Fauvism in 4 Minutes: The Wild Beasts of Art 👹
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- Опубликовано: 14 окт 2021
- The early 20th-century movement called FAUVISM started in 1905 in France and lasted for just a couple of years. The best-known fauvist art was created by three amazing artists: Henri Matisse, Andre Derain, and Maurice de Vlaminck.
The movement was short-lived but had a huge impact on the art of the 20th century. So let's find out why it's so special!
#Fauvism #Art #CuriousMuse
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Story: Dea Cvetkovic
Voice: Naomi Madelin
Copyrighting: Brandon Marcus
Production: IK Video Prod
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Curious Muse brings the best of arts and culture stories from around the world. Our stories will make you feel curious, learn new things and have a good time too. We cover a wide range of topics - visual and performing arts, literature and history, architecture and design, fashion and more - explained in a cool, digital way.
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Just discovered this channel. Amazing content! Subscribed and liked
Thank you, Vetle! 🙏🏻
This short video helped me understand - in four short minutes - the history of fauvism in a concise and interesting way. Thank you!
Glad to hear! 😍 We have a playlist of all major art movements in case you want to know about others too 👍🏻
You deserve more views
😍 can’t agree more
This is my very favorite school. I am happy to see this short clip. It deserves much more attention for it's influence on later movements. Thank you
Thank YOU ☺️🙏🏻
The French painter Georges Braque was an influential member of this movement before joining Picasso and Grís as a founding father of Cubism.
Useful synopsis and introduction to Fauvism. I love the bold colours and loose brush strokes.
Thank you for watching! ☺️🙏🏻
I am grateful for this channel. Simply amazing!
Thank you for watching! 😍
Short and sweet, perfect!
Thanks I struggle to teach this once in art school but this video has done great
I've been having a hard time on how to explain this in my report. Thanks to this video, I now can explain it to my classmate. ❤❤❤
Glad to hear it - thank you!
Great video! I have one small issue though, at 1:40 you say “fauvists ditched the realistic values” - I think in painting, “value” usually refers to how light or dark a colour is. In that sense I think the fauvists often did stick with realistic values, which is how they got away with so many fantastical colour combinations. Our eye can recognize the shape of a building or a face because of how the different values of the highlights and shadows are represented accurately even when the colours aren’t strictly accurate. I think there are lots of fauvists paintings where, if you photographed them in black and white, you’d see that the values are actually pretty realistic. If the fauvists had completely ditched realistic light & dark along with colour, their subjects would be pretty much unrecognizable!
This is totally just my interpretation, I could be wrong! Anyway, thanks for making a great video, I love fauvism! You can really see how these painters have had a huge impact on art even to this day.
Very interesting perspective, thank you for sharing. Indeed, it was short-lived but had a huge impact over many art styles. Yet, it's not as widely known as some other movements, so hopefully we've done some justice to it. ☺️
I think in this case the speaker was referring to fidelity to realistic colors as a value, not the term used to describe a quality of pigment.
I like the blue.
love fauvism ❤️
💕
Fauvism has enchanted me since I was a very young painter
Hii! I love this channel! GREAT way to teach some very interesting topics! I would loooove to know more about the mavo movement in japan, the mavoist. Great content! Subscribed and liked!
😍😍😍
Artist Marc Chagall was also part of the Fauvism movement.
From my own experience I wonder if in all instances the artist was making colors up. It has been said of my colors "they are really weird, but they work!" They seem weird because the viewer doesn't see the world that way, but it works because I do. If I paint a road purple or blue, it is because in a certain light it appears that way to me, but others see only black.
I am a photographer and in anything that seems only black or gray actually has a dominant hue of some color in it. So what seems to you as true may just be that, but a bit more desarurated
I wish we knew!
i'm new to art and i like matisse's works.
Thank you!!!❤
I loved your comment about how to
brighten a rainy day with Fauvism!!!
☔🖼
😍
Good video but wish you would also tell their color theory. Like how did they do this swaping of bright colors with that of realistic colors!!
I love your channel! Thanks!
🥳
I am going to try this technique
Really helpful video❤
this channel is severely underrated
Thanks for watching ☺️👍🏻
Thank youu! I've learned a lot ❤
Welcome! 😍🙏🏻
Rik Wouters is my absolute favorite!❤❤❤
Love all your videos.
Thanks so much!
Henrey matisse and his colorsss
This video is great! I really love fauvism. Thank you!
Wonderful! What do you like about Fauvism?
Thanks. I think i like fauvism as long as it's pleasing to the eye. some of it seems to be a bit wild for me. i don't know much about it at this point.
Some of it can be wild indeed ☺️
My favourite fauvist is Kalina Taseva from Bulgaria!!!
Thanks for sharing - we'll check out their works!
Kandinsky!!!! my fav
Today , I appreciated 8 more Fauvist paintings( also recommended 😁 ) on top of your recommended works:
Henri Matisse : < The Woman with the Hat, 1905> , ,
André Derain: , < Big Ben, 1906> ,
Maurice de Vlaminck: < Restaurant de la Machine à Bougival, around 1905 > ,
Do you think I have good taste in wild beasts?🤔
Well, I am not in a position to please you by commenting on any of them..
I am a novice appreciator , you know..
I'll come back equipped with more extensive knowledge some day or other.😎
I also enjoyed this video very much. Thanks.
Great paintings indeed! 😍 and yes, you do have good taste!
Can you summarize in words in this story fauvism pleasee🙏
...I'm looking forward for "Renaissance in a minute and aa half"...
Want to know the relation between fauvism and African art.
In a way we are all fauvists wheather we practice art professionally or not. We as humans colour everything we see through our eyes and more importantly through our minds that really see. And each one sees uniquely through our own colours of experience and personality. Fauvists we are. What say.
So true! Colours 🎨 make our life so beautiful!
Ana Leovy is my favorite Fauvist.
👌🏻
Thanks. What is the difference between fauvism and expressionism?
They are quite different in many ways: countries where artists were from, ideas they expressed on the canvas etc. Check out our video on Expressionism and you will see that.
@@CuriousMuse thanks. ✌️
I think expresionism is more focused on brush strokes and well.. expression as a whole. May it be in color, but also in other painting techinques. But, fauvism mostly focuses on showing values of light in color and its own inherent light values. Fauvism is more of an evolution on impressionism that took on a new spin, and expressionism focuses on the subject(artist)s intention, and not the object of painting. So any techniques used in expressionism are in purpose of representing and emphasizing the subjects vision of the object, and the fouvists is an exploration of the object by the subjects knowledge of techniques
@@ajmosutra7667 appreciate your helpful comment.
Make videos on " De Stijl " and " expresnism "
OMG, you are reading our mind! Our next videos are going to be them! 👍🏻
👌💕
My favorite fauvist? Pixel artists.
Tell me, what did you gain from this video?
And what did you gain? ☺️
Would you classify Obama's official painting as Fauvist?
Which one? 🤔
I think he's referring to the Hope & Change lithograph. It seems to be at the confluence of Fauvism and Andy Warhol.
What, is pop art came from this?
Not really as there’s ~50 years between these movements. With roots in Neo-Dada and other movements that questioned the very definition of “art” itself, Pop Art was birthed in the United Kingdom in the 1950s amidst a postwar socio-political climate where artists turned toward celebrating commonplace objects and elevating the everyday to the level of fine art.
@@CuriousMuse ah I see, thank you so much. It's very kind of you for explaining.
Gaugin
In short these are people who can't paint but our modern society is obsessed with everything old
😅 perhaps!
Oh look, someone who doesn’t know anything about art!
Well, most of the avantgarde(ahead of its time, pioneers) in modern art whom invented the movemebts like impressionism or ready made(conceptual art) were very controversial and deliberately opposed the rules of the exhibition and the rules of the academia.
Fauvism does use bright color as it's point of expression and the artist aren't reluctant that way. However, to me in most cases I find Fauvism ( a lazy movement) these artist are lacking study and much talent. Matisse, I like his stuff to a degree, and Kandinsky but they are nothing like post impressionist or impressionist imo, latter leading to abstract expressionism (Pollack and Rothko) and pop art (Warhol, Basquiat, Herring, etc) which to me almost altogether is college art. Never the less your taste is your taste. Even Chagall and then Surrealism doesn't wet my palette.
Thank you for sharing such an interesting point of view 👍🏻
ok lol
who is disliking my comment
such a horrid movement
Why?
I got a art appreciation test tmr this I hope this can help me fr🙏🙏
Good luck!!! 🤞🏻
I really could never understand what is the criteria to call a painting that looks childish a masterpiece, I think that's just overpriced objects for rich people to laundering money.
OMG! You saw someone say money laundering….. so you repeat money laundering….. though abstract art ain’t my thing….. you can put these pieces next to a kindergarten class and there is no comparison…..