Gauguin and the origins of symbolism
Book

Gauguin and the origins of symbolism

2004
ExhibitionsFrench ArtInfluenceSymbolism (Art movement)Exhibition catalogues and specific collectionsIndividual artistsPainting & paintingsPost-ImpressionismHistory - GeneralArt & Art InstructionArtArt / History / General

"From the mid-1880s until his departure for Tahiti in 1891, Gauguin moved beyond Impressionism to become the leading figure of the Symbolist movement in painting. This departure from Impressionism led him to question the entire 'naturalist' tradition of European art from the Renaissance onwards. He sacrificed all of painting's descriptive devices in favour of line and flat colour. His path towards Symbolism can also be characterised as a 'primitive' quest, developed both in iconography and style. On the iconographic level, this tendency starts from the use of a number of pastoral themes representing scenes of rural life. This spiritual return was accompanied by a stylistic regression, a leap from naturalism towards archaic modes of representation. The volume follows this process through a series of encounters between Gauguin and his masters, his contemporaries and his pupils."--Jacket.

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