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Still Life with a Sketch after Delacroix
Paul Gauguin·1887
Historical Context
Still Life with a Sketch after Delacroix (1887) is a fascinatingly self-referential work by Paul Gauguin in which a conventional still life arrangement is combined with a visible sketch after Eugène Delacroix — an act of deliberate homage to the Romantic master whom Gauguin venerated as a founding figure of modern color painting. Delacroix's influence on Post-Impressionist thinking about expressive, non-naturalistic color was immense, and by incorporating a sketch after him within a still life composition, Gauguin explicitly places himself within this lineage of coloristic liberation. Painted during Gauguin's transitional period before his first Tahitian voyage, the work reveals his growing ambition to move beyond Impressionist naturalism toward a more symbolic and personally expressive mode of painting. The juxtaposition of observed objects and artistic quotation anticipates the layered visual references that would characterize his mature Synthetist work.
Technical Analysis
Gauguin's brushwork here combines the structured, deliberate strokes of his post-Impressionist technique with looser, more gestural handling in the Delacroix sketch. The palette balances warm ochres and earth tones in the still life elements against cooler, more vivid passages in the copied sketch, creating a dialogue between two modes of color thinking.
Look Closer
- ◆A sketch after Delacroix is propped among the still-life objects — an artwork within the artwork.
- ◆The conventional still-life fruits and vessels are rendered with the Impressionist looseness.
- ◆The juxtaposition of observed objects and a reproduced image questions originality versus influence.
- ◆The sketch's warm tones echo the fruit's colours, suggesting Delacroix's palette was key to his.




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