Fauvism Les Fauves (Wild Beasts) • Fauvism was the first twentieth
Transcription
Fauvism Les Fauves (Wild Beasts) • Fauvism was the first twentieth
Fauvism Les Fauves (Wild Beasts) • Fauvism was the first twentieth-century movement in modern art. Inspired by the examples of van Gogh, Gauguin, Seurat, and Cézanne. • It grew out of a loosely allied group of French painters with shared interests. Henri Matisse was eventually recognized as the leader of Les Fauves, or "The Wild Beasts”. • Matisse like the group emphasised the use of intense color as a vehicle for describing light and space as well as for communicating the artist's emotional state. • Fauvism proved to be an important movement that came before Cubism and Expressionism and an inspiration for future types of abstraction. Beginnings Gustave Moreau (1826-1898) was a Symbolist painter and teacher at the Ecole Des Beaux Arts. He was a liberal teacher who encouraged his students to branch out and experiment. Matisse and Rouault were the two most famous students who became a part of the Fauves movement. ‘ Salome’ by Moreau, oil on canvas, 1876 ‘ St George’ by Moreau, oil painting, 1890 He taught his students, ‘You must think about colour, have imagination with it.. If you have no imagination you’ll never paint beautiful colour. You must copy nature and imagination- that is what makes an artist. Colour must be thought, dreamt and imagined’. Post-Impressionists such as van Gogh, Gauguin, Seurat, and Cézanne were considered the leaders in avant-garde art. Collectively, their experiments with paint application, subject matter, form and, most importantly, pure unmixed colour, were the seeds that brought forth Fauvism. Fauvism,Wild beasts,(1900-20) Madame Matisse (Green Stripes), 1905 Matisse by Derain, 1905 Estaque, Winding Road by Andre Derain 1920 ‘Old King’, oil, by Rouault,1916 ‘ A Day in the Country’ by Maurice de Vlaminck (1876-1958), 1905 Portrait by Kees Van Dongen Key Ideas • Fauvism never developed into a clear movement in the manner of Impressionism or Surrealism. It grew from the work of several friends that were artists who shared common enthusiasms. Many, such as Matisse, Marquet, and Rouault, had been pupils of the Symbolist Gustave Moreau, and admired his emphasis on personal expression. • The Fauves generally rejected the fantastic imagery of the Post-Impressionists, and returned to the more traditional subjects once favoured by the Impressionists, such as landscapes, cityscapes, and scenes of bourgeois leisure. • Rather than extend the scientific investigations of artists such as Seurat and Signac, Fauves such as Matisse and Derain were inspired by them to employ pattern and contrasting colours for the purposes of personal expression. • The Fauves became renowned for using pure and unmixed colors, which they intensified further by applying paint in thick daubs and smears. • Although the Fauves were not well-versed in academic colour theory, they sought out unique and unnatural colour combinations in their paintings without trying to paint realistically; in this sense, colour existed on the canvas as an independent characteristic, with its own rhythm and mood. Henri Matisse Develops His Style Ww Orpheus, by Guatav Moreau 1865 The Dinner Table, Matisse, 1897 The Moorish Floor, Matisse, 1920-22 Matisse, the principal founding artist of Fauvism, was like many of his contemporaries a great admirer of the Symbolist painter Gustave Moreau. In the closing years of the nineteenth century, Moreau's teachings that personal expression was among the most important attributes of a great painter were very influential for Matisse, who turned away from using subtle hues of mixed paints and began applying bright, unmixed color to his paintings as a means of personal expression. Matisse was also inspired by Moreau’s oriental style of painting whether it was women’s clothes or in the interior of a painting. Fauvism was influenced by Impressionism La Grande Jette by George Seurat • Still Life with Pitcher and Fruit c. 1898 by Henri Matisse Considerable importance to the young Matisse were the applied techniques and visual style of Georges Seurat who invented Pointillism. • Although Matisse did not apply Pointillist theory to his own work, Seurat's unique application of tiny dots of paint in varying colors to create a harmonious visual tone was something that fascinated Matisse. • It led him to develop "colour structure," or large areas of colour that served to create a deliberate, decorative effect and sense of mood. Henri Matisse + André Derain create their first Fauve paintings in the south of France In 1905, Matisse invited André Derain to visit him in the fishing port town of Collioure in the south of Francwhere Matisse had made his home after leaving Paris. The two men spent the summer working and maturing their styles and technique. While a great many paintings were produced during that time, a stand-out piece is Matisse's Olive Trees, Collioure (1905) wherein the artist delicately applied small daubs of pure color to create a composition that is both representational and abstract. When considering Matisse's early body of work as well as that of other Fauvist artists, this painting can be considered the first definitively Fauvist work of art. Matisse's Olive Trees, Collioure (1905) Derain's Olive Trees, Collioure (1905) Les Fauves ( The Wild Beasts) At the Salon d'Automne, 14th of November 1905, held an exhibition at the Grand Palais in Paris. Included were several works by Matisse, Derain, Maurice de Vlaminck, and Albert Marquet. Their work received a luke warm response from the public, the paintings on display were quite distinctive, particularly in the use of bold, vivid color and heavy brush work. Les Fauves ( The Wild Beasts) name was created by a critic at this exhibition. Press clipping of the Les Fauves exhibition at Salon d’Autome on the left Matisse's ‘Open Window’, Collioure was shown in the exhibition, in a newspaper and here in colour. Fauvism and Cubism An important motif in Matisse's early work , unlike the other Fauves, was his depiction of faces. His wife in The Green Line, aka Mme. Matisse (1905), and Blue Nude (1907), which clearly indicate a fascination with African sculpture. Pablo Picasso (twelve years Matisse's junior), who incorporated African and Iberian masks into his own work, including a number of self-portraits and most notably the iconic Les Demoiselles d'Avignon (1907) was influenced by Matisse’s portraits. Fauvism to Cubism The Great Trees, L’ Estaque, 1906 "Olive Tree Near L'Estaque”, 1906 Road near L'Estaque, 1909 Georges Braque was a practicing Fauve for a short but significant period. He began to favour a more restricted color palette. He focused more on subtle gradations of colour and scale, much in the style of Cézanne. This led Braque to fill his canvases with an abundance of shapes and forms, as with his 1908 work Road near L'Estaque. Fauvismwas a crucial precursor to the artist's development of the Cubist style. Henri Matisse, from "Notes of a Painter" Cubism Cubism is an early 20th-century style and movement in art, especially painting, in which perspective with a single viewpoint was abandoned and use was made of simple geometric shapes, interlocking planes, and, later, collage. Bathers c. 1890 by Paul Cézanne Les Demoiselles d‘Avignon by Picasso, 1907 One of the most influential art styles of the 20th century, Cubism was created by Pablo Picasso (1881-1973) and Georges Braque at the beginning of the 20th century in France. It began in 1907 with Picasso’s unveiling of his painting Les Desmoiselles d’ Avignon, which showed influence of primitive African and Spanish sculpture and Cézanne’s innovative ideas. Analytical Cubism After seeing Les Demoiselles d‘Avignon for the first time, Braque stopped trying to depict, as Cézanne and Picasso had done , but painted objects form several viewpoints on one canvas. Soon, Braque and Picasso began working together . ‘The Bay from L'Estaque’, 1886, by Paul Cézanne Cézanne influenced Braque’s landscapes. When Matisse made a quick sketch of one of Braque’s landscapes to show how it was, ‘made up of little cubes’, as a way of describing Braque’s painting style. An critic referred to this type of painting as ‘Houses in l'Estaque’, 1908, by Braque Cubism and the name stuck. Anaylitical Cubism Pablo Picasso (Spanish, 1881-1973). Still Life with Compote and Glass, 1914-15. Oil on canvas. 25 1/4 x 31 1/2 in. (64.1 x 80 cm) In the analytic phase (1907–12) the cubist palette was severely limited, largely to black, browns, grays, and off-whites. In addition, forms were rigidly geometric and compositions subtle and intricate. Cubist abstraction as represented by the analytic works of Pablo Picasso, Georges Braque, and Juan Gris intended an appeal to the intellect. The cubists sought to show everyday objects as the mind, not the eye, perceives them—from all sides at once. The trompe l'oeil element of collage was also some times used. Juan Gris 1887-1927 Voilin and Chequered board 1913 The Spanish artist Juan Gris (his real name was José Victoriano González-Pérez), a friend and neighbour of Picasso in Paris, was the best of these and he refined the cubist vocabulary into his own instantly recognizable visual language. He is often referred to as 'the third cubist'. Synthetic Cubism Synthetic Cubism took the movement to its extreme -- all sense of three-dimensionality disappeared. Instead of breaking down and reassembling facets of the original image, it was a matter of synthesizing entirely new, expansive structures. Sometimes the subject was recognizable as a unified structure; at other times, it was hardly legible. Instead, artists started using collage methods; overlapping various media; and including words, graphics and patterns, to achieve a desired thematic result. Colours were much brighter, geometric forms were more distinct, and textures began to emerge with additives like sand, paper or gesso. During 1912-13, Picasso and Braque began painting papiers collés- a method of pasting coloured or printed pieces of paper onto canvas. ‘Still life with Chair Caning’ by Pablo Picasso 1912 The trompe l'oeil element of collage was also some times used. Georges Braque, 1908-1963, was the son of a painter-decorator and, from 1899 to 1901, was apprenticed in that trade. Many of the techniques and effects thus learned – wood-graining, marbling, lettering, wall-papering, mixing sand with paint to achieve a variety of textures – he subsequently brought into fine art painting. Futurism (1909-16) While the Cubists were working in France, in Italy, a group of artists were discussing other artistic ideas. From 1909 to 1916, the Futurists as they called themselves, produced art that they believed shrugged off Italian traditions of art and looked to the future, embracing what they perceived as the glorious new modern technology. Left: Giacomo Balla, "Dynamism of a Dog on a Leash" (1912). Right: Marcel Duchamp, "Nude Descending a Staircase No 2" (1912) The group wanted to embrace new ideas and destroy the past through war. They described war as ’the world ‘s only hygiene’. They also had ideas about glorifying violence. Artist were encouraged to find ways of representing dynamism and motion in their art. All machines and new technology and even war, fast and modern and worth depicting in fine art, not least because they thought that it would help dispense with social prejudices. As well as modern technology, industrialisation, the Futurists were inspired by Expressionism, Neo-Impressionism and Cubism. Glorifying violence The Futurist’s created a Futurist Manifesto, a document declaring the groups style, which praised: youth, machines, movement, power and speed in 1909. The Charge of the Lancers, by Umberto Boccioni 1915 Rhythm and sequence Velocity and vitality was what Futurists aimed to express. Futurists painted painted with rhythmical, repetitive lines broken sequences or blurred forms, demonstrating a familiarity with photography and the recent discovery of x-ray. Rejecting the past The artist thought that museums should be burned down and academies of art . The Futurists saw themselves as revolutionaries. ‘Unique Forms of Continuity in Space’,1913 by Umberto Boccioni ‘Music’ by Luigi Russolo, 1911 The effects of war The Futurists underestimated the futility of war or the devastating power of the machine gun, which they had revered. Two of the group Boccioni and the Futurist architect Antonio Sant’Elia were both killed in action in 1916 and Russolo was badly wounded. Gino Severini, War train, Gino Severini, 1915 Vorticism C R W Nevinson 1914 The Arrival, C R W Nevinson, 1914 A Battery Shelled,Wyndham Lewis,1919 Dazzle Ship in a Dry dock, Edward Wadsworth, 1919 Vorticism was a short-lived modernist movement in British art and poetry of the early 20th century. It was partly inspired by Cubism. While Vorticists shared the Futurists’ fascination with dynamism and industry, they rejected the Futurists’ celebration of industrial advancement. Vorticism, aiming to capture movement within the image, “proud of its polished sides,” sought the stillness at movement’s center (like a vortex), whereas Futurism sought movement itself.