SOLD
Country of origin: France
Medium: Oil on canvas
Signed: No visible signature
Dated: c. 1905
Condition: Very good original condition
Size: 32.00" x 24.00" (81.3cm x 61.0cm)
Provenance: From a private french collection - belived to have originally been part of a triptych
c. 1910
Oil on panel
£28,000.00
View piece
Appareilleurs
by Maximilien Luce
1955
Oil on original canvas
£16,500.00
View piece
Salon des arts menagers – 1955
by Jacques Martin-Ferrieres
1881
Oil on canvas
£79,500.00
View piece
Le peintre en plein air
by Charles Theophile Angrand
1924
Oil on paper laid on panel
£5,950.00
View piece
Dimanche
by Paul Elie Gernez
1932
Oil on board
£6,500.00
View piece
Evening in Paris
by Louis Hayet
c. 1900
Oil on panel
£2,550.00
View piece
Pierrot aux bonnet noir
by Armand Francois Henrion
1918
Oil on original canvas
£51,000.00
View piece
Portrait of a Girl
by Alfredo Guttero
1915
Oil on panel
£2,650.00
View piece
The Great War – Soldier & horse on a road
by Andre Devambez
1915
Oil on panel
£2,650.00
View piece
Le Café de la Place Blanche
by Elie Anatole Pavil
1903
Oil on board laid on canvas
£28,000.00
View piece
Le Manege
by Nikolai Aleksandrovich Tarkhoff
c. 1930
Oil on board
£4,950.00
View piece
Nu dans les nuages
by Albert BraÏtou-Sala
c. 1975
Oil on canvas
£8,950.00
View piece
Jeune bretonne dans l’atelier Dyf – Arzon
by Marcel Dyf
Fauvism is the style of les Fauves (French for "the wild beasts"), a group of early twentieth-century modern artists whose works emphasized painterly qualities and strong color over the representational or realistic values retained by Impressionism. While Fauvism as a style began around 1904 and continued beyond 1910, the movement as such lasted only a few years, 1905–1908, and had three exhibitions. The leaders of the movement were André Derain and Henri Matisse, whose members shared the use of intense color as a vehicle for describing light and space, and who redefined pure color and form as means of communicating the artist's emotional state.