
Tahitian Landscape
$47.00
Select sizeSize guide
- 380g/m² cotton canvas — certified museum quality
- Solid wood stretcher bar with 0.75” gallery wrap
- HD Giclée print — colour-true to the original
- Ready to hang — hanging hardware included
Tahitian Landscape, painted in 1892 by Paul Gauguin, belongs to the first, most vivid body of work he produced after sailing to Tahiti in 1891 in search of a life — and a way of painting — untouched by European convention. Freed from the muted palette of his Impressionist years in France, Gauguin here lets saturated greens, ochres, and violets sit side by side in flat, decorative planes, describing the island's volcanic hills and dense vegetation less as observed fact than as a remembered dream.
This was the turning point that made Gauguin a father of modern painting: color used not to describe light but to carry emotion directly, outlines simplified into bold, almost symbolic shapes. The Tahitian landscapes of 1891–93 would go on to influence the Fauves and Expressionists who followed a generation later.
Now held in the collection of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, this masterwork is presented here as a premium stretched canvas reproduction, printed on museum-quality matte canvas and hand-wrapped around a solid 0.75-inch gallery wrap frame — ready to hang and built to last.
| Artist | Paul Gauguin |
| Year | 1892 |
| Medium | Oil on canvas |
| Dimensions | 25 3/8 x 18 5/8 in. (64.5 x 47.3 cm) |
| Collection | The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York |
| Movement | Post-Impressionism |
| Available sizes | |
| Small | 40 × 30 cm (16″ × 12″) |
| Medium | 50 × 40 cm (20″ × 16″) |
| Large | 90 × 60 cm (36″ × 24″) |
| All sizes include a 0.75" gallery wrap. Ready to hang — no framing required. | |



