experience' in Martinique

AMSTERDAM — In the spring of 1887, the painter Paul Gauguin wrote a letter to his wife, Mette-Sophie, who was living in Denmark with four of their children, to ask her to come pick up their fifth child, Clovis, from Paris, because Gauguin wanted to leave the stifling city and find a “free and fertile” island.

“I will take my paint and my brushes,” he wrote, and “live like a native.”

In April of that year, he and his friend and fellow painter Charles Laval left Paris to go to Panama, but found it inhospitable, then detoured to the Caribbean island of Martinique, a French colony at the time. They spent the next four months together living in a hut on a sugar plantation there, near the Bay of St.-Pierre, painting images of the tropical landscape; mango, papaya and palm trees; and the local women.

That brief period of Gauguin’s career has mostly been forgotten, in part because that first tropical sojourn has been overshadowed by the decade that Gauguin spent on the French Polynesian island of Tahiti, where he created some of his most famous paintings.

But a new exhibition at the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, “Gauguin & Laval in Martinique,” which opened on Friday and runs through Jan. 13, seeks to illuminate that short but transformative moment by bringing together most of the works the two painters created during that time.'>>>

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/08/arts/gauguin-martinique-van-gogh-museum.html?

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Illuminating Gauguin's 'Decisive Experience' in Martinique (Original Post) elleng Oct 2018 OP
Wonderful exhibit, tx for posting. I'd love to see it. Gauguin's appalachiablue Oct 2018 #1

appalachiablue

(41,147 posts)
1. Wonderful exhibit, tx for posting. I'd love to see it. Gauguin's
Tue Oct 9, 2018, 12:44 AM
Oct 2018

paintings from Martinique are stunning and have been historically overlooked for the works he did in France and Tahiti.

Martinique is a beautiful island alive with with natural beauty, vibrant culture and French creole flair. The cuisine, architecture and beaches are the best. In 1902, St. Pierre, the old port town, once known as the 'Paris of the Caribbean' was struck by the volcano Mt. Pele killing 30,000 people. During WWII the French island was controlled by the Vichy govt. and the 1944 movie, 'To Have and Have Not' with Bogie & Bacall was set there.



Martinique view, St. Pierre Bay, Gauguin, 1887.

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