
The Brooding Woman
Paul Gauguin·1891
Historical Context
The Brooding Woman, painted in 1891 during Gauguin's first Tahitian stay, depicts a Polynesian woman in the inward, contemplative state that several of his Tahitian figure paintings explore. He was drawn to subjects of psychological interiority — women absorbed in thought, silent, unaware of or indifferent to the painter's gaze — which allowed him to project his own philosophical preoccupations onto his subjects. The 'brooding' state connects this work to Faaturuma (Melancholic) painted the same year, both exploring the same mood of withdrawn reflection. Gauguin's interpretation of Tahitian inner life was inevitably a European projection, filtered through Symbolist ideas about the mysterious interior life of 'primitive' peoples.
Technical Analysis
Oil on canvas with the figure's stillness translated into a compositional stasis — the woman occupying the canvas without narrative action, her brooding state suggested through posture and downward gaze rather than facial expression. Gauguin's flat color handling and firm outlines give even this quiet subject a formal intensity.




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