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| | Paul Gauguin |
 | | Gauguin’s artistic development of a conceptual method of representation was important for the history of art as it moved into the twentieth century. |  | | Gauguin said himself about his drawings that “It always seems to me that something is missing: the color.” Though based, to use Gauguin’s words, on “sharpness of outline,” it is their color that brings Gauguin’s best drawings and paintings to life. |  | | Pissarro became a friend and painting teacher as Gauguin began to paint himself. |
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http://www.fantasyarts.net/Gauguin.htm
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| | Paul Gauguin. Biography - Olga's Gallery |
 | | William Molard, a musician, neighbor of Gauguin in Paris in 1893-94, his admirer and supporter. |  | | This portrait of his mother, Gauguin painted by a photograph and from memory. |  | | In the broker’s agency Gauguin met and befriended Claude-Emile Schuffenecker (1851-1934), a shy clerk, who shared Gauguin’s interest in painting, they both started to study painting at the Colarossi Academy, worked together en plein-air and in the Louvre and met Parisian artists. |
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http://www.abcgallery.com/G/gauguin/gauguinbio.html
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| | Brianne/Paul Gauguin |
 | | Paul Gauguin is known for some very weird paintings, but one of his weird paintings got him into the group of impressionism. |  | | The media that Gauguin used was paints and sculptures. |  | | Gauguin lived a lot of places in his life, some of those places had effects on his art. |
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http://www.yesnet.yk.ca/schools/wes/webquests_themes/artist_quest/famous_artists_reports/brianne.html
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| | Paul Gauguin ....................... |
 | | Gauguin was born in Paris, France in 1848, into a middle-class family. |  | | Paul Gaugin was a French painter whose lush colour, flat images, and idyllic subject matter helped form the basis of modern art. |  | | His early style was impressionist, a realistic style favoured particularly by French painters in the late 1800's, that used dabs and strokes of umixed primary paint colours to simulate reflected light. |
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http://www.worsleyschool.net/socialarts/gauguin/page.html
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| | Tahiti1.Com - The Polynesian Web Directory |
 | | Gauguin was an excellent writer and polemic, and there is no doubt that the battles that he provoked and wholeheartedly engaged in gradually gave him back his taste for life. |  | | It can therefore safely be claimed that Gauguin was the real discoverer in Europe of the aesthetic merits of the hitherto neglected and disdained arts of the so-called primitive peoples, and the first artist in the Western world to adapt In his own works many of their characteristic features and designs. |  | | Gauguin was well received, mainly thanks to an official letter of introduction from the Department of Colonies that he had obtained before his departure from Paris. |
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http://www.tahiti1.com/gauguin/gauguin_en.htm
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| | Gauguin, Paul on Encyclopedia.com |
 | | Paul Gauguin and the lure of the exotic: no matter where he traveled, the artist absorbed the sights and subjects encountered there into his own unique vision. |  | | GAUGUIN, PAUL [Gauguin, Paul], 1848-1903, French painter and woodcut artist, b. |  | | Un visiteur devant le tableau "Contes barbares" de Paul Gauguin, le 1er octobre au Grand Palais à Paris La Réunion des mus. |
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http://www.encyclopedia.com/html/G/Gauguin.asp
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| | Paul Gauguin Post-Impressionist Artist |
 | | Gauguin is considered one of the leading painters of the Postimpressionist period. |  | | Gauguin began his career as a stockbroker in Paris in 1872. |  | | Gauguin's mother, of Peruvian descent on her mother's side, and her two children moved in with a great grand uncle and his family in Lima. |
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http://www.lucidcafe.com/library/96jun/gauguin.html
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| | Tahiti: Paul Gauguin |
 | | Paul Gauguin took his greatest inspiration from primitive subjects and indigenous peoples, and his work took on a power and profound sense of mystery from the tropical colours and Polynesian culture of the South Seas. |  | | Paul Gauguin, along with Van Gogh, was one of the major post-impressionist painters. |  | | It was not until after his passing that Gauguin's genius for colour harmonies and use of large flat areas of non-naturalistic colour were recognized by the art world. |
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http://www.janeresture.com/tahiti_gauguin
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| | WetCanvas: Virtual Museum: Individual Artists: Paul Gauguin |
 | | Gauguin was encouraged also by Arosa's daughter, an amateur painter, and in 1874 he had some lessons with the Impressionist Camille Pissarro. |  | | His interest in art was encouraged by his guardian, who had a fine collection of paintings and in whose house most of the best-known painters of the day appeared from time to time. |  | | By 1884, Gauguin's savings had run out, he had sold scarcely a painting and although a move from Paris to Rouen in Normandy had reduced his household expenses, his family was fast approaching destitution. |
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http://www.wetcanvas.com/Museum/Artists/g/Paul_Gauguin
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| | ArtLex on Post-Impressionist Paul Gauguin |
 | | Paul Gauguin, Portrait of the Artist with the Idol, c. |  | | Paul Gauguin, Washerwomen (Les Lavandières à Arles), 1888, |  | | Paul Gauguin, Tahitian Women [On the Beach] (Femmes de Tahiti [Sur la plage]), 1891, oil on canvas, 27 1/8 x 35 7/8 inches (69 x 91 cm), Musée d'Orsay, Paris. |
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http://www.artlex.com/ArtLex/p/postimp.gauguin.html
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| | Paul Gauguin |
 | | From 1886 to 1891 Gauguin lived mainly in rural Bretagne (except for a trip to Panama and Martinique from 1887 to 1888), where he was the center of a small group of experimental painters known as the school of Pont-Aven. |  | | Source: The Art of Paul Gauguin; Brettell, Cachin,... |  | | Gauguin's bold experiments in coloring led directly to the 20th-century fauvist style in modern art. |
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http://www.mcs.csuhayward.edu/~malek/Impression/Gauguin.html
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| | NCAW Autumn 03 Dario Gamboni on Gauguin's Genesis of a Picture |
 | | Gauguin wrote to Monfreid that the nude in Mana'o tupapa'u had not been painted from life. |  | | Gauguin wrote to Mette about the group of paintings: "Many of the pictures, of course, will be incomprehensible and you will have something to amuse you. |  | | The painting is one of Gauguin's most famous works and it had a special importance for him, as demonstrated by the high price he asked for it, its numerous variations, and its inclusion in the Self-Portrait with a Hat painted in the winter of 189394 in Paris (Musée d'Orsay, Paris). |
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http://19thc-artworldwide.org/autumn_03/articles/gamb.html
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| | Guggenheim Collection - Artist - Gauguin - Biography |
 | | Gauguin later worked as a stockbroker’s clerk in Paris but painted in his free time. |  | | Gauguin organized a group exhibition of their work at the Café Volpini, Paris, in 1889, in conjunction with the World’s Fair. |  | | Gauguin’s other writings include Cahier pour Aline (1892), L’Espirit moderne et le catholicisme (1897 and 1902) and Avant et après (1902), all of which are autobiographical. |
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http://www.guggenheimcollection.org/site/artist_bio_50.html
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| | The reincarnation of Paul Gauguin? |
 | | Gauguin continues to be a mystery as books with various views on his art continue to be published. |  | | In fact, Gauguin was regarded with contempt by some for leaving his wife and family behind in search of his artists' paradise of primitive man and unspoiled nature. |  | | It is said that Mette Gauguin fully supported her husband and understood his need to explore a different environment to fulfill his creative passions. |
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http://www.peterteekamp.com/kevins_website_page.html
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| | Paul Gauguin Encyclopedia Article @ GreatArtworks.com |
 | | For Europeans the romantic strangeness and eroticism of his paintings of the islanders, the festivities with their unknown symbolism, are inherently attractive, and this has tended to obscure Gauguin's real contribution. |  | | Like his friend Vincent Van Gogh, with whom he spent nine weeks painting in Arles, Paul Gauguin experienced bouts of depression and at one time attempted suicide. |  | | A successful stockbroker during week-days, Gauguin spent holidays painting with Pisarro and Cezanne. |
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http://www.greatartworks.com/encyclopedia/Paul_Gauguin
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| | The Art Institute of Chicago: Art Access |
 | | Paul Gauguin began to paint in his late 20s. |  | | Gauguins Post-Impressionist style, defined by a decreasing tendency to depict real objects and the expressive use of flat, curving shapes of brilliant color, influenced many abstract painters of the early 20th century. |  | | When he returned to France in 1893, he spent most of his time in Paris promoting his work and writing and illustrating Noa Noa, a fictionalized account of his Tahitian experience. |
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http://www.artic.edu/artaccess/AA_Impressionist/pages/IMP_9.shtml
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| | Paul Gauguin Biography |
 | | In 1876 a landscape painting by Gauguin was accepted for the Salon d'Automne. |  | | Gauguin first went to Pont-Aven in Brittany and joined a group of avant-garde artists for 6 months. |  | | With his predilection for "primitive" and exotic art, Gauguin discovered woodcuts as an interesting printmaking technique. |
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http://www.artelino.com/articles/paul_gauguin.asp
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| | Paul Gauguin -- Britannica Concise Encyclopedia - The online encyclopedia you can trust! |
 | | Gauguin coined the term 147;Synthetism&; to describe his style during this period, referring to the synthesis of his paintings' formal elements with the idea or emotion they conveyed. |  | | The leading French painter of the postimpressionist period, Paul Gauguin was at his best when he could paint what he called natural men and women living with their fears, faiths, myths, and primitive passions. |  | | From the 1880s he was a member of the artistic association known as the Nabis, which was inspired by Paul Gauguin's use of color and pattern. |
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http://www.britannica.com/ebc/article-9365317
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| | WebMuseum: Gauguin, (Eugène-Henri-) Paul |
 | | His meeting with van Gogh, the influence of Seurat, the doctrines of Signac, and a rediscovery of the merits of Degas--especially in his pastels--all combined with his own streak of megalomania to produce a style that had little in common with the thoughtful lyricism of the work of his erstwhile mentor Pissarro. |  | | Gauguin's art has all the appearance of a flight from civilisation, of a search for new ways of life, more primitive, more real and more sincere. |  | | His attitudes to art were deeply influenced by his experience of its first exhibition, and he himself participated in those of 1880, 1881 and 1882. |
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http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/auth/gauguin
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| | THE MASTERS: Gauguin |
 | | Eugène-Henri-Paul Gauguin (1848-1903) was born in Paris, France, to a Peruvian mother and journalist father. |  | | Fifteen years after his separation he went to Tahiti and discovered primitive art. |  | | Also during this time, Gaguin's paintings were very Impressionistic - the opposite of how we usually think of Gauguin's style (The Seine at the Pont d'Iéna, Snowy Weather). |
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http://www.tumbleintoart.net/gauguinbio.html
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| | Paul Gauguin (Getty Museum) |
 | | Gauguin remained in Tahiti for two years, producing sculptures, woodcuts, and images of young women in Edenic landscapes. |  | | Gauguin first became enthusiastic about painting in the 1860s. |  | | Writing to his wife in 1887, Paul Gauguin expressed his desire to seek an earthly paradise in the South Seas. |
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http://www.getty.edu/art/gettyguide/artMakerDetails?maker=258&page=1
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| | Paul Gauguin |
 | | Gauguin, Spirit of Deaths Vigilates, "Manao tupapau", 1892, oil on canvas, 73 x 92 cm, Buffalo, (N.Y), Albright-Knox Art Gallery. |  | | Gauguin, Girls with Mango Flowers (Tahitian Women), 1899, oil on canvas, 94 x 72 cm, Nueva York, Metropolitan Museum of Art. |  | | Gauguin, Yellow Christ, 1889, oil on canvas, 92 x 73 cm, Buffalo (N.Y), Albright-Knox, Art Gallery. |
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http://www.spanisharts.com/history/del_impres_s.XX/neoimpresionismo/i_gauguin.html
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| | Paul Gauguin, French Painter |
 | | During this period he was essentially a "Sunday" painter, pursuing his art on weekends and in the summer, but in 1875 he met Camille Pissarro and began to work with him to improve his drawing and painting. |  | | May 8, 1903, was one of the leading figures in postimpressionist art of the 1880s and '90s (see postimpressionism). |  | | Gauguin visited France for the last time in 1893-95, then returned to Tahiti. |
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http://www.discoverfrance.net/France/Art/Gauguin/Gauguin.shtml
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| | Paul Gauguin Online |
 | | Paul Gauguin at the National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C. works by Paul Gauguin |  | | Original works by Paul Gauguin available for purchase at art galleries worldwide |  | | Van Gogh and Gauguin: The Search for Sacred Art |
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http://www.artcyclopedia.com/artists/gauguin_paul.html
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| | NGA - Paul Gauguin |
 | | Gauguin began collecting works by the impressionists in the 1870s. |  | | A successful stockbroker, he studied painting under Pissarro and soon abandoned his middle-class life to be an artist, participating in the impressionists' last four group exhibitions. |  | | Copyright ©2006 National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC |
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http://www.nga.gov/collection/gallery/gg82/gg82-main1.html
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| | PAUL GAUGUIN |
 | | He wrote a letter to Gauguin in October 1888 and even offered to give full charge of the studio to Gauguin. |  | | Van Gogh knew that a separation was coming soon and at this time he drew two well known paintings Van Gogh's Chair and Gauguin's Chair. |  | | Up on his return home he took the razor and sliced off his earlobe, later offering it as a give to Rachel, a girl from the bar. |
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http://www.uwosh.edu/departments/english/38-385/orlowski/gauguin.htm
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| | Amazon.com: Paul Gauguin 1848-1903: The Primitive Sophisticate (Basic Series : Art): Books: Ingo F. Walther,Paul Gauguin |
 | | There cannot have been many other artists who set out as wholeheartedly to live the life they envisioned in their art as Paul Gauguin did. |  | | Inspired by a primitive way of life, Paul Gauguin came to reject the world of the Impressionists, leaving Parisian society in search of paradise. |  | | South Seas, Art Institute of Chicago, Noa Noa, Paul Gauguin, New York, Christian God, Where Are We Going, Brooding Woman, Caricature Self-Portrait, Folkwang Museum, National du Louvre, National Gallery of Art, Old World, Pushkin Museum |
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http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/382289639X?v=glance
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| | WebMuseum: Signac, Paul |
 | | One of the principal neoimpressionist painters, Paul Signac, b. |  | | Aug. 15, 1935, worked with Georges Seurat in creating pointillism (or divisionism). |
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http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/auth/signac
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| | Paul Gauguin French Artist Impressionist Questia.com Online Library |
 | | Paul Gauguin, and his painter companion Charles...Le Centre DArt Memorial Musee Paul Gauguin, whose moving spirit is Mme. |  | | Ivory, Apes, and Peacocks: Joseph Conrad, Walt Whitman, Jules Laforgue, Dostoievsky and Tolstoy, Schoenberg, Wedekind, Moussorgsky, Cezanne, Vermeer, Matisse, Van Gogh, Gauguin, Italian Futurists, Various Latter-Day Poets, Painters, Composers, and Dramatists |  | | ...innovation that would come to define modernism in art, Paul Gauguin formed a key link. |
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http://www.questia.com/library/art-and-architecture/artists/paul-gauguin.jsp
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| | Sanford & A Lifetime of Color: Study Art |
 | | When he returned to France, critics called his paintings "savage" and "barbaric," but Gauguin was proud of such comments. |  | | He moved to Tahiti to create a new style that conveyed such passion. |  | | Sanford & A Lifetime of Color: Study Art |
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http://www.sanford-artedventures.com/study/bio_gauguin.html
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| | The Metropolitan Museum of Art - Special Exhibitions: Gauguin in New York Collections: The Lure of the Exotic |
 | | This major exhibition marks the first occasion in more than 40 years that Paul Gauguin (French, 1848—1903) has been the subject of a major monographic show in New York City, and the first time that the Metropolitan Museum has displayed its entire collection of the artist’s work. |  | | Thanks to pioneering acquisitions and the generosity of donors, the Metropolitan and other museums in the state—from the Museum of Modern Art in New York City to the Albright-Knox Gallery in Buffalo—have afforded generations of viewers a vivid sense of Gauguin’s genius. |  | | The Metropolitan Museum of Art - Special Exhibitions: Gauguin in New York Collections: |
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http://www.metmuseum.org/special/se_event.asp?OccurrenceId={C9AAB34A-859E-11D5-93FE-00902786BF44}
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| | CGFA- Paul Gauguin (Page 1) |
 | | Portrait of Camille Pisarro by Gauguin (right)- Portrait of Paul Gauguin by Pissarro (left), 1879-83, chalk on paper, Musée du Louvre, Paris. |  | | Madame Mette Gauguin in Evening Dress, 1884, oil on canvas, National Gallery, Oslo. |  | | The Garden in Winter, rue Carcel, 1883, oil on canvas, private collection. |
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http://cgfa.sunsite.dk/gauguin
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| | Gauguin, Cezanne, Ceurat Notes and Lesson Plan |
 | | * Gauguin owned and greatly admired this Cezanne painting, and recreated it for the background of one of his own paintings, here: |  | | He depicted them using this very child-like style with its bold colours, dramatic patterns and apparent disregard for proprotion and natural colouration. |  | | Don't get stuck with researching the Japonese influences on Gauguin, or his views on religion, or how he treated the women in his life until you've really looked at the work and made a note of all the features. |
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http://www.amblesideonline.org/GauguinCezanneSeurat.shtml
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| | Paul Gaugin |
 | | PRATHER, M.: GAUGUIN A RETROSPECTIVE The story of Gauguin through the eyes of the artist's friends, colleagues, critics, etc. 1987, 4to, 386 pp, 250 ill, |  | | Where Have We Come From (1897)- Museum of Fine Arts, Boston |  | | : CENT OEUVRES DE GAUGUIN Exposition Galerie Charpentier a Paris, 1960. |
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http://www.scaruffi.com/art/gaugin.html
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| | Regent Seven Seas Cruises : Ships |
 | | View stateroom photos and floorplans for Paul Gauguin: |  | | The Paul Gauguin was designed specifically for sailing French Polynesia year-round. |  | | And her beloved troupe of Gauguines - part cruise staff, part entertainers, part storytellers, add the unique personality of French Polynesia to every cruise. |
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http://www.rssc.com/ships/ship.jsp?code=PAU
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| | Eugene Henry Paul Gauguin: Tutte le informazioni su Eugene Henry Paul Gauguin su Encyclopedia.it |
 | | Eugene Henry Paul Gauguin: Tutte le informazioni su Eugene Henry Paul Gauguin su Encyclopedia.it |  | | Eugene Henry Paul Gauguin, pittore francese, nasce a Parigi il 7 giugno 1848 da Clovis Gauguin, un giornalista antimonarchico, e da Aline Marie Chazal. |  | | Accolto tra gli impressionisti, Gauguin gettò le basi del "sintetismo" ispirandosi alle stampe giapponesi e all'arte primitiva e rifiutando la prospettiva; dette la preferenza ai colori violenti e ad un marcato contorno delle figure; fu anche il precursore di quel movimento pittorico sviluppatosi tra il 1898 e il 1908 che prese il nome di "fauvismo". |
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http://www.encyclopedia.it/e/eu/eugene_henry_paul_gauguin.html
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| | The Sculpture of Paul Gauguin |
 | | Paul Gauguin: Be in love, you will be happy (Soyez amoureuses, vous serez heureuse.), wood, 1889. |  | | Carved Door frame panels from Gauguin's house, the Maison du Jouir, 1902 |
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http://www.bc.edu/bc_org/avp/cas/fnart/art/gauguin_sculp.html
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| | Cruise Critic Reviews: Paul Gauguin |
 | | I can think of no better way to cruise the islands of French Polynesia. |  | | Stunningly crafted, and specially designed to navigate the coral-filled, shallow waters of the area, the Gauguin has a magical feel about her from the moment your jet-lagged body reaches the gangplank. |  | | If you've never been to French Polynesia, this spiffy, little luxury liner is the way to go. |
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http://www.cruisecritic.com/reviews/review.cfm?ShipID=65
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| | Paul Gauguin and the Russian Avantgarde |
 | | If you are curious, you can give a look at the Guest Book of the Gauguin Exhibition, and have an idea on how many people visited this page from the access statistics for the Show. |  | | If you liked the presentation (or even if you don't...) please leave a note on the Guest Book. |  | | You can give a look at the awards this page gained during the years (sorry but some links are dead). |
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http://www.tesre.bo.cnr.it/~mauro/Show
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