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Cleveland Museum of Art

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Paul Gauguin — The Devil Speaks (Mahna No Varua Ino) (recto); Women Washing Clothes (verso)
Paul Gauguin

The Devil Speaks (Mahna No Varua Ino) (recto); Women Washing Clothes (verso)

1893

In 1893, Paul Gauguin returned to Paris from time spent in Tahiti. He began to conceive of a book that would describe his life outside Europe and provide context for the avant-garde works he created while away. This print is one of a series of ten intended to illustrate this book, which Gauguin titled Noa Noa. He carved each image roughly into a woodblock and printed them himself, giving the prints a rough quality that he hoped would enhance their subject matter. Because of this process, combined with the artist's practice of varying his inks and papers while working, prints such as this one are virtually unique.

Medium
woodcut

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About this work

Paul Gauguin, The Devil Speaks (Mahna No Varua Ino) (recto); Women Washing Clothes (verso), 1893

In 1893, Paul Gauguin returned to Paris from time spent in Tahiti. He began to conceive of a book that would describe his life outside Europe and provide context for the avant-garde works he created while away. This print is one of a series of ten intended to illustrate this book, which Gauguin titled Noa Noa. He carved each image roughly into a woodblock and printed them himself, giving the prints a rough quality that he hoped would enhance their subject matter. Because of this process, combined with the artist's practice of varying his inks and papers while working, prints such as this one are virtually unique.

Medium
woodcut
Year
1893
Seen at
Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH

Related themes

Print, Wood, Modern, Unique Work

More works by Paul Gauguin

Collected by

Art Institute of Chicago, Cleveland Museum of Art, Harvard Art Museums