A painting by Paul Gauguin that combines鈥痓eauty and eroticism with a strong feeling of unease. The young woman is not at rest but anxiously aware of the bird and the strange beings behind her, who may be evil spirits.
Paul Gauguin鈥(1848鈥1903), Nevermore鈥, 1897, Oil paint on canvas, The Courtauld, London (Samuel Courtauld Trust)听漏 The Courtauld

Nevermore

Paul Gauguin

Paul Gauguin painted鈥Nevermore鈥痠n February 1897, during his second and final stay in Tahiti, an island in the southern Pacific colonised by France. Intended for a white European male audience, the sensual reclining nude belongs to a long artistic tradition. To this familiar theme however, Gauguin added a sense of exoticism, writing to a friend that his nude is meant to suggest 鈥渁 certain barbarian long-lost luxury鈥.

This disconcerting painting combines鈥痓eauty and eroticism with a strong feeling of unease. The young woman is not at rest but anxiously aware of the bird and the strange beings behind her, who may be evil spirits. For modern viewers, the youth鈥痮f the nude figure, sometimes identified as Paul Gauguin鈥檚 15-year-old鈥痯artner鈥疨ahura,鈥痠s its most unsettling aspect.

The painting鈥檚 title associates the bird on the ledge with Edgar Allan Poe鈥檚 poem鈥疶he Raven鈥(first published in 1845, translated into French in 1875). In it, a poet, driven mad by the death of his lover, hears a raven endlessly repeating 鈥榥evermore鈥. This sense of loss has sometimes been seen as alluding to Gauguin鈥檚 disillusionment at the destruction of Tahitian culture by the French authorities. Instead of the unspoilt paradise he had imagined, he found a society corrupted by decades of colonialism. This did not prevent him from taking advantage of his position as a European coloniser.鈥疨ahura鈥痺as one of several teenagers that he took on as 鈥榳ives鈥. The widespread racist fantasy of Tahitian girls as sexually precocious led to their unabashed exploitation.

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Two men sit across from each other at a table covered with a brown tablecloth, playing cards. Both men wear overcoats and hats, and the man on the left smokes a pipe. They sit inside a wooden building. Paul C茅zanne (1839-1906) The Card Players, around 1892-96, The Courtauld, London (Samuel Courtauld Trust)

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