Nave nave moe

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Nave nave moe (1894) by Paul Gauguin Paul Gauguin 068.jpg
Nave nave moe (1894) by Paul Gauguin

Nave nave moe is an oil on canvas painting by Paul Gauguin, produced in Paris in 1894 but inspired by his trip to Tahiti three years earlier. It is now in the Hermitage Museum. [1]

As early as 1895 it was displayed at an exhibition at the Hôtel Drouot, base of an auction house, under the title Eau delicieuse("Delicious water)". [2] In 1907 it was acquired by the Moscow collector Ivan Morozov. After the Bolshevik nationalisation it was exhibited at the State Museum of Modern Western Art. It was transferred to the Hermitage Museum in 1931. [3]

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Josef Karl PaulOtto Krebs was a German industrialist and major collector of late 19th and early 20th century French paintings, particularly those of Cézanne, Van Gogh and Gauguin. Seized by the Red Army and taken to Leningrad as war reparations, his collection is still housed at the Hermitage Museum in that city.

References

  1. (in Polish) Cristina Sirigatt Wielkie muzea. Ermitaż, wyd HPS Warszawa 2007, ISBN   978-83-60688-43-4.
  2. Ingo F. Walther; Paul Gauguin (2000). Gauguin. Taschen. p. 65. ISBN   978-3-8228-5986-5.
  3. "Nave nave moe by Paul Gauguin". PaulGauguin.org. Retrieved 3 December 2021.