Teaching Gauguin: Pacific Studies and Post-Impressionism

dc.contributor.authorWaldroup, Heather
dc.date.accessioned2021-11-12T21:54:38Z
dc.date.available2021-11-12T21:54:38Z
dc.date.issued2002-01-01
dc.description.abstract<p>Perhaps it's because I'm looking for him, but Paul Gauguin seems to follow me everywhere. I am standing in line at a bank on Rarotonga when a European woman behind me comments that the bank tellers "look just like a Gauguin painting"; her companion murmurs in agreement. In North America and Europe, Gauguin's paintings have become the defining, and inescapable, vision of the Pacific. Replicas of his images appear in the Disney Polynesian Resort in Kissimmee, Florida; in a bath products shop in California's Silicon Valley; in ads for Tahitian tourism: brown, lounging women, wrapped (or unwrapped) in brightly-colored <em>pareu</em> and adorned with flowers. The employees of a Bank in Avarua, professionally dressed in crisp white blouses and dark skirts like businesswomen in many parts of the world, transform in European eyes trained in looking through Gauguin's lens, and begin to "look like" not themselves, but like women in paintings created by a Frenchman living in another archipelago, one hundred years ago.</p>
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10524/64543
dc.subjectRapa Nui
dc.subjectEaster Island
dc.subjectPaul Gauguin
dc.titleTeaching Gauguin: Pacific Studies and Post-Impressionism
dc.typeResearch paper
dc.type.dcmiText
prism.number1
prism.volume16

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