A Closer Look at Gauguin’s NAFEA faaipoipo (When Will You Marry?)

Gauguin_NAFEA faaipoipo

Paul Gauguin, NAFEA faaipoipo (When Will You Marry?), 1892. Oil on canvas, 40 x 30 1/2 in. The Rudolf Staechelin Collection © Kunstmuseum Basel, Martin P. Bühler

Having seen displays of Asian and Pacific cultures at the Paris World’s Fair of 1889, Paul Gauguin considered traveling to Polynesia. He wrote to his wife, Mette, in February 1891: “There in Tahiti . . . I can listen to the sweet murmuring music of my heart, beating in amorous harmony with the mysterious beings of my environment.” A sale of 30 works financed his voyage, but upon his arrival, Gauguin found a very different reality. He explained to Mette in July 1891, “The Tahitian soil is become quite French and the old order is disappearing. Our missionaries have already introduced a good deal of Protestant hypocrisy and are destroying a part of the country.” Gauguin completed relatively few canvases during these early months. Choosing to draw instead, he combined direct observation with his more exotic impressions. Gauguin wrote to Mette in June 1892: “There is dawning in me an oceanic character. . . . Tahiti is not devoid of charm and its women . . . have an indescribable quality that is penetrating
and utterly mysterious.”

Set in an idyllic landscape, NAFEA faaipoipo (When Will You Marry?) explores the psychology of the Tahitians as Gauguin saw them. The Maori title is a provocation, suggesting an emotional situation heightened by the poses of the women, their contrast in dress, and their expressions. The sensual female in a colorful, wraparound skirt (pareu) crouches, turning away from a more reserved woman, who sits upright, wears a missionary-style dress, and points beyond the picture plane. Her gesture may derive from Buddhist art and indicate a warning or a threat. The flower in the hair of the foreground figure suggests her interest in a husband or a lover, while the second figure has been interpreted as an alter ego of the first. Gauguin’s young companion Tehamana (Tehura) may have modeled for both—one the Tahitian woman of his dreams, the other his reality.

The color and design of the painting represents a synthesis of experiments. A preliminary drawing exists, as does a full-scale pastel of the crouching woman, which he transferred to the canvas. The picture’s matte surface may be the effects of l’essence when oil is drained from paint and then mixed with turpentine. The related work Tahitian Women shows a less idealized rendering of the two figures. The woman wearing the pareu is featured again in Eu haere ia oe (Where Are You Going).

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(left) Paul Gauguin, Tahitian Women, 1891. Oil on cavas. Musee d’Orsay, Paris (right) Eu haere ia oe (Where Are You Going?), 1892. Oil on canvas. Staatsgalerie, Stuttgart, Germany

NAFEA faaipoipo was included in Gauguin’s Paris exhibition of 1893 at Galerie Durand-Ruel, listed for the extraordinary price of 1,500 francs. Gauguin held it in high regard and believed it would appeal to a Parisian audience, perhaps swayed by Western perceptions of Tahitian women popularized in novels by Pierre Loti and others. Unfortunately, it did not sell.

Elizabeth C. Childs, Etta and Mark Steinberg Professor of Art History at Washington University in St. Louis, examines this work in the context of Gauguin’s prolific engagement with both the mythic idea and the social reality of the Tahitian vahine (young women) of colonial Tahiti in a lecture Thursday evening, Dec. 10.