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FAUVISM

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Title: FAUVISM


1
FAUVISM
  • Wild Beasts

2
Fauvism
  • Between 1901 and 1906, several comprehensive
    exhibitions were held in Paris, making the work
    of Vincent van Gogh, Paul Gauguin, and Paul
    Cézanne widely accessible for the first time. For
    the painters who saw the achievements of these
    great artists, the effect was one of liberation
    and they began to experiment with radical new
    styles. Fauvism was the first movement of this
    modern period, in which color ruled supreme.

3
Fauvism
  • Fauvism, French Fauvisme, style of painting that
    flourished in France from 1898 to 1908 it used
    pure, brilliant color, applied straight from the
    paint tubes in an aggressive, direct manner to
    create a sense of an explosion on the canvas. The
    Fauves painted directly from nature as the
    Impressionists had before them, but their works
    were invested with a strong expressive reaction
    to the subjects they painted.

4
Fauvism
  • First formally exhibited in Paris in 1905,
    Fauvist paintings shocked visitors to the annual
    Salon d'Automne one of these visitors was the
    critic Louis Vauxcelles, who, because of the
    violence of their works, dubbed the painters "Les
    Fauves" (Wild Beasts).

5
Fauvism
  • The advent of Modernism if often dated by the
    appearance of the Fauves in Paris at the Salon
    d'Automne in 1905. Their style of painting, using
    non-naturalistic colors, was one of the first
    avant-garde developments in European art. They
    greatly admired van Gogh, who said of his own
    work Instead of trying to render what I see
    before me, I use color in a completely arbitrary
    way to express myself powerfully''.

6
Fauvism
  • The Fauvists carried this idea further,
    translating their feelings into color with a
    rough, almost clumsy style. Matisse was a
    dominant figure in the movement other Fauvists
    included Vlaminck, Derain, Marquet, and Rouault.
    However, they did not form a cohesive group and
    by 1908 a number of painters had seceded to
    Cubism.

7
Fauvism
  • Fauvism was a short-lived movement, lasting only
    as long as its originator, Henri Matisse
    (1869-1954), fought to find the artistic freedom
    he needed. Matisse had to make color serve his
    art, rather as Gauguin needed to paint the sand
    pink to express an emotion. The Fauvists believed
    absolutely in color as an emotional force.
    Color lost its descriptive qualities and became
    luminous, creating light rather than imitating
    it.

8
Fauvism
  • They astonished viewers at the 1905 Salon
    d'Automne the art critic Louis Vauxcelles saw
    their bold paintings surrounding a conventional
    sculpture of a young boy, and remarked that it
    was like a Donatello parmi les fauves'' (among
    the wild beasts). The painterly freedom of the
    Fauves and their expressive use of color gave
    splendid proof of their intelligent study of van
    Gogh's art. But their art seemed brasher than
    anything seen before.

9
Fauvism
  • The leader of the group was Henri Matisse, who
    had arrived at the Fauve style after careful,
    critical study of the masters of
    Postimpressionism Paul Gauguin, Vincent van Gogh,
    and Georges Seurat. Matisse's methodical studies
    led him to reject traditional renderings of
    three-dimensional space and to seek instead a new
    picture space defined by movement of color.
    Matisse exhibited his famous "Woman with the Hat"
    (SFMOMA) at the 1905 exhibition brisk strokes of
    color--blues, greens, and reds--form an
    energetic, expressive view of the woman. As
    always in Matisse's Fauve style, his painting is
    ruled by his intuitive sense of formal order.

10
Fauvism
  • Other members of the group included two painters
    from Chatou, France, André Derain and Maurice de
    Vlaminck, who, together with Matisse, formed the
    nucleus of the Fauves. Derain's Fauve paintings
    translate every tone of a landscape into pure
    colour, applied with short, forceful
    brushstrokes.

11
Fauvism
  • The Fauves represented the first break with the
    artistic traditions of the past. The movement's
    emphasis on formal values and expressive use of
    color, line, and brushwork helped liberate
    painting from the representational expectations
    that had dominated Western art since the
    Renaissance. Fauvism was the first explosive
    20th-century art movement.

12
Fauvism
  • Fauvism was for most of these artists a
    transitional, learning stage. By 1908 a revived
    interest in Paul Cézanne's vision of the order
    and structure of nature had led them to reject
    the turbulent emotionalism of Fauvism in favour
    of the logic of Cubism. Matisse alone pursued the
    course he had pioneered, achieving a
    sophisticated balance between his own emotions
    and the world he painted.

13
Henri Matisse
14
Self Portrait with Striped T Shirt 1906
15
Henri Matisse
  • An artist often regarded as the most important
    French painter of the 20th century. The leader of
    the Fauvist movement around 1900, Matisse pursued
    the expressiveness of color throughout his
    career.

16
Henri Matisse
  • While studying to become a lawyer, Henri Matisse
    felt the urge to painta feeling that completely
    changed his life. In the exhibition of 1905,
    Matisse exhibited shocking works with the Wild
    Beasts. He used intense colors and simplified
    complex subjects. This ability moved him to the
    forefront of Fauvism and he became spokesperson
    for the group. He wanted to express himself with
    simple color and shape rather than shading and
    perspective.

17
Henri MatisseMaster of Color
  • Matisse's artistic career was long and varied,
    covering many different styles of painting from
    Impressionism to near Abstraction. Early on in
    his career Matisse was viewed as a Fauvist, and
    his celebration of bright colors reached its peak
    in 1917 when he began to spend time on the French
    Riviera at Nice and Venice. Here he concentrated
    on reflecting the sensual color of his
    surroundings and completed some of his most
    exciting paintings.

18
Abstraction
  • Abstraction
  • Imagery which departs from representational
    accuracy, to a variable range of possible
    degrees, for some reason other than appear to be
    true or real. Abstract artists select and then
    exaggerate or simplify the forms suggested by the
    world around them.

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22
Henri Matisse
  • In 1941 Matisse was diagnosed as having duodenal
    cancer and was permanently confined to a
    wheelchair. It was in this condition that he
    completed the magnificent Chapel of the Rosary in
    Vence.

23
Woman with a Hat 1905
24
Woman with a Hat 1905
  • It is believed that the woman in the painting was
    Matisse's wife, Amelie.
  • It was exhibited with the work of other artists,
    now known as "Fauves" at the 1905 Salon
    d'Automne.
  • The pictures gained considerable condemnation,
    such as "A pot of paint has been flung in the
    face of the public" from the critic Camille
    Mauclair, but also some favorable attention. The
    painting that was singled out for attacks was
    Matisse's Woman with a Hat, which was bought by
    Gertrude and Leo Stein this had a very positive
    effect on Matisse, who was suffering
    demoralization from the bad reception of his
    work.

25
Salon dAutomne, ( French Autumn Salon)
exhibition of the works of young artists held
every fall in Paris since 1903.
  • The Salon dAutomne was established as an
    alternative to the conservative official Salon.
    It was also an alternative to the Salon des
    Indépendants, which was liberal but had a
    juryless policy that often led to mediocrity.
    The founders decided to form their own
    organization with the aims of welcoming any
    artist who wished to join, selecting a jury for
    exhibitions by drawing straws from the new
    groups membership, and giving the decorative
    arts the same respect accorded the fine arts.

26
Open Window 1905
27
Luxury, Calm and Pleasure 1904
28
  • Green Stripe (Madame Matisse)
  • 1905
  • In his green stripe portrait of his wife, he has
    used color alone to describe the image. Her oval
    face is bisected with a slash of green and her
    coiffure, purpled and top-knotted, juts against a
    frame of three jostling colors. Her right side
    repeats the vividness of the intrusive green on
    her left, the mauve and orange echo the colors of
    her dress. This is Matisse's version of the
    dress, his creative essay in harmony.

29
Green StripeMadame Matisse
  • Matisse painted this unusual portrait of his wife
    in 1905. The green stripe down the center of
    Amélie Matisse's face acts as an artificial
    shadow line and divides the face in the
    conventional portraiture style, with a light and
    a dark side, Matisse divides the face
    chromatically, with a cool and warm side. The
    natural light is translated directly into colors
    and the highly visible brush strokes add to the
    sense of artistic drama.

30
The Conversation 1909
  • Matisse's Fauvist years were superseded by an
    experimental period, as he abandoned
    three-dimensional effects in favor of
    dramatically simplified areas of pure color, flat
    shape, and strong pattern. The intellectual
    splendor of this dazzlingly beautiful art
    appealed to the Russian mentality, and many great
    Matisses are now in Russia. One is The
    Conversation (1909 177 x 217 cm (5 ft 9 3/4 in x
    7 ft 1 1/2 in)) in which husband and wife
    converse. But the conversation is voiceless.

31
The Conversation 1909
32
The Dance 1910
33
The Dance 1910
  • It was one of two monumental panel pictures
    created by the artist in 1910 for his principal
    patron, the Russian businessman Sergei Schukhin,
    who originally hung them on the staircase of his
    mansion in Moscow. Together with its companion
    piece, Music, the work can now be seen in the
    State Hermitage Museum in Leningrad.

34
The Dance
  • I like dance very much, Matisse said,
    explaining the genesis of this stark and brightly
    coloured depiction of naked, convulsively
    cavorting figures. Dance is an extraordinary
    thing life and rhythm. It is easy for me to live
    with dance. When I had to compose a dance for
    Moscow , I had just gone to the Moulin de la
    Galette on a Sunday afternoon.

35
The Dance
  • And I watched the dancing. I especially watched
    the farandole (a dance accompanied by pipe and
    tabor_ This farandole was very gay. The dancers
    hold each other by the hands, they run across the
    room, and they wind around the people who are
    standing around Back at home, I composed my
    dance on a canvas of four meters, singing the
    same tune that I had heard at the Moulin de la
    Galette, so that the entire composition and all
    the dancers are in harmony and dance to a single
    rhythm.

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The Red Studio 1911
  • Matisse gets his place in the timeline of
    painting because of his use of color. He did
    things with color no-one had before, and
    influenced many artists who followed. Matisse's
    Red Studio is important for its use of color and
    its flattened perspective, his altering of
    reality and our perception of space.

38
The Red Studio
  • Matisse didn't get the perspective "wrong", he
    painted it the way he wanted it. He flattened the
    perspective in the room, and altered it from how
    we perceive perspective with our eyes.
  • The question of getting perspective "right"
    applies only if you're trying to paint in a
    realist style, that is to create an illusion of
    reality and depth in a painting. If that's not
    your aim, then you can't get the perspective
    "wrong". And it's not that Matisse didn't know
    how to get it "right" neither he just chose not
    to do it that way.

39
Chapel of the Rosary
  • The Chapelle du Rosaire de Vence (Chapel of the
    Rosary), often referred to as the Matisse Chapel
    or the Vence Chapel, is a small chapel built for
    Dominican nuns in the town of Vence on the French
    Riviera. It was built and decorated between 1949
    and 1951 under a plan devised by Henri Matisse.
    It houses a number of Matisse originals and was
    regarded by Matisse himself as his "masterpiece."
    While the simple white exterior has drawn mixed
    reviews from casual observers, many regard it as
    one of the great religious structures of the 20th
    century.

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Three Great Murals
  • For the walls, Matisse designed three great
    murals to be made by painting on white tiles with
    black paint and then firing the large sections of
    tile. Each tile measures 12 in.2. Matisse was so
    crippled with ailments by this time that he could
    only work from a wheelchair, and he had a long
    stick with a brush strapped to his arm and pieces
    of construction paper placed on the wall. He then
    drew the images, which were transferred to tiles
    by skilled craftsmen.

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The Fall of Icarus 1943
45
Anfitrite 1947
46
Le Gerbe 1953
47
Matisses Paper Cuts
  • During the last fifteen years of his life, Henri
    Matisse developed his final artistic triumph by
    "cutting into color." The drama, scale, and
    innovation of Matisse's rare and fragile papiers
    coupes (paper cutouts) remain without precedent
    or parallel. His technique involved the freehand
    cutting of colored papers into beautiful shapes,
    which he then pinned loosely to the white studio
    walls, later adjusting, recutting, combining, and
    recombining them to his satisfaction.

48
Matisses Paper Cuts
  • The result created an environment that
    transcended the boundaries of conventional
    painting, drawing, and sculpture. Later, the
    shapes were glued to large white paper
    backgrounds for shipping or display. This group
    of cutouts represents one of the largest
    concentrations of these important works
    worldwide.

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