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How the ‘Wild Beasts’ of Fauvism Took the Art World by Storm A new exhibition examines the short-lived movement—and sheds new light on its women members ...
Art & Exhibitions A New Show on Fauvism Is Challenging the Movement’s Reputation of Being a Boy’s Club by Shining a Light on Its Overlooked Women Members The exhibition shows that women were ...
The leaders of a short-lived but consequential art movement that flourished early in the 20th century take center stage at the Met Museum.
Movements such as Fauvism, Tonalism, and Rayonism left their mark on art history and deserve special recognition.
By 1908, the Fauvist movement had fizzled out, giving way to Abstract Expressionism, Cubism, and other avant-garde art movements.
We trace the brief yet rich life of Fauvism, an art movement led by Henri Matisse that forewent staid representation for sensation.
The room was nicknamed “la cage aux fauves” (“the cage of wildcats”). The nickname has stuck to that group of artists and extended to their important art-historical movement: Fauvism.
An art movement of "Wild Beasts" had a woman problem in more ways than one, writes Deborah Nicholls-Lee.
An exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art displays the vibrant works of the early 20th-century art movement’s two chief pioneers.