I hope I dont' get banned for this... I just think everyone can use a nice dose of art history now and again. =)
Eroticism in Paul Gauguin’s work: The Fox, and the Female Nude
My painting teacher, Rey Milici, once told me that looking at an artist’s work is like looking at a piece of their brain. So that if one was to line up separate works by an artist throughout their career, they would describe their life and personality without the use of words. If this is true, looking at the work of Paul Gauguin reveals a mind both sexually perverse and romantic. A man fascinated by sex and violence throughout his career as an artist. Three themes Gauguin utilizes throughout the period of his life as a painter are the fox, the woman in the waves, and the tortured Eve. These three symbols carry the idea that Gauguin had a fascination with sexual lust and violence. This fascination has earned Gauguin the label of a sadist, which, along with “womanizer”, is still synonymous with his name, even after one hundred years since his death. We know the history of Gauguin’s relationship with his wife, Mette. That he beat her, threatened her with sex, and controlled her with empty promises is known to all, as it was known to his son, who claimed to have seen, “my father bloody my mother’s face with his fist” as a ten-year-old boy. Gauguin’s desire to live in Tahiti was mainly due to the hope of finding spiritual and sexual fulfillment. As well as the means to paint non-European people in his “primitive”, cloisonne style of flat, brilliant colors, often accompanied by black outlines.
In 1888 Gauguin visited an “Ethnographical Museum” in Paris that had on display a Peruvian mummy in an almost fetal position of terror and misery. The first painting he adopted the motif for was Vendanges a Arles. Miseres humaines, or Human Misery. In this piece, the hunched woman in the foreground is the first of many women Gauguin would use to depict the guilt and fear after sexual intercourse. Just as his Eve’s fear the punishment bestowed upon them for having intercourse, the girl in the foreground partially hides her face in her hands, already aware of the punishment pregnancy will be for a women of her class. Gauguin paints the girl’s hair red, like that of a fox, symbolizing lust, while the mounds of grapes behind her are signs of fertility, and also indicate the future roundness of her womb. In these aspects, the painting is an important one for Gauguin’s maturing interest in the Symbolist movement. The color of the grapes painted an almost deep red to suggest menstrual blood, while the girl’s legs are slightly spread in order to again suggest sexual intercourse and to foreshadow the birth of the child she is now pregnant with. The birth is conflicted by the fear of death on the girl’s face. It was common for women to die during childbirth, even until the 19th century, and the fact Gauguin used the long-dead mummy’s pose for the girl was clever. The various Eve’s that were based on that same mummy, and made throughout the rest of his career all symbolize fear and death. Considering Gauguin had painted so many of these tortured women based on the mummy, and never one male is solid evidence to believe he preferred to see the female sex in anguish, rather than the male. The connotations with death that the Eve figures exude are even more apparent when Gauguin uses the motif to depict an older woman, as he did in his relief sculpture Be In Love (Make Love) and You Will Be Happy, and his masterpiece, which asked the eternal questions Where Do We Come From? What Are We? Where Are We Going? In the latter piece, the figure of the tortured woman is old and on the brink of death and symbolizes the eternal question that every human has asked at some point: Where are we going?
Gauguin’s sculpture Soyez Amoureuses, Vous Serez heureause, or Make Love and You Will Be Happy utilizes both the tortured Eve and fox motifs. Made in 1889 out of linden wood, the sculpture is Gauguin’s inner desire to be with the Polynesian women, before he had ever been to Tahiti. The self-portrait of Gauguin in the upper right corner shows himself as an ogre-like giant who is taunting the nude Tahitian woman to “make love and be happy”, as the title states. However, she is not entirely willing to go along, and hesitates as she sees the sight of the monster before her, drooling with a thumb in his mouth and a look of complete licentiousness upon his heavy-lidded face. Gauguin described this woman to Theo Van Gogh in a letter as one ‘’who struggles despite the good advice of the tempting inscription.” As the woman tries to pull herself away from his grasp with her free hand (which has a wedding ring on it), in the lower right-hand corner the elderly Eve figure is on top of a fox, signaling both death and perversity. Eve is tortured by her own knowledge; that the monster above her is a liar, and that making love will not bring about happiness. Her ears are covered in an attempt to drown out her own thoughts as events occur around her that she has no power to stop. Gauguin places the control and dominance in the hands of his self-portrait, while all sorts of personal and unexplainable things happen around the main figures of the woman and the giant, that conjure up references to Hieronymus Bosch’s visions of Hell. For instance, next to the giant hangs a limp shape, which is by all means phallic and is being held onto by a figure who’s body’s about equal to that of the limp reproductive organ. Scattered about the piece are faces and figures of all differing countenances that all seem to be taunting the two victimized women in the foreground. The title of the piece is carved into the top of the composition; at the center of the shape is the letter ‘A’ that symbolizes the start, therefore implying that reproduction is the beginning of life, and the start of death. The ‘A’ shape also frames the woman and further accentuates her position as the central figure. It is painted quite simply with black washes, or stains, that are mostly kept to the background. Gauguin leaves everything in the foreground, other than the ‘A’, the natural color of the linden wood, which in places takes on a gold characteristic, especially in the flowers.
The year in which Gauguin started assimilating his woman in the waves figure was the same as when he found the Peruvian mummy. His first works to contain the motif were 1889’s two Ondine’s, one of which was a pastel study for the painting Woman in the Waves (Ondine). Unless the viewer is familiar with the story of Ondine, it is not clear why she is falling into the swirling ocean below her. However, to Gauguin, Ondine was a soulless creature of the water. After falling in love with a knight and coaxing him into marriage in order to obtain a soul, the knight falls in love with a human female. “On his wedding day, Ondine emerges from the sea and kills the knight with a fatal kiss” (Kung and Richmond par 5). The line the story crossed between love and violence must have captivated Gauguin. So much that he would return again and again to this image for several years. The painting that illustrates the moment Ondine returns to the ocean, Woman in the Waves, depicts Ondine as both ecstatic and nervous by the awkward positioning of her body. Her naked back is to the viewer as her torso is twisted to the right, her left arm raised level to her head, while she is frenetically biting down on her right arm in a moment of emotional and physical ecstasy. This ecstasy is most likely caused by the incredibly surge of power murder can incite, and by her intense joy to be returning to the water from which she came. Again, Gauguin paints the woman’s hair bright red like that of a fox, which is further complimented by the green, churning waves that surround her. Gauguin’s brushstroke is choppy and gestural throughout, except for the flatness of the woman’s hair, and he uses the green of the ocean and the pink of the flesh in spots throughout the canvas. The overall composition is predominated by curves and motion, as the woman and the water represent bodies that both give and take life.
The fox was a plausible animal for Gauguin to work with as a motif, for in Peru it is a symbol of sexual lust and, according to Gauguin, is “a symbol of perversity among the Indians”. Along with being a symbol of lust, in Andean mythology it is a creature of the devil. No doubt it’s red fur, pointed eyes and mysterious, quiet character appealed to Gauguin. He first used the symbol in 1890 with his paintings The Loss of Virginity and Nirvana (Portrait of Meyer de Haan). In Nirvana, De Haan, who Gauguin grew to hate and often depicted him as the animal of perversity and sin, represents the fox. Not meaning for the painting to be incredibly beautiful, Gauguin rather meant it as a satire and statement against de Haan for winning the attention of a woman both he and Gauguin were competing for. By including all three of his favorite motifs, Eve, Ondine and the fox, the piece portrays different aspects and levels of sexual activity. In the foreground there is the fox, the symbol of lust and sexual attraction. People would not have sex if there was no desire for it, hence the fox being in the front, as the most important aspect. To the right of de Haan is, again, Ondine, Gauguin’s symbol of ecstasy as she bites her arm to control her emotions. However, in this work Ondine symbolizes sexual ecstasy, and the arm that seems to disappear inside her moth can also be read as an implication for the sexual act of fellatio. Lastly, Gauguin uses his Eve figure as a representation of the psychological effects that sexual intercourse can have on a human being. She is the fallen woman; the one who has been destroyed by the act of making love. As Eve, she signifies the loss of virginity, and loss of innocence. Taken in this way, she is also a symbol of knowledge, which she must be punished for. Gauguin paints her, using the Peruvian mummy pose of terror and desperation, while she waits for her punishment. She is the regret and the guilt, the permanence that sex instills, and the permanent change for women who become pregnant, whose lives are altered irreparably. Chaotic in its composition, all the figures are piled together in the center. Also, running diagonally from the top right of the composition to the bottom left, is a dark mass of seaweed, which here takes on characteristics of blood. It lends more commotion to the piece, while blood is the symbol of life as well as death, just as the two women behind de Haan represent the beginning and end of sexual lust.
By the time Gauguin made it to Tahiti, he was, already at 42 years, a “lascivious old man”. Despereate to find erotic and spiritual fulfillment, as his taking advantage of “loose” women paid off in the end for he contracted syphilis, which would haunt him for the rest of his life. Gauguin died in 1903, at the age of 55, alone in the Marquesas Islands at his Maison du Joir, or “House of Pleasure”. He was denied a Christian burial, due to his indecency in Parisian society at the time. Several of his works were also burned, one such painting, titled Tahitian Love, may very well have met this fate. It has been described as “a brilliantly colored painting of a man beating a woman” (Matthews 181). Unfortunately, it seems to have been true that Tahitian women expected to be beaten by their husbands, and it was a cultural norm that Gauguin found highly erotic. As he stated in his book, Noa Noa, “I saw plenty of calm-eyed young women, I wanted them to be willing to be taken without a word: taken brutally. In a way longing to rape.” It seems Gauguin tried very hard to believe, right up until the end of his life, that “Being In Love”, or being a lover, would make him happy. If he ever did realize, like the elderly Eve did in Make Love and You Will Be Happy, that it is not true, it was too late for him.