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Parau na te Varua ino (Words of the Devil)

Paul Gauguin1892

National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

National Gallery of Art, Washington DC
Washington, DC, United States

Lured to Tahiti in 1891 by reports of its unspoiled culture, Gauguin was disappointed by its civilized capital and moved to the countryside, where he found an approximation of the tropical paradise he had expected. The Tahiti of his depictions was derived from native folklore supplemented by material culled from books written by earlier European visitors and overlaid with allusions to western culture. The pose of the standing nude, for instance, is derived from a medieval statue of the biblical Eve and more distantly from the Venus Pudica of classical sculpture. The artist placed this rich combination of references to original sin, the loss of virginity, and occidental standards of beauty and art within the context of his Tahitian mythology and primitive, non–European aesthetics.


The meaning of the title _Parau na te Varua ino_ is unclear. The phrase _varua ino_, evil spirit or devil, refers to the masked kneeling figure and _parau_ means words, suggesting the interpretation "Words of the Devil." The meaning of many of Gauguin's Tahitian paintings remains elusive. There is little likelihood that Gauguin's original audience would have been able to interpret the Tahitian legends that Gauguin carefully inscribed on most of the 66 paintings he took back to Paris in 1892.

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  • Title: Parau na te Varua ino (Words of the Devil)
  • Creator: Paul Gauguin
  • Date Created: 1892
  • Physical Dimensions: overall: 91.7 x 68.5 cm (36 1/8 x 26 15/16 in.) framed: 116.8 x 94 x 10.1 cm (46 x 37 x 4 in.)
  • Provenance: (Gauguin sale, Paris, 18 February 1895, no. 10, bought in). (Ambroise Vollard [1867-1939], Paris); sold on 30 May 1906, for 4000 francs, to Alexandre Berthier, 4th Prince de Wagram (1883-1918);[1] returned possibly due to non-settlement of bill to Vollard, stock no. 5453, by 1910;[2] Millet, Paris. Phileas Pluckett, Manchester, England. Paul Guillaume [1891-1934], Paris; sold 1930 to Marie N. Harriman [1903-1970] and W. Averell Harriman [1891-1986], New York;[2] the W. Averell Harriman Foundation, New York; gift 1972 to NGA. [1] As revealed by a letter dated 11 June 1906 from Vollard to the Prince de Wagram recording: ‘tableau en hauteur femme nue se cachant le sexe; derrière l’esprit du mal, 4000 francs’, one among a bulk purchase of six Tahitian canvases made by the Prince on 30 May 1906. MS 421. Cited by Suzanne Diffre and Marie-Josèphe Lesieur in ‘Gauguin dans les archives Vollard du musée d’Orsay,’ _Gauguin-Tahiti, L’Atelier des tropiques_, Paris, 2003: 353. [2] The painting was lent by Vollard to _Manet and the Post-Impressionists_, Grafton Galleries, London, 1910-1911, no. 43, as _L'Esprit du mal_, per Donald Gordon, _Modern Art Exhibitions: 1900-1916: Selected Catalogue Documentation_, Munich, 1976: 436. Vollard also lent the painting to the 1913 Armory show as _Spirit of Evil_ and offered it for sale there (see Archives of American Art, Washington, D.C.: Walt Kuhn Family Papers and Armory Show Records, 1.3 European Entry Cards and 1.4 Notes). [3] According to Harriman collection records in NGA curatorial files.
  • Medium: oil on canvas
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

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