
Cleveland Museum of Art
The Devil Speaks (Mahna No Varua Ino) (recto); Women Washing Clothes (verso)
Paul Gauguin
- Date
- 1893–1894
- Medium
- woodcut
- Culture
- France, late 19th century
- Department
- Prints
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
In 1893, Paul Gauguin returned to Paris from time spent in Tahiti. He began to conceive of a book that would describe his life outside Europe and provide context for the avant-garde works he created while away. This print is one of a series of ten intended to illustrate this book, which Gauguin titled Noa Noa . He carved each image roughly into a woodblock and printed them himself, giving the prints a rough quality that he hoped would enhance their subject matter. Because of this process, combined with the artist's practice of varying his inks and papers while working, prints such as this one are virtually unique. In 1921, Paul Gauguin's son Pola printed a new edition of his father's Noa Noa prints, wiping the woodblocks cleanly so the images were more legible.
The authoritative record is held by Cleveland Museum of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Cleveland Museum of Art and other institutions.

Reverberations of Taiga, Volume 2 (leaf 25)
Cleveland Museum of Art
Parody of the Story of Narukami
Art Institute of Chicago

Reverberations of Taiga, Volume 2 (leaf 7)
Cleveland Museum of Art
![[View in the Catacombs]](https://media.getty.edu/iiif/image/c7859494-83d5-4885-ba92-413163a14590/full/808,/0/default.jpg)
[View in the Catacombs]
Getty Museum

Uzume no Mikoto from The Cave Door of Spring
Cleveland Museum of Art

Why Hide Them?, Plate 30
Cleveland Museum of Art

The Day Before the Beginning of Spring
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Reverberations of Taiga, Volume 1 (leaf 23)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Ama no Tajikara no Mikoto from The Cave Door of Spring
Cleveland Museum of Art
One of Eight Printed Nō Plays published by Kōetsu (Kōetsu-bon Yōkyoku hachiban)
Harvard Art Museums

Huwelijk van Mozes en Sippora
Rijksmuseum

Shaving a Boy's Head
Minneapolis Institute of Art