Matisse: periode feuve
Fauvism was the first of the avant-garde movements that flourished in France in the early years of the twentieth century. The Fauve painters were the first to break with Impressionism as well as with older, traditional methods of perception. Their spontaneous, often subjective response to nature was expressed in bold, undisguised brushstrokes and high-keyed, vibrant colors directly from the tube. Henri Matisse (French, 1869–1954) and Andre Derain (French, 1880–1954) introduced unnaturalistic color and vivid brushstrokes into their paintings in the summer of 1905, working together in the small fishing port of Collioure on the Mediterranean coast. When their pictures were exhibited later that year at the Salon d’Automne in Paris (Matisse, The Woman with a Hat), they inspired the witty critic Louis Vauxcelles to call them fauves (“wild beasts”) in his review for the magazine Gil Blas. This term was later applied to the artists themselves.
Данные книги
Париж
1956
15 страниц
Открытый доступ
Нет
Да
709.201 Mat
1
- Franz Marc1987
- Пикассо и окрестности: Сборник статей2006
- Brancusi New York: 1913–20132013
- Edward Hopper and the American Imagination1995
- Письма к друзьям2015
- Rene Magritte (Or: The Rule of Metaphor)2018
- Пабло Пикассо. «Любительница абсента»2019
- Hans Richter: Encounters2013
- Diego Rivera: Murals for the Museum of Modern Art2011
- Пауль Клее2007
- The Picasso Book2010
- Otto Dix — Das Graphische Werk aus der Schenkung Karsch/Nierendorf an die Berlinische Galerie2001