Woman Holding a Fruit; Where Are You Going - Paul Gauguin

Woman Holding a Fruit; Where Are You Going? by Paul Gauguin - Genre Paintings from Hermitage Museum

Painting Detail

Woman Holding a Fruit; Where Are You Going
Artist: Paul Gauguin
Medium: Painting, Oil on canvas, 92.5x73.5 cm
Date: 1893
Genre: Genre Painting
Source: State Museum of New Western Art, Moscow, 1948


Tahiti was for Gauguin the embodiment of that primitive and unspoiled life of which he dreamed, of natural harmony and simplicity. He intially spent two years in Tahiti before returning to Paris for a short time. This work dates from that first period in Oceania, when the artist was still more concerned with the external attributes of the exotic world full of mystery, so unlike Europe. The impressions of the colours and vegetation, the appearance and rituals of the Tahitians, gave the artistic much material to work with.

An everyday episode in the islanders' life is here turned into the embodiment of the eternal rhythm of life, of harmony between man and nature. Standing in the foreground is a Tahitian girl with a fruit in her hand - the Eve of that eastern Paradise.

Rejecting the rules of traditional painting, and then of Impressionism, Gauguin went on to create his own individual style. The flat space, the rhythmic repetition of lines, forms and areas of colour, and the pure colours applied in broad masses combine to create a highly decorative effect.