fauvism

IPA: foʊvɪzʌm

noun

  • An artistic movement of the last part of the 19th century which emphasized spontaneity and the use of extremely bright colors.
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Examples of "fauvism" in Sentences

  • Below, the photo gets the fauvism treatment by PhotoArtomation. com.
  • The "fauvism" effect we chose had a funky-but-fun effect that used bold colors and lines.
  • He was already anticipating the demise of cubism, futurism and fauvism though the latter in particular has a strong influence on his painting here.
  • The painting shocked the art world when it went on display that fall in Paris and launched a new movement called fauvism, from the French word for wild.
  • What he invented-with a little help from Andre Derain-in the summer of 1905 was fauvism: an emotion-charged method of separated brushstrokes in floral colors.
  • In 1963, Dufy's widow donated seventy of his works -- from his impressionist and fauvism periods to the end of his life -- to the Museum of Le Havre, now the Malraux Museum.
  • After coffee and candied cashews, the group retired to the screening room for Mr. Adams and Mr. Bolton's PowerPoint presentation on fauvism, the Ballet Russes and how wild-animal art influenced fashion and Cartier.
  • "Normandie Impressionniste" traces how such artists as Monet, Pissarro, Degas, Cassatt and Sisley developed their unique approach to painting and, in so doing, cleared the way for art of the twentieth century from pointillism to fauvism, from cubism to abstract expressionism.

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