Hage, Ralph
In: Art and architecture (Lebanese University Press), 6 (2016), pp. 65-72
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Abstract
The article argues that the art critic Albert Aurier’s use of the European stereotype of the "savage" as a description of Paul Gauguin, was primarily an idealist philosophical strategy for opposing late XIXth century naturalism and its scientific underpinnings. It led to the formation of the Artists’ image and determined the reading of his work for more than a century.
Document type: | Article |
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Version: | Secondary publication |
Date Deposited: | 03 Aug 2017 16:27 |
Faculties / Institutes: | Research Project, Working Group > Individuals |
DDC-classification: | Painting |
Controlled Keywords: | Aurier, Gabriel-Albert, Gauguin, Paul, Symbolismus, Wildheit, Primitivismus |
Subject (classification): | Painting |
Countries/Regions: | France |