Paul Gauguin - Portrait of Meyer de Haan by Lamplight 1889

Portrait of Meyer de Haan by Lamplight 1889
Portrait of Meyer de Haan by Lamplight
1889 80x52cm oil/wood
Museum of Modern Art, New York, USA

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From Museum of Modern Art:
This portrait depicts one of Gauguin’s closest friends, the Dutch painter Jacob Meyer de Haan, in the pose of a thinker. It includes two books that reflect Meyer de Haan’s preoccupations with religion and philosophy: John Milton’s Paradise Lost and Thomas Carlyle’s Sartor Resartus. Carlyle’s central character is called Diogenes, after the Greek philosopher who searched by lamplight for an honest man, and the prominent lamp here may extend this reference. This work was originally intended as part of a decorative panel for the door of an inn at Le Pouldu—a small coastal village in France where both artists stayed—to be hung next to a companion self-portrait by Gauguin that is now in the collection of the National Gallery, in Washington, D.C