Edmund Dulac’s Tanglewood Tales: Jason Choosing Tiphys for the Voyage of the Argo Edmund Dulac’s illustration...
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The Red Sails (1905) by André Derain is a striking Fauvist seascape inspired by the Mediterranean coast, likely painted during his transformative summer in Collioure. The composition features boats with blazing red sails set against intensely colored water and shoreline. Derain abandons naturalistic hues in favor of bold, expressive contrasts—crimson, cobalt, and emerald—applied in confident, unmixed strokes. The simplified forms and flattened perspective heighten the decorative rhythm of the scene. This work exemplifies Fauvism’s radical commitment to color as an independent emotional force.
André Derain (1880–1954) was a central founder of Fauvism, working closely with Henri Matisse in the movement’s formative years. His early paintings are celebrated for their explosive palette and structural clarity, which challenged academic conventions. Though he later embraced a more classical style influenced by old masters, his Fauvist period remains his most influential contribution to modern art.
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