, Journal sérieux'', 1899.
Louvre, Cabinet des dessins Oviri has long blonde or grey hair reaching to her knees. Her head and eyes are disproportionately large, while the aperture at the back of her head resembles a vaginal orifice. She holds a
wolf cub to her hip, a symbol of her indifference and wild power. It is not clear whether Oviri is smothering or hugging the cub, Art historians including Sue Taylor suggest the second animal may represent Gauguin. The association between the woman and a wolf stems from a remark
Edgar Degas made defending Gauguin's work at the poorly received 1893
Durand-Ruel exhibition, when Degas quoted
La Fontaine's fable
The Dog and the Wolf, which is usually taken as implying that freedom should not be exchanged for comfort or financial gain: "You see, Gauguin is the wolf." In
Oviri, the mature wolf, the European Gauguin, perishes while the whelp, the Gauguin of Tahiti, survives. ,
Borobudur The Tahitian myths had largely disappeared by Gauguin's time (he based his own accounts on other sources without acknowledgement), as had most artefacts associated with that culture. His representation of
Oviri is largely a work of imagination, informed by a collection of what he described as his "little world of friends" and which he took with him to Tahiti on his first visit. These included
Odilon Redon's
lithograph La Mort, photographs of subjects such as
a temple frieze at
Borobudur,
Java, and an
Egyptian fresco from an 18th dynasty tomb at
Thebes. Other sources that have been suggested include an
Assyrian relief of
Gilgamesh clutching a lion cub now in the
Louvre, and a
Majapahit terracotta figure from the
Djakarta museum. Oviri's head seems based on mummified skulls of chieftains in the
Marquesas Islands, whose eye sockets were traditionally encrusted with mother-of-pearl and worshiped as divine. Elements of her body may draw from
Borobudur images of
fecundity. Thus life and death were evoked in the same image. In a letter to Mallarmé trying to raise a public subscription to purchase the work, Morice titled the sculpture
Diane Chasseresse ("Diana the Huntress"), an allusion to the ancient Greek goddess
Diana of the hunt, moon and childbirth. He made the same reference in his poems on
Oviri. Barbara Landy interprets the life and death theme as indicating Gauguin's need to abandon his civilised ego in a return to the natural state of the primitive savage. The work is related to the 1889 ceramic
Black Venus, which shows a woman kneeling over a severed head resembling the artist.
Nancy Mowll Mathews believes the creatures in her arms and at her feet are actually foxes, animals Gauguin had used in his 1889 wood carving
Be in Love, You Will Be Happy and in his 1891 Pont-Aven oil painting
The Loss of Virginity. In an 1889 letter to
Émile Bernard, he described the
Soyez amoureuses fox as an "Indian symbol of perversity". There is a long tradition in Asian folklore of foxes having the power to transform into women (for example in Japanese
Yōkai or
Kitsune folklore). Gauguin depicts the
Oviri figure in at least one drawing, two watercolour transfer
monotypes and two woodcuts. It is possible that the woodcuts were created in Pont-Aven in the summer of 1894; before the ceramic. The last to appear is probably the drawing in what is apparently the first issue of Gauguin's
Papeete broadsheet
Le Sourire "(The Smile: A Serious Newspaper)" published between August 1899 and April 1900. It was accompanied by the inscription "Et le monstre, entraînant sa créature, féconde de sa semence des flancs généreux pour engendrer Séraphitus-Séraphita" (
And the monster, embracing its creation, filled her generous womb with seed and fathered Séraphitus-Séraphita). Séraphitus-Séraphita is an allusion to
Honoré de Balzac's novel
Séraphîta which features an
androgynous hero. In this first issue of
Le Sourire, he reviewed a local
Maohi author's play by that dealt with incest (among other themes), and invokes 'Séraphitus-Séraphita'. The review congratulated the play's "savage author" and ended with a plea for women's liberation through the abolition of marriage. The accompanying drawing is distinctly androgynous. File:Hero lion Dur-Sharrukin Louvre AO19862.jpg|Relief from a façade in the throne room of
Sargon II (
Khorsabad, 713–706 BC), showing an Assyrian hero
grasping a lion and a snake, Louvre File:Paul Gauguin, 1889, Pot Anthropomorphe, glazed stoneware, 28.4 cm, Musée d'Orsay, Paris.jpg|
Pot Anthropomorphe, 1889, glazed stoneware,
Musée d'Orsay File:Paul Gauguin, 1893-95, Objet décoratif carré avec dieux tahitiens, terre cuite, rehauts peints, 34 cm, Musée d'Orsay, Paris.jpg|Paul Gauguin, 1893–95,
Objet décoratif carré avec dieux tahitiens,
terracotta, Musée d'Orsay File:Paul Gauguin - Oviri - Watercolor monotype F 31.jpg|
Oviri, 1894, watercolour
monotype,
Fogg Museum, Boston ==Interpretation==