Provides a "painted & authentic" style to images printed on canvas and mounted on real solid wood frames cut to measurement.
Our canvas is professionally hand-stretched and layered with protective ink for a superior museum-grade finish.
Added to your wishlist
Adding to your wishlist in progress
Aluminum mounting added to your wishlist
Share this work
Share with your printing options
Link to be shared
Add to my wishlist
Additional products
Fine Art Print
starting at CA$ 33
Fine Art Print Standard frame sizes
starting at CA$ 42
Mounting on aluminium
starting at CA$ 74
Framed Giclée Print 18.5 " x 9.5 "
CA$ 113
More works by Paul Gauguin
Vision After the Sermon
30.5 x 24.1 cm
starting at CA$ 86
When Will You Marry?
30.5 x 40.5 cm
starting at CA$ 107
Two Tahitian Women
30.5 x 39.6 cm
starting at CA$ 107
Still Life with Three Puppies
30.5 x 43.5 cm
starting at CA$ 109
Spirit of the Dead Watching (M...
30.5 x 24.1 cm
starting at CA$ 86
Tahitian Landscape
30.5 x 22.3 cm
starting at CA$ 82
Street in Tahiti (Papeete road...
30.5 x 30.5 cm
starting at CA$ 93
Description
During his second stay in Tahiti in 1897–1898, Paul Gauguin (1848–1903) embarked on the creation of his largest masterpiece, a frieze spanning nearly four meters. The title of this work, without question marks, is inscribed in the top left corner of the canvas in a yellow background. This frieze is a series of existential questions that resonate in harmony with the motifs that compose it. See more
The elements of this work are diverse and intriguing: a newborn, a very old woman curled up on herself, young and languid bodies, a monochrome sculpture, a few animals, and lush green and blue vegetation. All these elements interact and invite us to explore their meaning, creating a kind of visual puzzle. Despite this wealth of expressive elements, the overall composition resists any linear narrative. To this day, this frieze remains an enigma to art historians.
Through his desire to paint this monumental work, Gauguin has bequeathed to us a complex and captivating artistic testament of his time in Tahiti. His existential questions, his fascination with nature, and human diversity intertwine in this mysterious creation, inviting us to reflect and ponder the many facets of life and art.