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Grid Drawing in the Negative (Unnatural Colors) Fauvism
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Grid Drawing in the Negative(Unnatural Colors)

Fauvism

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Fauvism

• Les Fauves (French for “the Wild Beasts”)• Fauvism was the first of the avant-garde movements

that flourished in France in the early 20th century– Avant-garde: New/unusual/experimental ideas

• Developed after Impressionism and Post-Impressionism• Very inspired by van Gogh and Seurat:

– Sometimes included components of Post-Impressionism, a melting pot of the techniques of Vincent van Gogh (squeezing paint right onto the canvas from the tube) and Georges Seurat (Pointillism)

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Vincent van Gogh, 1872, Age 19

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Vincent van Gogh; The Starry Night; 1889; Post-Impressionism; Oil on Canvas

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Georges Seurat

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Georges Seurat, A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of la Grande Jatte, 1884-1886 (have you ever seen Ferris

Bueller’s Day Off?)

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Fauvism

• Only lasted a few years (1904-1908)– This movement was more of a transitional

learning stage for artists– Eventually led to a regression back to the origins

of Cubism of Paul Cézanne, which led to THE Cubist movement (Picasso, etc.)• Revived interest in Paul Cézanne’s order/structured

vision of nature led artists to reject the turbulent emotionalism of Fauvism in favor of the logic of Cubism

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Paul Cézanne

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Paul Cézanne; Maison Maria on the way to the ChEteau Noir; c. 1895; Post-Impressionism; Oil on Canvas

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Pablo Picasso

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Pablo Picasso, Weeping Woman with Handkerchief; 1937; Analytic Cubism; Oil on Canvas

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Fauvism

• Wild brush strokes– Could see them, they weren’t hidden

• Wild colors/Bold colors/Unnatural colors – Often applied directly out of the tube/not mixed

with other colors = pure color• Simplification/abstraction of subject– Subjective response to nature

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Fauvism

• Leaders of the movement:– Henri Matisse (considered the more “controlled” Fauve)– André Derain

• Other Fauvists:– Kees van Dongen– Maurice de Vlaminck (considered a true Fauve in

personality and painting)– Charles Camoin– Jean Metzinger– Georges Braque (also became the cofounder of Cubism

with Picasso)

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Henri Matisse

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Portrait of Madame Matisse (The Green Line); Henri Matisse; 1905; Fauvism; Oil and Tempera on Canvas

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The Red Room; Henri Matisse; 1908; Fauvism; Oil on Canvas

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Woman with a Hat, Henri Matisse, 1905, Fauvism, Oil on Canvas

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Luxembourg Gardens; Henri Matisse; 1902-1903; Fauvism; Oil on Canvas

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Open Window, Collioure; Henri Matisse; 1905; Fauvism; Oil on Canvas

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André Derain

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Bridge over the Riou; André Derain; 1906; Fauvism; Oil on Canvas

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Charing Cross Bridge, London; André Derain; 1906; Fauvism; Oil on Canvas

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Henri Matisse; André Derain; 1905; Fauvism; Oil on Canvas

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Landscape Near Chatou; André Derain; 1904-1905; Fauvism; Oil on Board

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Mountains at Collioure; André Derain; 1905; Fauvism; Oil on Canvas

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The Turning Road, L'Estaque; André Derain; 1906; Fauvism; Oil on Canvas

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Kees van Dongen

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Gisele; Kees van Dongen; 1908; Fauvism; Oil on Canvas

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In the Plaza/Woman at the Balustrade; Kees van Dongen; 1911; Fauvism; Oil

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La Parisienne de Montmartre; Kees van Dongen; 1911; Fauvism; Oil on Canvas

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Le Coquelicot, "The Corn Poppy"; Kees van Dongen; c. 1919; Fauvism; Oil on Canvas

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Portrait of a Woman; Kees van Dongen; 1909; Fauvism; Oil on Canvas

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Portrait of a Woman; Kees van Dongen; Fauvism; Oil on Canvas

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Maurice de Vlaminck

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Restaurant de la Machine a Bougival; Maurice de Vlaminck; c. 1905; Fauvism; Oil on Canvas

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The River Seine at Chatou; Maurice de Vlaminck; 1906; Fauvism; Oil Canvas

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Charles Camoin

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Quai du port de Cassis; Charles Camoin; 1903; Fauvism; Oil on Canvas

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Jean Metzinger

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Jean Metzinger, c.1906, Femme au Chapeau (Woman with a Hat), Oil on Canvas

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Jean Metzinger, 1913, La Femme à l'Eventail (Woman with a Fan), Oil on Canvas

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Country Village; Jean Metzinger; 1916; Analytic Cubism; Watercolor

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Georges Braque

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Georges Braque, La Calanque, temps gris, 1907, Oil on Canvas

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Houses at L'Estaque; Georges Braque; 1908; Analytic Cubism; Oil on Canvas

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Assignment• Select a person to portray in your grid drawing• Instead of doing a positive portrayal, you will do a negative image,

meaning that:– In the dark areas, you will use light colors– In the light areas, you will use dark colors

• Medium: Colored Pencil• Layer colors using cross hatching

– Use colors, not just black and white!– This assignment will help you to understand the difference between light

colors and dark colors, and that ANY COLOR CAN BE EITHER DARK OR LIGHT!!!• Consider choosing a person who is known for having both positive and

negative attention from the public as a metaphor for drawing them in the negative

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Example of what “negative” looks like

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Example of what “negative” looks like

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Example of what “negative” looks like

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Example of what “negative” looks like

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OTMS Student Example:Negative vs. Positive

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OTMS Student Example:Negative vs. Positive

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OTMS Student Example:Negative vs. Positive

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OTMS Student Example:Negative vs. Positive

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OTMS Student Example:Negative vs. Positive

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My Example

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My Example + Color Inversion