
Mona Mona
Paul Gauguin·1901
Historical Context
Mona Mona — Tahitian for something pleasant or beautiful — dates from Gauguin's final Polynesian period, when he had left Tahiti for the more remote Marquesas Islands. By 1901 he was living in Atuona on Hiva Oa, increasingly ill and in conflict with the colonial administration, yet continuing to paint with extraordinary intensity. Works from this late Marquesan period are among his most formally distilled, stripping away the lush abundance of earlier Tahitian canvases in favor of simpler compositions that reflect both his weakening physical state and a deepening mythological imagination. The title's gesture toward pure pleasantness carries a certain irony given the isolation and deteriorating health that surrounded the painting's creation.
Technical Analysis
The late Marquesan paintings show a simplification of Gauguin's already bold style: flatter color areas, stronger outlines, and reduced spatial complexity that focuses attention on the symbolic weight of individual figures and motifs. Color relationships are more arbitrary and expressive than descriptive.
Look Closer
- ◆Gauguin's Marquesas palette is more saturated than his Tahitian work, burning with stronger color.
- ◆The figures carry the postural dignity Gauguin consistently gave his Polynesian subjects.
- ◆The background Marquesas flora — banana, hibiscus, breadfruit — differs from Tahitian vegetation.
- ◆Warm tropical light fills the composition without shadow drama, light as an environmental condition.




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