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Gauguin, Paul - Vision of the Sermon (Jacob Wrestling with the Angel) (1888) - Postcard Bundles with Envelopes Included

Gauguin, Paul - Vision of the Sermon (Jacob Wrestling with the Angel) (1888) - Postcard Bundles with Envelopes Included

Regular price $30
Sale price $30 Regular price
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Printify

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$30
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Description

Something Worth Keeping

Most things you receive in the mail go directly in the recycling. These don't. The art travels; to someone else's hands, their studio pinboard, their cubicle at work. A memento of you for them to use to Make Center for themselves. 

Like the Victorian language of flowers, fine art speaks with layered meaning. Send some portable intentional vibes to your chosen family, to let them know they’re in your inner circle of thoughts.

5x7 Horizontal or Vertical, Matte finish, envelopes included. Bundles of 10, 30, or 50.

Care Instructions

Wipe gently with a soft dry cloth, working from the center outward.

Art Story

The Death of the Eyeball

By 1888, the Parisian art scene was a suffocating machine of light and logic. Gauguin traveled to Brittany to find meaning in art, and ended up finding a living ghost. In the rugged, salt-sprayed landscape of Pont-Aven, he found a people who still believed in the invisible, and Gauguin painted their collective imagination, his way. Impressionism had become too scientific, obsessed with how light hits a haystack. Gauguin wanted to know how a soul hits a canvas instead.

Vision of the Sermon is the moment the umbilical cord to objective reality finally snapped for Gauguin. The scene is split by a brutal, diagonal tree trunk borrowed straight from Japanese woodblock prints. On one side, you have the Breton women in their stiff white caps and black wool. On the other, a biblical wrestling match between Jacob and an angel, in the background. The ground beneath them isn't grass. It’s a flat, screaming field of vermilion red.

This is a mindscape, not a landscape. Gauguin is painting the collective hallucination of a congregation after a particularly fire-and-brimstone sermon. The red isn't a color, it’s the heat of belief. When he tried to give this masterpiece to the local church in Nizon, the priest actually turned him away. The church couldn't handle a vision that didn't follow the representational rules for shadows and dirt. Gauguin didn't care. He had killed the observation of nature to make room for the imagination.

References

Gauguin, Paul. Letters to Nanette. Edited by Amy S. Wyckoff. Museum of Modern Art.

Thomson, Belinda. Gauguin. Thames & Hudson. 1987.

Silverman, Debora. Van Gogh and Gauguin: The Search for Sacred Art. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. 2000.

Bretell, Richard. The Art of Paul Gauguin. National Gallery of Art. 1988.

Shipping & Satisfaction

Shipping & Satisfaction

Free shipping on all US orders, always.

Every order ships to US addresses at no additional cost. Allow up to 10 business days from fulfillment for delivery.

Your investment is protected. Material or print defects are replaced or fully refunded — no friction, no negotiation. If the work doesn't resonate aesthetically within 5 days of receipt, reach out and we'll make it right.

One note worth reading before you order: because every piece is produced on demand, we're unable to accommodate returns for incorrect size selections. Consult the product specs before you commit — they're there to make sure what arrives is exactly what you envisioned.

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