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Lollichon Field and Pont-Aven Church by Paul Gauguin

Lollichon Field and Pont-Aven Church

Paul Gauguin·1886

Historical Context

Lollichon Field and Pont-Aven Church, painted in 1886 during Gauguin's first Pont-Aven stay, shows the landscape of the Breton village that would become central to his artistic development. The Pont-Aven church — a Romanesque structure central to the village's religious and social life — appears in the background, framing the open field in the foreground. In 1886 Gauguin was still working in a relatively Impressionist manner, his later Synthetist innovations still developing; this early Brittany painting has more naturalistic color than his 1888 canvases. The church's presence signals the Breton Catholic piety that Gauguin found both picturesque and significant as a counterpoint to Parisian secularism.

Technical Analysis

Oil on canvas with a relatively naturalistic palette appropriate to 1886, before Gauguin's full stylistic transformation. The field's greens are observed rather than symbolically intensified, the church rendered with architectural specificity, and the composition organized along conventional landscape principles of foreground, middle distance, and sky.

Look Closer

  • ◆The Romanesque church tower of Pont-Aven is shown across the Lollichon meadow — distance is registered through atmospheric softening of the tower's stone detail.
  • ◆The meadow grass is painted in warm green strokes that are not individually botanical but collectively suggest the specific texture of a mowed or grazed field.
  • ◆The sky above the church is the composition's lightest area — Gauguin uses the sky's brightness to silhouette the tower rather than model it in light and shadow.
  • ◆This early Gauguin still shows Impressionist brushwork — the strokes are loose and varied, not yet systematized into the Synthetist approach of his Pont-Aven School period.
  • ◆A path or field boundary in the foreground provides a compositional entry point — the viewer positioned at the field's edge looking toward the church across the meadow.

See It In Person

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Quick Facts

Medium
canvas
Dimensions
71 × 92 cm
Era
Post-Impressionism
Style
Post-Impressionism
Genre
Religious
Location
undefined, undefined
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