Te raau rahi (The Big Tree)

Art Institute of Chicago

Te raau rahi (The Big Tree)

Paul Gauguin (French, 1848–1903)

Date
1891
Medium
Oil on jute canvas
Culture
France
Department
Painting and Sculpture of Europe
Institution
Art Institute of Chicago

“Everything in the landscape blinded and dazzled me,” wrote Paul Gauguin of his first months in Tahiti. Here, he showcased the island’s variety of bountiful fruit trees, including a thick-trunked, violet hotu at left; spindly mango and coconut trees; and three short banana plants with lush, splayed leaves. In the foreground, a man uses a stick to crack a coconut and a family rests in the grass with a sleeping dog beside them. The painting’s coarsely woven canvas, made of a fibrous plant matter (jute), is visible through the paint layer. Cheaper and more readily available than traditional canvas, this support material lends the work a rugged, organic texture.

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Object type
AAT300033618

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