Faber Members get 10% off their first order

Wild Thing: A Life of Paul Gauguin

Sue Prideaux

A vital re-examination of the trailblazing and controversial artist Paul Gauguin, by the prize-winning author of I Am Dynamite!

£12.99
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780571365944
Date Published
05.06.2025
Delivery
All orders are sent via Royal Mail and are tracked: choose from standard or premium delivery.
Summary

A TIMES, DAILY TELEGRAPH, SPECTATOR, ECONOMIST, NEW STATESMAN AND TLS BOOK OF THE YEAR

LONGLISTED FOR THE WOMEN’S PRIZE FOR NON-FICTION 2025
WINNER OF THE POL ROGER DUFF COOPER PRIZE 2025
SHORTLISTED FOR THE BAILLIE GIFFORD PRIZE FOR NON-FICTION 2024
WINNER OF THE FRANCO-BRITISH SOCIETY LITERARY AWARD 2024

A vital re-examination of the trailblazing and controversial artist Paul Gauguin – and the first full biography in over thirty years – written by the award-winning author of I Am Dynamite!: A Life of Nietzsche.

‘Scintillating.’ FINANCIAL TIMES
‘Immaculate.’ NEW STATESMAN
‘Phenomenal.’ PROSPECT
‘A heroic rehabilitation.’ THE TIMES

Paul Gauguin is chiefly known as the giant of post-Impressionist painting whose bold colours and compositions rocked the Western art world. It is less well known that he was a stockbroker in Paris and that after the 1882 financial crash he struggled to sustain his artistry, and worked as a tarpaulin salesman in Copenhagen, a canal digger in Panama City, and a journalist exposing the injustices of French colonial rule in Tahiti.

In Wild Thing, the award-winning biographer Sue Prideaux re-examines the adventurous and complicated life of the artist. She illuminates the people, places and ideas that shaped his vision: his privileged upbringing in Peru and rebellious youth in France; the galvanising energy of the Paris art scene; meeting Mette, the woman who he would marry; formative encounters with Vincent van Gogh and August Strindberg; and the ceaseless draw of French Polynesia.

Prideaux conjures Gauguin’s visual exuberance, his creative epiphanies, his fierce words and his flaws with acuity and sensitivity. Drawing from a wealth of new material and access to the artist’s family, this myth-busting work invites us to see Gauguin anew.

Critic Reviews

Scintillating . . . As a man, as an artist, Gauguin was more than one thing, and Prideaux colourfully fleshes out his story with nuance and detail.

Financial Times
Critic Reviews

This detailed biography complicates our perception of the bad boy of French art and illuminates his fraught friendship with Van Gogh . . . Prideaux examines the facts and contexts of the painter’s South Sea life in greater detail than before, while refusing to begin to judge any of those choices . . . [she] lets him construct his own epitaph: “virtue, good, evil are nothing but words, unless one takes them apart in order to build something with them.”

Observer
Critic Reviews

An immaculate biography: even handed, scholarly, comprehensive and historically informed.

Michael Prodger, New Statesman
Critic Reviews

A brilliantly readable and compassionate study of Gauguin – not just as a painter, sculptor, carver and potter, but as a human soul perpetually searching for what is always just out of reach.

Artemis Cooper, Spectator
Critic Reviews

This sympathetic biography is a heroic rehabilitation . . . It is undeniable that Prideaux, who has also written about Nietzsche, Strindberg and Munch, is one of the finest biographers working today. Quite apart from possessing reserves of sympathy, she also has a feel for place, gleaned from visits to Gauguin’s many adopted homelands.

The Times
Critic Reviews

As an art-critic and cultural historian Sue Prideaux is thoughtful and knowledgeable. As a biographer she is witty and bold. She writes with panache about the artist’s prosperous years and with unshockable sympathy about his hard times. A scintillating account of a richly complicated life.

Lucy Hughes-Hallett
SuePrideaux

Sue Prideaux’s first biography Edvard Munch: Behind the Scream (2005) won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize. Strindberg: A Life (2012) won the Duff Cooper Prize and was shortlisted for the Samuel Johnson Prize. I Am Dynamite!: A Life of Friedrich Nietzsche (2018) was awarded the Hawthornden Prize and was The Times Biography of the Year.

Read More
SuePrideaux
Sue Prideaux