The Fauvist Movement

Fauvism In Art - Information on Fauvism

Art Pages:

Abstract Art Home
Online Art Gallery
Gallery Page 2
Gallery Page 3
About The Artist
Sales Information
Susana Garza Abstract Art
About Susana Garza
How To Buy Susana Garza Art
How To Sell Art
Modern Art Prints
Art Books
Modern Art Movements
Modern Art
Funny Stuff





Online Business Pages:

Make Your Own Website
Web Host Reviews
Cheap Website Hosting
Search Engine Optimization
SEO Tools Reviews
Blog To Create Income
How Do Websites Make Money




History of the Fauvist Movement (1898-1908)



Back To Modern Art Movements Home Page

The Fauvist Movement

Fauvist Movement - Maurice de Vlaminck

Fauvist Movement - Maurice De Vlaminck 'The Potato Pickers' 1905

The term 'Fauve' means 'wild beasts', and refers to how wild and violent these paintings must have seemed when first seen at the end of the nineteenth century. Fauvism in art meant paintings that used intense pure colours in a totally non-naturalistic way.

The Fauvist Movement was a form of expressionism and was characterised by paintings of landscapes or people where both forms and colours were distorted for the purpose of expressing something beyond the superficial image of the object being painted.

The name of Fauvism as an art movement was originally coined in 1905 when these artists first exhibited together in Paris. The name apparently comes from the occasion when the art critic Louis Vauxcelles, referring to a classical sculpture situated among the Fauvist paintings, called it "Donatello au milieu des fauves", meaning Donatello among the wild beasts.

Fauvism in art was characterised by the move away from the impressionist and post impressionist short brush-marks to more radical and bold distortions of form and areas of violent colour. The Fauvist movement rejected the idea of three dimensional space in paintings, preferring a two dimensional surface of intense colours and vigorous brush-marks.

The leading artists of the Fauvist Movement included Henri Matisse, Georges Rouault, Andre Derain, Maurice de Vlaminck and Raoul Dufy. Another key figure in the Fauve movement was Gustave Moreau, who was a professor at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris, and who taught Matisse, Roualt and others. It was his encouragement to think beyond the norms of tradition that led to these artists creating their Fauvist paintings.

Fauvist Movement - Henri Matisse - The Green Stripe

Fauvist Movement - Henri Matisse - 'Mme Matisse, or The Green Stripe' 1905







Already got a website? Found this useful? Add a link to me!

Does your website have a disclaimer? Download a Free Disclaimer here.



All images are copyright of Keith Garrow. They may not be downloaded, modified, altered or sold without the express written permission of the artist.

Back To Top Of Page