(as originally posted by
news-antique.com)
On the evening of November 7, 2007,
Sotheby’s in New York will offer for sale Paul Gauguin’s Te
Poipoi (The Morning), one of the greatest Tahitian scenes by the
artist remaining in private hands. For the past 62 years, this
painting was part of one of the most illustrious collections ever
formed in America, that of Joan Whitney Payson. Acquired by Mrs.
Payson and her husband, Charles, in 1945, this stunning scene of an
exotic paradise hung alongside masterpieces by artists such as
Vincent van Gogh, Pablo Picasso and others, and has been consigned
for sale by her family. Executed in Tahiti in September or October
1892, the painting is estimated to sell for $40/60 million (£20/30
million)*. Prior to auction, the painting will be on view at
Sotheby’s London from October 7-12 and in New York from November
2-7, 2007.
David Norman, Executive Vice President, a Chairman
of Sotheby’s Impressionist and Modern Art Department Worldwide,
said, “Sotheby’s is thrilled to have yet another occasion to
represent one of the greatest collecting families in America. Joan
Whitney Payson and her brother John Hay Whitney were each the very
definition of the enlightened, passionate and daring American
collector in the 20th century, and their previous sales, whether
directly or indirectly, through Sotheby’s – Vincent van Gogh’s
Irises, Pierre-August Renoir’s Au Moulin de la Galette, Pablo
Picasso’s Au Lapin Agile and Boy with a Pipe, among others --
represent not only many of the world’s greatest works of art, but
also landmarks of the modern art market.
“For Paul Gauguin, the
towering figure who provided the bridge from Impressionism to 20th
century Modernism, the search to represent the ideal in art took him
outside the comforts of western tradition toward the great exoticism
of remote Tahiti. In the present work, the artist represents a
quintessential Tahitian scene – an unspoiled landscape populated by
native women going about their daily routines in the midst of a sun
drenched, color-rich paradise.” In Te Poipoi, Gauguin presents a
highly idealized version of paradise, untouched by western influence.
This stunning canvas was painted on the island’s southern coastal
region of Mataiea in September or October 1892, about a year into the
artist’s first extended stay in French Polynesia. The title of the
painting refers to the still and quiet morning hours when the local
people began their day. We can imagine Gauguin’s voyeuristic
pleasure in watching this intimate scene of women bathing beneath a
canopy of banyan and mango trees. Te Poipoi is a refreshingly modern
and daring interpretation of the ritual of the bath, one of the most
symbolically loaded themes in the history of western art.
Edgar Degas
presented one of the best well-known modern interpretations of this
theme by focusing exclusively on the bodies of his young models
standing over their metal tubs. Gauguin would have been
well-acquainted with these images because he had exhibited with Degas
in 1887 at the final Impressionist group exhibition in Paris. When
Gauguin returned to France in August 1893, he brought back with him
over sixty canvases and selected the best among them, including the
present work, for a one-man exhibition at Durand-Ruel. After
suffering a number of visits with his estranged family in Copenhagen
and a broken leg in a street brawl in Pont Aven, Gauguin longed to
return to the South Pacific. In order to raise money for the trip
back, he sold several canvases at auction at Hôtel Drouot,
including the present work, and in June 1895 set sail for Tahiti,
where he would remain for the rest of his life.
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