2011년 6월 17일 금요일

A Moon and Sixpence- Tahiti

The Moon and Sixpence is a book based loosely on the story of artist Paul Gauguin. The book has also been produced as a play and for television. Gauguin, like the book's main character, journeyed to the Polynesian islands where he produced a number of paintings. The main character of The Moon and Sixpence is Charles Strickland. Charles leaves his family, his London life, and his relatively safe position as a stock broker to pursue his artistic dreams. He travels first to Paris, then to Tahiti, making life choices that could be considered less than the best along the way. Eventually, Strickland kills himself, but not before breaking up a marriage and betraying a friend.


In this book, Strickland put his last passion as an artist in Tahiti. In this island, there is a museum of Gauguin where his works are placed in real.

This museum/memorial to Paul Gauguin, the French artist who lived in the Mataiea district from 1891 until 1893, owns a few of his sculptures, woodcarvings, engravings, and a ceramic vase. It has an active program to borrow his major works, however, and one might be on display during your visit. Otherwise, the exhibits are dedicated to his life in French Polynesia. It's best to see them counterclockwise, starting at the gift shop (which sells excellent prints and reproductions of his works). The originals are in the first gallery. An interesting display in the last gallery shows who owns his works today. The museum has a lagoonside restaurant, although most visitors have lunch at the nearby Restaurant du Musée Gauguin, at PK 50.5.

The museum is adjacent to the lush Harrison W. Smith Jardin Botanique (Botanical Gardens), which was started in 1919 by Harrison Smith, an American who left a career teaching physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and moved to Tahiti. He died here in 1947. His gardens, which now belong to the public, are home to a plethora of tropical plants from around the world. This is the wettest part of Tahiti, so bring an umbrella.

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