“…when i put down a green, it doesn’t mean grass; and when I put down a blue, it doesn’t mean the sky”, Henri Matisse
At the dawn of the 20th century, Fauvism burst onto the art scene with an explosion of unrestrained colour. Henri Matisse and André Derain, the movement’s leading figures, rejected the muted tones and academic traditions of the past, instead using pure, unmixed colours straight from the tube. Their goal was not to imitate nature but to express its emotional impact through colour alone.
Colour as a means of personal expression
Matisse’s Woman with a Hat (1905) epitomised this liberation, depicting his wife in a riot of green, blue, and red tones that bore no relation to natural skin colour. Critics were scandalised, but Matisse saw colour as a means of personal expression rather than representation. Derain, in works like The Turning Road, L’Estaque (1906), took a similar approach, filling landscapes with fiery reds and electric blues, transforming ordinary scenes into something vibrant and dynamic.
Scots in on the act
Across the Channel, the Scottish Colourist J.D. Fergusson was deeply inspired by Fauvism. His Parisian paintings, such as La Terrasse, Café d’Harcourt (1908), reflect the same uninhibited joy in colour. He absorbed Matisse’s ideas but developed his own rhythmic, expressive brushwork, using colour to suggest light and movement rather than simply describe form.
Modern art changed forever
Fauvism was short-lived, but its radical use of colour changed modern art forever. By setting colour free from its descriptive role, Matisse, Derain, and Fergusson paved the way for Expressionism and beyond, proving that colour could be a language of pure feeling.
Broad Horizons 2
And today in Caernarfon, we see this freedom of expression in the original oil paintings by Dermod Ruddock. No more so than “A Puff of Smoke, Milngavie” after JD Fergusson with Ruddock’s unique style of using oil sticks to paint his rich textures with. Dermod Ruddock’s solo exhibition at Life: Full Colour art gallery runs from 5th April to 26th April 2025. We look forward to welcoming you to our historic venue on Stryd y Palas.
Sara McKee FRSA
Pink Haired Art Dealer