Vase in the Form of a Tropical Plant with Bird and Deity

Description

In I886 Paul Gauguin was invited to design artistic pottery with the well-known ceramist Ernest Chaplet. Rather than simply decorating premade vessels, Gauguin chose to model his own unconventional forms by hand, jokingly calling them his “monstrosities.” Here the wide lip and distinctive shoulder of the vase echo the shape of the tall plant on its surface, while the protruding leaves on its sides suggest handles yet have no utilitarian function. Gauguin decorated this vase with a mix of motifs, including a goose drawn from the artist’s paintings of Brittany and a Cambodian deity copied from a photograph of a sculpture near Angkor Wat.

Provenance

Albert Dauprat (1857–1921), Paris. Sold, Sotheby's London, Dec. 3, 1975, lot 43. J. Mallin, New York. Aldis Browne Fine Arts, Venice, California; sold to the Josefowitz family, 1992; sold to the Art Institute of Chicago, 2019.

Vase in the Form of a Tropical Plant with Bird and Deity

Paul Gauguin

1887–88

Accession Number

212301

Medium

Stoneware painted with slip and gold

Dimensions

21.5 × 17 × 12 cm (8 1/2 × 6 1/2 × 4 1/2 in.)

Classification

vase

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Through prior purchase of the Estate of Suzette Morton Davidson, Major Acquisitions Centennial Endowment, Dellora A. Norris Funds