Open every day from 10am to 5pm
Artwork
Joseph Dufour & Cie, Jean-Gabriel Charvet

Les Sauvages de la mer Pacifique (The Native Peoples of the Pacific Ocean)

circa 1804

Les Sauvages de la mer Pacifique (The Native Peoples of the Pacific Ocean)

Artwork Information

'The purpose of the enterprise is to please the eye and to excite the imagination', wrote Joseph Dufour in the promotional prospectus published with this panoramic, or scenic, wallpaper. The complete 'wallpaper without ends' extended to 10.8 metres and contained views of exotic Pacific peoples and events, based on the accounts of European explorers from the previous century. This small section shows a wrestling match in Tongatapu, Tonga, part of a fête witnessed by Captain James Cook on his third and last voyage to the Pacific. Local 'royalty' and the King and Queen of 'nearby' St Christine in the Marquesas Islands are among the guests. Dufour describes the scene: 'The king of Tongatabo who is pictured in this scene under a banana tree with one of his favourite wives is a tall and handsome figure with the most dignified, elegant war-like costume imaginable . . . The dress of his favourite seems made on the model of those which covered the beautiful forms of the goddesses of mythology. It is the natural taste of these Indian women that determine the grace of this costume'. Les Sauvages de la mer Pacifique was first exhibited in Paris at the Exposition des Produits de l'Industrie, 1806, where a critic described it as 'most curious'. (from The Guide, 2001)

Title
Les Sauvages de la mer Pacifique (The Native Peoples of the Pacific Ocean)
Production Date
circa 1804
Medium
woodblock and gouache on paper
Dimensions
2200 x 1800 mm
Credit Line
Mackelvie Trust Collection, Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, purchased 1995
Accession No
M1995/39
Copyright
No known copyright restrictions
Department
International Art
Display Status
Not on display

More by Joseph Dufour & Cie (1)

View All
Les Sauvages de la mer Pacifique (The Native Peoples of the Pacific Ocean)

Les Sauvages de la mer Pacifique (The Native Peoples of the Pacific Ocean)

circa 1804

Artwork
Explore Connections (10)
Battles

Battles

140 Artworks

Bays (bodies of water)

Bays (bodies of water)

193 Artworks

Sportsmen

Sportsmen

21 Artworks

Sports

Sports

25 Artworks

Trees

Trees

1738 Artworks