
Breton boys bathing
Paul Gauguin·1888
Historical Context
Breton Boys Bathing, painted in 1888 and now in the Hamburger Kunsthalle, shows young Breton males swimming or wading in an outdoor setting — a subject that allowed Gauguin to combine his interest in the primitivist authenticity he sought in Brittany with the tradition of the outdoor male nude. The bathers subject connected to the broader Impressionist and Post-Impressionist interest in modern outdoor leisure, pursued differently by Cézanne's monumental Bathers series and Seurat's La Grande Jatte. For Gauguin, the Breton boys embodied the uncorrupted rural life he was seeking as an antidote to Parisian civilization. The Hamburger Kunsthalle holds one of Germany's finest collections of nineteenth and twentieth-century art.
Technical Analysis
Oil on canvas with Gauguin's 1888 Synthetist approach applied to outdoor figures — the boys' forms simplified and outlined, the water's surface rendered in broad flat areas rather than Impressionist light-play, the whole composition aspiring to the decorative boldness he associated with non-Western art.
Look Closer
- ◆The boys' bodies are rendered with flat summary outlines rather than anatomical modelling — Gauguin treats them as simplified shapes against the water and grass.
- ◆The green of the grass and the green-blue of the water use nearly identical hues, compressing the distinction between ground and water into a single chromatic plane.
- ◆A thin dark line around the figures recalls cloisonné enamel — the synthetist outline technique Gauguin was beginning to develop with Bernard.
- ◆One boy's reflection appears in the water beneath him, rendered as a distorted mirror image that adds a second version of the same flat shape.
- ◆The figures occupy the upper half of the canvas while the lower half is almost entirely still water, reversing the usual landscape hierarchy.




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