Tahitian Landscape

Tahitian Landscape portrays the lush, sun-saturated world of French Polynesia through Paul Gauguin’s characteristically bold and visionary eye — sweeping tropical terrain rendered in rich, unnatural colours that feel more emotionally true than photographically accurate, where deep greens, burnt oranges, and radiant yellows pulse with the heat and vitality of a paradise experienced from the inside. Gauguin captures Tahiti not as a tourist sees it but as a man who surrendered to it completely, finding in its landscape a primal, spiritual beauty untouched by the noise of modern Western life.

In a home, this work brings an energy of sun-drenched abundance, bold chromatic warmth, and liberating, untamed vitality. Its fearless use of colour fills a room with a sense of heat, life, and joyful intensity — the feeling of somewhere far away and deeply alive, where colour itself becomes an emotion and every wall it hangs on feels warmer for its presence.

It is a perfect fit for Tropical or Bohemian interiors — spaces that embrace richness, colour, and a free-spirited celebration of the natural world. In a Tropical setting it pairs magnificently with rattan, lush indoor plants, warm timber, and woven textiles; in a Bohemian space it anchors a room full of layered colour, global treasures, and an atmosphere that is gloriously, unapologetically alive. Either way, it is a piece that transforms a home into somewhere that feels like an adventure.

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Size

Print Material*

Print Quality (A2)

Print Material*

Print Quality (A1)

Print Material*

Print Quality (60X80CM)

Frame Options*

Frame Options (A2) (FINE)

Frame Options*

Frame Options (A1) (FINE)

Frame Options*

Frame Options (60X80) (FINE)

Frame Options*

Frame Options (A2) (CANVAS)

Frame Options*

Frame Options (A1) (CANVAS)

Frame Options*

Frame Options (60X80CM) (CANVAS)

Size

Print Material*

Print Quality (A2)

Print Quality*

Print Quality (A1)

Print Quality*

Print Quality (60X80CM)

Frame Options*

Frame Options (A2) (FINE)

Frame Options*

Frame Options (A1) (FINE)

Frame Options*

Frame Options (60X80) (FINE)

Frame Options*

Frame Options (A2) (CANVAS)

Frame Options*

Frame Options (A1) (CANVAS)

Frame Options*

Frame Options (60X80CM) (CANVAS)

Total: $36.69

ESTIMATED TOTAL COST: SGD 181.24

ABR offers free shipping on all products over $100 and will arrive within 14 days of purchase.

ABR Frames are standardized at 3CM as well as an additional 5CM thick mat installed around the image. Hence your framed painting might look bigger than you anticipated. A good rule of thumb is to add 16CM to your length and height of your chosen size. For more on Frames & Mat, click here!

ABR only offers 2 selections of print materials (Fine art + Canvas) because they are the best of the best quality. We will recommend certain materials for certain artworks but rest assured that they are of top quality regardless. For more information about the print materials, click here!

MEET THE ARTIST

Paul Gauguin

Paul Gauguin (1848–1903) was a French Post-Impressionist painter whose restless, searching life became as legendary as the bold, revolutionary art it produced. Born in Paris to a French father and a Peruvian Creole mother, he spent part of his childhood in Lima, an early exposure to non-European culture that may have planted the seeds of his lifelong search for a world beyond Western civilisation. Gauguin came to painting relatively late, working first as a stockbroker in Paris while painting as a hobby, before abandoning his career, his wife, and his five children in his mid-thirties to pursue art with total, uncompromising commitment. He befriended Camille Pissarro and exhibited with the Impressionists, and famously shared a turbulent, volatile few months in Arles with Vincent van Gogh — a collaboration that ended dramatically when Van Gogh severed his own ear during a breakdown. Dissatisfied with European life and convinced that the authentic, spiritual beauty he sought could only be found elsewhere, Gauguin eventually sailed to Tahiti in 1891, and later to the Marquesas Islands, where he spent the final years of his life. It was there that he produced his most iconic work — monumental canvases alive with bold flat colour, simplified form, and figures drawn from Polynesian life and mythology, rendered in a style that broke decisively from Western tradition and pointed directly toward twentieth century modernism. His life in the Pacific was far from the paradise he imagined — marked by poverty, illness, conflict with colonial authorities, and profound personal loss. He died in the Marquesas in 1903, largely unrecognised, leaving behind a body of work that would prove transformative for generations of artists including Picasso, Matisse, and beyond.

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