Our arts editor dropped out this month -- the ox had fallen into the ditch as one says -- therefore I wrote a "picture post" for the philosophy weekly Pi. It is titled (click here) The Noble Savage, and draws a parallel between a group photo (in which I appear) and the art of the post-impressionist painter Paul Gauguin. Why did Gauguin's beautiful paintings reveal death, suffering, and cruelty in the background? It might have been for a better reason than some think. OBSERVATION: The "noble savage" is a term for which Jean-Jacques Rousseau was famous.
1 comment:
Gauguin was a very ill man and must have known this - possibly death haunted his subconscious thoughts.
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