Maurice de Vlaminck was a key exponent of the Fauvist movement, his textural, richly coloured paintings rivalled only by the likes of Matisse and Derain. Certain themes and forms are taken up again ...
After discovering the art of Maurice de Vlaminck at the 1905 Salon des Indépendants, Ambroise Vollard visited Vlaminck's workshop in 1906 and bought all the paintings which were in the artist's ...
How did André Derain, Maurice de Vlaminck, Andre Dunoyer de Segonzac and Henri Matisse ... sold for cash or possibly destroyed in a bonfire of degenerate art, were they and their works then banned in ...
A show at the Grey Art Museum re-establishes Berthe Weill as a guiding light of the Parisian avant-garde. Her rediscovery has ...
The infamous 1905 iteration featured paintings by Henri Matisse, André Derain, Albert Marquet, Maurice de Vlaminck, and Kees van Dongen. In response to the prismatic exuberance of their colorful ...
Growing up in Nepal, Gaurab Thakali was more interested in outdoor activities than pursuing artistic hobbies. He would more likely be found running or swimming before taking up skateboarding, and ...
A new art season is starting in Europe ... near Berlin, is honouring Maurice de Vlaminck, an important figure of the Fauvist movement. This exhibition provides an opportunity to rediscover ...
Fauvism was a French art movement which followed Impressionism. Artists such as Henri Matisse, André Derain and Maurice de Vlaminck used wild, expressive and exaggerated colour in their paintings ...
Following Maurice de Mauriac and Racquet’s Rallymaster III collaboration in July, the two parties have unveiled a new co-creation that celebrates their mutual passion for tennis. Aptly named ...
Maurice de Vlaminck was a key exponent of the Fauvist movement, his textural, richly coloured paintings rivalled only by the likes of Matisse and Derain.