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Colour Rules OK

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Artists exhibiting in room 7 were Matisse, Derain, Vlaminck. Assistant = Dufy ... Complementary colours: pink/turquoise; orange/blue. Colour theory. Back to questions ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Colour Rules OK


1
  • Colour Rules! OK?

2
Fact File
When and where?
Why Fauves?
Which artists?
Colour and form
Click on the buttons to find out more
Web search
3
When and where?
  • 1905
  • Salon dAutomne, Paris
  • Artists exhibiting in room 7 were Matisse,
    Derain, Vlaminck
  • Assistant Dufy
  • Short-lived movement 1905 1908
  • Transitional stage for most of these painters

Woman with Hat, Matisse 1905
4
Four Fauves
Click on a picture to see more
5
Henri Matisse 1869 - 1954
  • Matisse was the leader of the Fauves
  • Colour was his passion throughout his life
  • He said

When I use a green it is not grass. When I use a
blue it is not sky.
Click to look more closely at the painting
Open Window, Collioure, 1905
6
Complementary colours pink/turquoise orange/blue
Open Window, Collioure, 1905
7
Colour theory
Complementary colours appear opposite each other
on the colour wheel e.g.red/green, blue/orange,
and violet/yellow. When juxtaposed with its
complementary, a colour seems brighter and more
vivid.The red in the two examples below is the
same.
  • Colour is a wavelength of light. We see blue
    because the surface we are looking at absorbs
    other wavelengths and reflects only the blue
    wavelength back to us.
  • The subtractive primaries also called pigment
    primariesare red, blue and yellow - or more
    correctly magenta, cyan and yellow.
  • When mixed they make black and when combined in
    pairs they form the additive primaries also
    called light primaries.

8
Maurice de Vlaminck 1876 - 1958
Landscape with Red Trees, 1907
Still Life, 1907
9
André Derain 1880 - 1954
Mountains at Collioure,1905
10
André Derain 1880 - 1954
Westminster Bridge,1906
11
Raoul Dufy 1877 - 1953
Chantilly, 1939
12
Why Fauves?
Cest Donatello dans la cage aux fauves!Louis
Vauxcelles, 1905
  • When the art critic Louis Vauxcelles saw their
    paintings in the Salon with a traditional
    sculpture of a boy in the middle he said that it
    was like a Donatello in the wild beasts cage.
    The name stuck and the room became known as the
    cage.
  • The sensational publicity made the artists famous
    overnight
  • Can you think of an artist or group of artists
    who have benefited from bad publicity in recent
    times in the same way?

Its Donatello in the wild beasts cage!
13
Colour and form
Why has Fauvism been called the first truly
abstract style?
  • Departure from reality of what is seen
    non-objective art
  • Non-naturalistic colours
  • Colour for colours sake
  • Flat colour no 3D shading or tonal modelling
  • Colour is the subject matter whether the painting
    is a landscape, portrait or still life
  • Details are edited out simplify, select
    modify from nature

The Dance, Matisse, 1910
14
Colour and form
Why has Fauvism been called the first truly
abstract style?
  • Experimentation with relationship of colours to
    each other
  • Pure, saturated colour straight from the tube
  • Colour mixed by the eye not on the palette
  • Colour rhythm movement
  • Colour emotional force
  • Colour creates light not imitates it
  • Shape pattern surface

The Dance, Matisse, 1910
Back to questions
Colour theory
15
Web search
When you have finished looking at the
presentation, choose one of the four artists and
find out how his work developed after Fauvism.
Use Google to start your search.
Matisse Portrait with Green Stripe, 1911
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