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168开奖官方开奖网站查询:Impressionist & Modern Art

Fauvism: 7 Things You Need to Know

By Sotheby's

Fauvism was the first avant-garde art movement of the 20th Century. Spearheaded by a trio of young, Paris-based painters – Henri Matisse, André Derain and Maurice de Vlaminck – it was characterised by intense, expressive, non-naturalistic colour, aꦏlong with loose brushwork and simplified forms. 

Active from around 1905 to 1910, the Fauvists drew on – and advanced – several, recent currents of art🐭꧒: chiefly that of the Impressionists, Pointillists, Gauguin and Van Gogh, who refused to use colours in a way that literally corresponded to the subjects they were describing.

...when i put down a green, it doesn't mean grass; and when I put down a blue, it doesn't mean the sky"
Henri Matisse

As Mat🃏isse put it, "when I put down a green, it doesn't mean grass; and when I put down a blue, it doesn't mean the sky''. Colour, in short,🐈 was completely set free. 

Other Fauvi🍒sts of note included Char🔥les Camoin; Henri Manguin; Kees van Dongen; Georges Braque (who’d go on to co-found Cubism with Pablo Picasso); Othon Friesz; Jean Puy; Raoul Dufy; and Georges Rouault.

1. Wild Beasts: The movement's name derives from the French word for wild beast – fauve – and was coined by the stunned art critic, Louis Vauxcelles, when writing a review of the Autumn Salon exhibition in Paris in 1905. Seeing a Quattrocento-style sculpture displayed in the same room as eye-popping paintings by Matisse, Derain&nbဣsp;et al, he said, was like witnessing "Donatello chez les fauves" (Donatello among wild b🌞easts). The label stuck, and Fauvism was born.

2. A Chance Meeting: The story of Fauvism starts with the chance meeting (and subsequent friendship) of Derain and Vlaminck in 1900 –𓂃 after a train they were both on derailed outside Paris, forcing all passengers to get out and walk. Also crucial was the summer (of 1905) that Derain and another friend – Matisse – spent together in the Mediterranean fishing port of Collioure, in the south of France. There they painted a number of the works which would feature in that year's Autumn Salon.

HENRI MATISSE, WOMAN WITH A HAT, 1905. SAN FRANCISCO MUSEUM OF MODERN ART. © PHOTO SCALA, FLORENCE.

3. Woman with a Hat: As it had been for the Impressionists, landscape scenes were highly popular with the Fauves – who set about painting Paris, its suburbs, Normandy, the Côte d'Azur and London, among other places. Perhaps the movement's first, major work, though, was a portrait: Matisse's Woman with a Hat (unveiled at the 1905 Autumn Salon and the🦩se days seen in the ).

In it, Matisse rendered his wife Amelie with red hair, a green nose, blue cheeks, and a hat that looked as if it had a flower bed on top of it. Bourgeois sensibilities were offended, one critic saying of the work: "a pot of paint has been flung in the public's face". Woman with a Hat was swiftly purchased, however, by Amer🦂ican collectors, Leo🌼 and Gertrude Stein, who'd go on to become loyal patrons of Matisse's work.

4. Matisse and Derain: Of all the Fauve artists, Matisse is by far the most famous today. However, in terms of contribution to the mᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚovement, Derain, was equally as important. He painted two of Fauvism’s landmark series: one of the River Thames, dไuring a visit to London; and another of the French village of L'Estaque, near Marseilles.

ANDRÉ DERAIN, THE TURNING ROAD, L'ESTAQUE, 1906. MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS, HOUSTON. © PHOTO SCALA, FLORENCE.

5. Advances in Colour: Fauvism was only made possible by advances in industrial manufacturing in the 19th Century, which created newඣ and brighter-coloured paint pigments. The group often used these straight from the tube, without mixing – which is to say, in the strongest possible form – in defiance of Academy practice and, indeed, of Western artistic convention generally.

6. Revolutionary Art: Even though the Fauvists made revolutionary art, it's fair to say they didn't have the personalities of 🐼"wild beasts". Before becoming a painter, Matisse was a lawyer, for example, while Derain was an engineer. The only member who came close to being an anarchist was Vlaminck, who insisted he "wanted to burn down the École des Beaux-Arts with [his] cobalts and vermillions".  

7. The Path to Abstraction: Giv✨en the brilliant colours and spont🏅aneous brushwork, the movement on which Fauvism had the greatest impact was probably German Expressionism: in its two forms, The Blue Rider and Die Brücke. 

However, by subordinating everything – including the realistic depiction of subjects – t﷽o the interplay of colours, the Fauves also opened the way to abstraction.

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