Take part in the European Scientific Photography Contest 2015!
Fauvism
[edit / edit wiki text] Material from Wikipedia the free encyclopedia
Go to: navigation, Search
Fauvist landscape by A. Morer
Fauvism (from the French fauve — wild) is a trend in French painting of the late XIX early XX century.
The name was assigned to a group of artists whose paintings were presented at the autumn salon of 1905.
The paintings left the viewer with a sense of energy and passion, and the French critic Louis Vosel called these painters wild animals (fr. les fauves).
This was the reaction of contemporaries to the exaltation of color that struck them, the "wild" expressiveness of colors.
So a random statement was fixed as the name of the entire current.
The artists themselves have never recognized this epithet over themselves.
Merodac Jeannot.
"The Yellow Dancer" (1912)
The leaders of the direction can be called Henri Matisse and Andre Derain
Also among the supporters of this direction are such creators as Albert Marquet, Charles Camoine, Louis Valta, Henri Evenepoul, Maurice Marino, Jean Puy, Maurice de Vlaminck, Henri Mangin, Raoul Dufy, Othon Friez, Georges Rouault, Kees van Dongen, Alice Bailly, Georges Braque, Georgette Agutt and others.
The distinctive features of the Fauvists include the dynamism of the brushstroke, spontaneity, the desire for emotional power.
The power of artistic expression was created by a bright color, purity and sharpness, contrast of colors, intensely open local colors, a comparison of contrasting chromatic planes.
Fauvism is characterized by a sharp generalization of space, volume and the entire drawing, reducing the form to simple outlines while rejecting chiaroscuro modeling and linear perspective.
The group made itself known at the Paris exhibitions of 1905-1907, but soon the association broke up, and the creative paths of the participants diverged.
Painting[edit / edit wiki text]
Fauvism in painting is characterized by the brightness of colors and the simplification of form.
As a direction, it did not last long from about 1898 to 1908.
The Fauvists were inspired by the post impressionists Van Gogh and Gauguin, who preferred a subjective intense color to a soft and natural color, characteristic of the Impressionists.
The head of this school is considered to be Matisse, who made a complete break with optical color.
In his painting, a woman's nose could well be green, if it gave her expressiveness and composition.
Matisse claimed: "I donot draw women; I draw pictures."
Literature[edit / edit wiki text]
The Fauvists.
From the history of French painting of the XX century, Brodskaya N. V., Aurora, Parkstone, 1996 Goryacheva T. V. Lessons of Fauvism / / Arthronika.
— 2000.
— № 2.
Links[edit / edit wiki text]
There is an article "fauvism"in the Wiktionary
There is a page on the topic in Wikicitatnik
Fauvism
Fauvism
This is a blank article on art.
You can help the project by completing it.
[hide] Post Impressionism at the end of the XIX century.
Neo Impressionism · Intimacy · Pointillism · Cloisonism · Synthetism · "Nabi" · Art Nouveau The beginning of the XX century.
Fauvism · "Blue Rider" · "Bridge" · Expressionism · Cubism · Activism
<img src="//ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:CentralAutoLogin/start?type=1x1" alt="" title="" width="1" height="1" style="border: none; position: absolute;" />
Source — "https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Фовизм&oldid=68944119"
Category: Fauvism
Hidden categories: Articles with links to the Wiktionary Articles with links to the Wikicitatnik Incomplete articles on art
Navigation
Personal Tools
You did not introduce yourself to the system Discussion Contribution Create an account Log in
Namespaces
Article Discussion
Variants
Views
Read Edit Edit wiki text History
More
Search
Navigation
Title Page Heading Index A Z Selected articles Random article Current Events
Participation
Report a bug Community Portal Forum Recent edits New pages Help Donations
Tools
Links Here Related Edits Special Pages Permanent Link Page Information Wikidata element Quote Page
Print/Export
Create a book Download as PDF Printable version
In other projects
Wikicitatnik Wikimedia Commons Wikidata
In other languages
Alemannisch Aragonés العربية Azərbaycanca Belarusian Bulgarian Bosanski Català Čeština Dansk Deutsch Ελληνικά English Esperanto Español Eesti Euskara فارسی Suomi Français Galego עברית Hrvatski Magyar Հայերեն Bahasa Indonesia Ido Kazakh Italiano 日本語 ქართული 한국어 Lietuvių Latviešu Malti Nederlands Norsk bokmål Norsk nynorsk Occitan پنجابی Polski Português Română Scots Srpskohrvatski / srpskohrvatski Simple English Slovenčina Srpski Slovenscina / srpski Svenska தமிழ் ไทย Tagalog Türkçe Ukrainian Tiếng Việt 中文
Edit links
Last modified on this page: 16: 06, March 1, 2015.
The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike license; in some cases, additional conditions may apply.
For more information, see Terms of use.
Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the non profit organization Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.
Contact us
Privacy Policy Wikipedia Description Disclaimer Developers Mobile Version
