Bronze Sculpture for Sale
Fauvism established itself as one of the first major breakaway movements of modern art, emerging in France at the beginning of the twentieth century around a small group of artists who made pure color, liberated from any descriptive constraint, the founding principle of their practice.
First presented at the 1905 Autumn Salon, where critic Louis Vauxcelles ironically coined the term “Fauves" (“wild beasts") in response to the chromatic intensity of their paintings, the movement brought together artists as diverse as Henri Matisse, André Derain, Maurice de Vlaminck, and Raoul Dufy. They shared the conviction that color should free itself from its descriptive role and become an autonomous language capable of conveying emotion and visual energy.
Drawing inspiration from Paul Cézanne, Paul Gauguin, and Vincent van Gogh, whose chromatic explorations had paved the way for a painting of sensation rather than imitation, Fauvism pushed this liberation to its most radical point, applying bold, unmixed colors directly onto the canvas in compositions where line and form dissolve in favor of unprecedented chromatic power.
Although the movement lasted only a few years before its members pursued more personal artistic paths, its influence on twentieth-century art was considerable, paving the way for Expressionism, lyrical abstraction, and all artistic practices that would make color a central field of experimentation.
On Artsper, this selection brings together contemporary works that extend this Fauvist legacy through chromatic intensity, compositional freedom, and the celebration of color as a language in its own right.
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