Buquês e Cerâmicas em uma Cômoda (Bouquets et Céramique sur une Commode) - Paul Gauguin
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OST - 60x73 - 1886
A major example of Gauguin's still-lifes, Bouquets
et céramique sur une commode displays a strong palette and a
lush treatment of the flowers that herald the main preoccupations of his later
career. Gauguin took joy in depicting the unpretentious subject-matter and the
nature that surrounded him. Like Barbizon and Impressionist painters before
him, he was attracted to pastoral themes and everyday motifs as an emblem of a
pristine past, free from the complications of modern civilised life. This
uncomplicated subject-matter allowed the artist to focus on his technique and
on use of colour and form. With its vibrant tones applied in quick
diagonal brushstrokes, the present work reveals a style reminiscent of Van
Gogh's painting.
Executed towards the end of 1886, Bouquets et céramique
sur une commode belongs to the period that Gauguin spent in Paris, on
return from his first trip to Pont-Aven in Brittany. The artist went to
Pont-Aven earlier that year, leaving the capital in his pursuit of unspoilt
scenery and a simple way of life away from the metropolis. For Gauguin and a
number of his contemporaries, the appeal of this part of France, virtually
untouched by the effects of progress, was in the raw originality of its
landscape and the traditional way of life of its inhabitants. This work
epitomises the artist's life-long search for the primitive and displays the
vividness and the bright, warm palette that would reach its full blossom in his
celebrated Tahitian landscapes several years later.
Several months before painting Bouquets et céramique sur
une commode, Gauguin was introduced to the ceramicist Ernest Chaplet, who had
trained at the Sèvres factory, and he soon started working on his ceramics with
great vigour. Delighted with the challenge and creative possibilities offered
by this new discipline, Gauguin executed a number of ceramics, and often placed
them in his painted still-lives. The flowers of the present work, seemingly
casually arranged in a vase and spilling out of a basket, are joined by a
ceramic figurine to the far right. This unusually shaped pitcher depicting a
female face and titled Femme au capuchin, is presumed to date from circa 1887.
Its inclusion in this composition raises a question of the execution date of
the painting. Although it is possible that it was mistakenly dated 86 by
Gauguin at a later stage, Daniel Wildenstein argues that the painting was
indeed executed in 1886, and the sculpture itself added later to the
composition (D. Wildenstein, op. cit., pp. 308-309).
Gauguin's contemporary Albert Aurier commented about his
ceramics: 'How can one adequately describe these strange, barbaric, savage
ceramic pieces, into which the sublime potter has molded more soul than clay?'
(A. Aurier, 'Néo-Traditionnistes: Paul Gauguin', in La Plume, 1st September
1891, quoted in The Art of Paul Gauguin (exhibition catalogue),
National Gallery of Art, Washington, D. C., 1988, p. 57). Both in its style and
choice of subject matter, the present composition reveals a mutual influence
with the art of Cézanne. But while Cézanne, whose works Gauguin admired, used
the still-life motif for his formal pictorial exploration, Gauguin imbues this
subject with a more intimate mood.
Claire Frèches-Thory discussed Gauguin's ceramics: 'Having
already tried his hand at sculpture with great success, Gauguin was to find in
ceramics a perfect medium for expressing his love of raw materials and his
decorative sense. Of an estimated one hundred ceramic objects by the artist,
sixty or so remain; numerous others have disappeared, been lost, or irreparably
damaged [...] Except for a few pieces thrown on the wheel and then decorated,
Gauguin's ceramics were modelled by hand, allowing him to create "baroque"
forms: pitchers, pots, and vases with one, two, or three openings, adorned with
multiple rolled handles added on, decorated either with glazed or mat finish,
sometimes inlaid with gold highlights, but most often in relief [...] Gauguin's
ceramic technique was highly original, and he may be considered one of the
great revivers of stoneware art at the end of the nineteenth century' (C.
Frèches-Thory, 'The Ceramics', in ibid., pp. 57-58).

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