FAUVISIM
Fauvism was an art style that took use of vivid color. Its paintings and artworks used pure, brilliant hue that seemed to have been directly splashed from the paint tubes or pallets, creating a sense of color explosion on the canvas. The art style flourished in France at the start of the twentieth century. Although the art genre was short lived, it had an impact of influence on the following artists. Fauvist works were invested with a strong expressive reaction to the subjects portrayed. Fauvist artworks were admitted to a salon, or a museum where numerous artworks of different styles meet to form an environment infused with people who bond over an appreciation of art. Critic Louis Vauxcelles, because of the violence visible in the explosion effect of color splashed on to the canvas so aggressively, he called the artists of the works "fauves" which means "wild beasts". From this, the Fauvists attained their name. For most of these Fauvist artists, Fauvism was a transitional learning stage in art. A later new vision of nature's order and structure soon drove them to reject the idea of Fauvism and instead favor a Cubism approach.