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Still Life with Quimper Pitcher
Paul Gauguin·1889
Historical Context
Paul Gauguin's Still Life with Quimper Pitcher from 1889 connects directly to his engagement with Brittany, where he worked in both 1886 and 1889. The Quimper pitcher — earthenware pottery from the Brittany town of Quimper, decorated with traditional blue-and-white Breton folk art designs — became a recurring element in his Breton still lifes, serving both as a concrete object and a symbol of regional cultural identity. Between his first and second visits to Tahiti, Gauguin was wrestling with the tension between European roots and his search for a more 'primitive' authenticity, and Breton folk pottery occupied an intriguing middle ground: European but traditional, sophisticated but earthen.
Technical Analysis
The pottery's geometric folk-art decoration provided Gauguin with flat pattern elements he could play against the rounded form of the vessel. His handling is bold and simplified — broad color areas, decisive outlines — increasingly departing from Impressionist touch toward the synthetism he was developing in 1889.
Look Closer
- ◆The Quimper pitcher's distinctive blue-and-white Breton folk decoration is rendered with legible.
- ◆Bold black contour lines surround the fruit, flattening the still life into near-pictographic.
- ◆The table surface is tilted slightly toward the viewer, absorbing Cézanne's spatial experiment.
- ◆The Quimper earthenware contrasts with the tropical warmth of the surrounding fruit.




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