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Bios / Resources: Bio Bytes: Paul Gauguin (1848–1903)
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For many, the "myth" of Paul Gauguin—the self-taught artist who abandoned his family to focus full-time on painting in distant places—can overwhelm his actual life story and contributions to art. Apart from his personal story, Gauguin's innovations—his bold style that expressed emotion through strong color, and his exotic subject matter—had a profound effect on the art of the twentieth century.

Gauguin revealed little detail about his early life, but it is clear that his childhood was marked by frequent moves and shifting relationships. His parents left Paris soon after his birth in 1848 to join his mother's extended family in Peru. His father died on the ship, leaving his young wife to fend for Paul and his sister, and forcing the family to depend on others for financial security.

Paul Gauguin, Self-Portrait Dedicated to Carriere, 1888 or 1889
Paul Gauguin, Self-Portrait Dedicated to Carrière, 1888 or 1889

They returned to France five years later. Gauguin, whose first language was Spanish, learned to speak French. Unruly at home and at school, Gauguin enlisted in the merchant marines at age 17, and after that, in the navy. He spent the next several years traveling the world and learned of his mother's death from a distant port. When he returned to Paris in 1871, he had an inheritance to live on but no real life plan. He took a job in a stock brokerage and was introduced to contemporary art through friends. About this time, he started to dabble in painting. He met and married a Danish woman with whom he would have five children.

In 1873, although he had no formal training, Gauguin began to paint seriously and made quick progress. Within three years he exhibited a painting in the important official exhibition, the Paris Salon. Through his acquaintance with the painter Camille Pissarro, Gauguin met and exhibited with a group of impressionist painters including Monet, Renoir, and Degas.

Paul Gauguin, Self-Portrait, 1889
Paul Gauguin, Self-Portrait, 1889
Paul Gauguin, Haystacks in Brittany, 1890
Paul Gauguin, Haystacks in Brittany, 1890
Paul Gauguin in front of his canvases, late 1893 or 1894
Paul Gauguin in front of his canvases, late 1893 or 1894
Paul Gauguin, Self-Portrait with Portrait of Bernard, 'Les Miserables', 1888
Paul Gauguin, Self-Portrait with Portrait of Bernard, 'Les Misérables', 1888

Paul Gauguin, Breton Girls Dancing, Pont-Aven, 1888

In 1883 he decided to devote himself full-time to his art. He quit his job and found himself living on his own. His wife and children were confused by Gauguin's all-consuming passion for art, and they moved to Denmark. Though they remained apart, Gauguin corresponded with his wife throughout his life; his letters give us a personal look into the thoughts and motivations behind his art.

Gauguin was drawn to "primitive", mythic, and mysterious subject matter. His unique style developed during trips to Brittany, a rugged land in northwest France. There he hoped to tap the expressive potential of an unspoiled society. He made bold paintings of the Breton people in native dress, work that influenced a group of painters who became Gauguin's devoted followers.

Paul Gauguin, Breton Girls Dancing, 1888

Later, Gauguin spent nine weeks painting in southern France with Vincent van Gogh before finally settling in the South Pacific. There Gauguin hoped to find a paradise untouched by Western values. Inspired by his vision of its distant culture, he produced a huge number of paintings, sculptures, and everyday objects depicting the natives in their lush surroundings and suggesting (not necessarily accurately) the rituals and customs of their culture.

Paul Gauguin, Arearea no Varua Ino (Words of the Devil), 1894
Paul Gauguin, Arearea no Varua Ino (Words of the Devil), 1894
Paul Gauguin, Fatata te Miti (By the Sea), 1892
Paul Gauguin, Fatata te Miti (By the Sea), 1892

Paul Gauguin, Noa Noa album

His work was exhibited in Paris, where it received both enthusiastic and negative reviews. Gauguin continued to make art until his death in the South Pacific in 1903.