Paul Gauguin - No te aha oe riri (Why Are You Angry ) | Fine Art Poster
Paul Gauguin - No te aha oe riri (Why Are You Angry ) | Fine Art Poster
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Painted in 1896 during Gauguin's second stay in Tahiti, "No te aha oe riri? (Why Are You Angry?)" depicts a group of Tahitian women and children in a domestic scene, its Tahitian-language title — like many of Gauguin's titles from this period — posing an enigmatic question rather than simply describing the image. The painting reflects Gauguin's mature Tahitian style, combining flattened, boldly outlined forms with a rich, non-naturalistic palette drawn partly from memory and imagination. Now in the Art Institute of Chicago, it exemplifies the deliberately ambiguous, symbolic narratives of his island paintings.
Printed with archival giclée inks on smooth, acid-free 220 gsm gallery-grade fine-art paper; available in multiple sizes.
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