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  1. Paul Gauguin was a French Post-Impressionist artist, whose work deeply influenced the French avant-garde and modern artists, such as Pablo Picasso and Henri Matisse. As a descendant of the Peruvian nobility, he spent his early childhood in Lima, Peru.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Paul_GauguinPaul Gauguin - Wikipedia

    For a comprehensive list of paintings by Gauguin, see List of paintings by Paul Gauguin. Still-Life with Fruit and Lemons (c. 1880) The Swineherd, Brittany (1888)

  3. Paul Gauguin Paintings, Bio, Ideas | TheArtStory. French Draftsman, Painter, Printmaker, and Sculptor. Born: June 7, 1848 - Paris, France. Died: May 8, 1903 - Atuona, Marquesas Islands, French Polynesia. Post-Impressionism. Symbolism. Primitivism in Art.

  4. Paul Gauguin styled himself and his art as “savage.” Although he began his artistic career with the Impressionists in Paris, during the late 1880s he fled farther and farther from urban civilization in search of an edenic paradise where he could create pure, “primitive” art.

  5. Paul Gauguin's (1848–1903) famous image as the original Western “savage” was his own embellishment upon reality. That persona was, for him, the modern manifestation of the "natural man" constructed by his idol, the philosopher and writer Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712–1778).

  6. Jul 25, 2019 · Instead of capturing a true likeness, the portraits of Paul Gauguin are inventive investigations of the genre, the artist's explorations of the very idea of what a portrait could be.

  7. www.moma.org › artists › 2098Paul Gauguin | MoMA

    Along with his contemporaries Vincent van Gogh and Paul Cézanne, Paul Gauguin was a pioneer of modernist art. His use of expressive colors, flat planes, and simplified, distorted forms in paintings, as well as a rough, semi-abstract aesthetic in sculptures and woodcuts, exerted a profound influence on avant-garde artists in the early 20th ...

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