
GOLDBERG Itzhak, LABRUSSE Rémi, KREBS Sophie, MUNCK Jacqueline.
The Fauve Years.
Pierre Gianadda Foundation/Museum of Modern Art of Paris.s
Regular price
€35,00
N° d'inventaire | 29463 |
Format | 22 x 24 |
Détails | 227 p., illustrated, paperback. |
Publication | Paris, 2023 |
Etat | Nine |
ISBN | 9782884431774 |
In the summer of 2023, the Pierre Gianadda Foundation will have the privilege of exhibiting some 80 works, mainly from the Fauvist collections of the Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris.
Colour taken to its peak
The Foundation's walls will be adorned with expressive colors, landscapes brought to their maximum intensity and enhanced tones.
Fauvism: the first movement of the 20th century
The phrase hits the mark and Fauve becomes the eponym of Fauvism, recognized as the first movement of the 20th century. Paris at the time attracted artists from all over Europe like a magnet, and it was in this climate of an art metropolis that this young generation of painters trained at the École des Beaux-Arts or in free studios led this innovative fight for a revolutionary aesthetic. Alongside this first core of Fauves, who between 1905 and 1908 painted in Collioure, Saint-Tropez and l'Estaque, were joined by young painters from Le Havre: Émile Othon
Friesz, Raoul Dufy, Georges Braque, then Kees Van Dongen, Pierre Girieud, all of whom participated in this liberation of tones. Other painters can be linked to these artists, such as André Valtat, Jean Metzinger, Robert Delaunay, Étienne Terrus, Maurice Marinot, and the young Auguste Herbin, due to their proximity to key moments in the evolution of Fauvism. Picasso, two of whose works will be exhibited at the Foundation in 2023, established close contacts with the Fauves.
Colour taken to its peak
The Foundation's walls will be adorned with expressive colors, landscapes brought to their maximum intensity and enhanced tones.
Fauvism: the first movement of the 20th century
The phrase hits the mark and Fauve becomes the eponym of Fauvism, recognized as the first movement of the 20th century. Paris at the time attracted artists from all over Europe like a magnet, and it was in this climate of an art metropolis that this young generation of painters trained at the École des Beaux-Arts or in free studios led this innovative fight for a revolutionary aesthetic. Alongside this first core of Fauves, who between 1905 and 1908 painted in Collioure, Saint-Tropez and l'Estaque, were joined by young painters from Le Havre: Émile Othon
Friesz, Raoul Dufy, Georges Braque, then Kees Van Dongen, Pierre Girieud, all of whom participated in this liberation of tones. Other painters can be linked to these artists, such as André Valtat, Jean Metzinger, Robert Delaunay, Étienne Terrus, Maurice Marinot, and the young Auguste Herbin, due to their proximity to key moments in the evolution of Fauvism. Picasso, two of whose works will be exhibited at the Foundation in 2023, established close contacts with the Fauves.
Colour taken to its peak
The Foundation's walls will be adorned with expressive colors, landscapes brought to their maximum intensity and enhanced tones.
Fauvism: the first movement of the 20th century
The phrase hits the mark and Fauve becomes the eponym of Fauvism, recognized as the first movement of the 20th century. Paris at the time attracted artists from all over Europe like a magnet, and it was in this climate of an art metropolis that this young generation of painters trained at the École des Beaux-Arts or in free studios led this innovative fight for a revolutionary aesthetic. Alongside this first core of Fauves, who between 1905 and 1908 painted in Collioure, Saint-Tropez and l'Estaque, were joined by young painters from Le Havre: Émile Othon
Friesz, Raoul Dufy, Georges Braque, then Kees Van Dongen, Pierre Girieud, all of whom participated in this liberation of tones. Other painters can be linked to these artists, such as André Valtat, Jean Metzinger, Robert Delaunay, Étienne Terrus, Maurice Marinot, and the young Auguste Herbin, due to their proximity to key moments in the evolution of Fauvism. Picasso, two of whose works will be exhibited at the Foundation in 2023, established close contacts with the Fauves.