
Man Picking Fruit from a Tree
Paul Gauguin·1897
Historical Context
Man Picking Fruit from a Tree was executed during Gauguin's second Tahitian sojourn and belongs to a group of works exploring the motif of the fruit harvest as both literal record and mythological metaphor. The act of gathering tropical fruit connected to his broader theme of an Edenic Pacific life untouched by industrial capitalism — an idea he presented to European audiences even as it grew increasingly at odds with the colonised reality he found around him. The male nude climbing a tree recurs in his work as an image of natural bodily ease, part of his sustained project of depicting the Pacific body without the shame or self-consciousness he associated with Christian European culture.
Technical Analysis
The figure is painted with simplified, monumental forms set against a flat zone of intense tropical foliage. Gauguin uses the vertical format to allow the tree to bisect the composition, the climbing figure's limbs creating angular rhythms against the rectilinear division of sky and vegetation behind.
Look Closer
- ◆The figure reaching upward into the tree canopy creates a vertical axis in the horizontal.
- ◆Fruit in the upper branches is suggested by rounded warm masses of yellow and orange absorbed.
- ◆The flat blue sky visible between the leaves is applied in pure unmixed blue.
- ◆The ground plane carries the warm orange-red of Tahitian laterite soil.




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