Artwork Details
29 x 36-5/8 in. (canvas) 36-7/8 x 44-5/16 x 2-1/2 in. (framed, optium)
Mark DescriptionSigned and dated, lower right: P. Gauguin 89 Frame label, verso, ink on adhesive paper, left near lower corner: Z14534 Josefo CUT DOWN SPANISH 0.00FT £320 | SUBJECT ARTIST GAILGIN | COMMENTS PEND JD ORDER/ | DUE BACK 30-10-92 Backing board label, verso, ink on adhesive paper, upper left: VAN GOGH AND GAUGUIN: THE STUDIO OF THE SOUTH | Cat: 96 Crate: 61 {handwritten] | Paul Gauguin | FLAGEOLET (FLUTE?) PLAYER ON THE CLIFF, 1889 | Oil on canvas | 73 x 92 x cm., (28 3/4 x 36 1/4 in.) | 1998.168
Accession NumberSamuel Josefowitz Collection of the School of Pont-Aven, through the generosity of Lilly Endowment Inc., the Josefowitz Family, Mr. and Mrs. James M. Cornelius, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard J. Betley, Lori and Dan Efroymson, and other Friends of the Museum
CopyrightEuropean Painting and Sculpture 1800-1945
Color PaletteProvenance
Provenance
Sold by the artist at the Vente Gauguin in 1891 to a M[onsieur] Strauss.{1} Probably to (Ambroise Vollard, [1867-1939] Paris, France) between 1894 and 1899.{2} To the collector, artist and benefactor of Gauguin, Gustave Fayet [1865-1925]. By 1928 in the collection of George Viau [1855-1939], Paris;{3} purchased from the posthumous auction of the Viau collection by a Paris collector named Ménard;{4} sold via (Drouot Montaigne, Paris) to Samuel Josefowitz, Lausanne, Switzerland, in 1992;{5} acquired as a partial gift, partial purchase by the Indianapolis Museum of Art in 1998. {1} It appears in the Catalogue dune vente de 30 Tableaux de Paul Gauguin, Hotel Drouot, Paris, 23 February 1891 as no. 19 (Au-dessus de la Mer), as correctly cited in Georges Wildenstein, Gauguin, 1964, catalogue raisonné no. 361: à M. Strauss, 32, rue de Lévis. Labels on the verso of the stretcher, which are reproduced in the 1992 sale catalogue, Drouot Montaigne, Paris, Importants Tableaux des XIXe et XXe siècles under the multi-page entry for this painting, mistakenly identify it as no. 29 (Au-dessus du gouffre) of the Vente Gauguin. The latter painting Wildenstein, 1964, catalogue raisonné no. 282 and Wildenstein, 2002, catalogue raisonné no. 310 passed from this sale via the collection of Comte Guy de Cholet directly to the Musée des Arts Décoratifs, Paris. The merit of the 1992 Drouot Montaigne sale catalogue rests on its facsimile reproduction of the checklist for the 1891 Vente Gauguin catalogue. {2} Despite the fact that a 1902 letter from Monfreid to Gauguin cited in Wildenstein, 1964, p. 138 doubts Vollard's ownership of this painting, new research for the Ambroise Vollard: Patron of the Avant-Garde exhibition, jointly organized by the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, New York, The Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, and the Musée dOrsay, Paris, France, confirms that it passed through Vollard's hands early on. {3} See Paul Gauguin, 1848-1903, Kunsthalle Basel, July-August 1928, catalogue no. 53, as lent by Dr. G. Viau, Paris. There are also four Collection George Viau labels on the stretcher citing former exhibitions this painting was included in. {4} See Catalogue des Tableaux Modernes composant la Collection de M. Georges (sic) Viau, Hôtel Drouot, Paris, 11 December 1942, lot. No. 102 (illustration). {5} See letter from Daniel Wildenstein to Samuel Josefowitz, dated 23 September 1998, stating: [ce peinture] a toujours appartenu à Ménard depuis la vente Viau où il lavait acheté, in IMA Historical File (1998.168).
Gallery Labels
Gallery Labels
In 1889 Gauguin worked in the village of Le Pouldu. There he created this dizzying panorama, recording the site's craggy cliffs and the waves breaking on the beach. At right are a girl with her scythe and a boy playing a flageolet, or flute - symbols of the artist's attachment to the harmonies of Breton life.
Yet Gauguin also altered the view to suit his imagination, boldly pairing near and far, steep and flat to create a complex surface pattern. And where has he placed the viewer-hovering perilously over the abyss?
Exhibition History
Exhibition History
Exhibition Name
Venue
Dates
In Concert (Tintamarre!): Musical instruments in art between the 1860's and the 1910's
Musée des Impressionnismes Giverny
March 24, 2017 - July 2, 2017
Van Gogh and Gauguin: Studio of the South
The Van Gogh Museum
February 9, 2002 - June 2, 2002
Van Gogh and Gauguin: Studio of the South
Art Institute of Chicago
September 22, 2001 - January 13, 2002
Gauguin and the School of Pont-Aven from the Collection of Samuel Josefowitz
Indianapolis Museum of Art
March 28, 1999 - August 1, 1999
Paul Gauguin - Tahiti
Staatsgalerie Stuttgart
1998 - 1998
Paul Gauguin
Wildenstein & Company, Inc.
March 20, 1936 - April 18, 1936
Gauguin
Fogg Art Museum
1936 - 1936
Gauguin Retrospective
Baltimore Museum of Art
1936 - 1936
La vie ardent de Gauguin
Gazette des Beaux-Arts
1936 - 1936
Gauguin et ses amis
Gazette des Beaux-Arts
1934 - 1934
Gauguin
Bâle Kunsthalle
1928 - 1928
Rétrospective d’art français
Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam
1926 - 1926
Art Français
Bâle Kunsthalle
1923 - 1923
French Art, 1200-1900
The Royal Academy of Arts London
Dates Unknown
Related Content
Watch a lecture by Dr. Gloria Groom and hear her discuss the “radical abstraction” of The Flageolet Player on the Cliff (34:06).
Learn more about Gauguin’s life and where scholars say he developed his artistic identity in the New York Times article, “Art View; Just Where Did Gauguin Become Gauguin?”
Read an interview with Gauguin’s great-granddaughter, Mette, regarding the artist and a 2011 exhibition at the Tate Modern.
Read the New York Times article about the IMA’s 1998 acquisition of 30 works of art by Gauguin from collector Samuel Josefowitz, including The Flageolet Player on the Cliff.
Learn more about the man whose 30 works of Gauguin the IMA now holds and his collection before it came to the IMA in an article by Michelle Owens in Rensselear Magazine.
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