André Derain

André Derain (10 June 1880 – 8 September 1954) was a French artist, painter, sculptor and co-founder of Fauvism, together with Henri Matisse and Maurice de Vlaminck.

Quotes of André Derain

 * sorted chronologically, by date of the quotes of André Derain


 * There	is only	one kind of painting: landscape. It is the most	difficult. It has also,	I believe, the	most simple kind of composition. Because	no one can stop	us from	imagining the world in the way that pleases us most.
 * Quote from Derain's letter to Maurice de Vlaminck, c. 1906; as cited in 'Report: André Derain's 'Trees by a Lake', by Cleo Nisse and Francesca Whitlum-Cooper, p. 5


 * I have found a boat, small with two sails, that would make me happy. Unfortunately, I need one hundred francs.. ..and I haven't got it! If you want, I could give you two canvases which you could sell, just to make you some many and you could give me the hundred francs..  .Kahnweiler [Paris' art-dealer] is the only one who gives me money, and just what we need to live on.
 * Quote from Derain's letter, 23 August 1909 to Maurice de Vlaminck, in Lettres à Vlaminck, p. 205; as cited and translated in 'Report: André Derain's 'Trees by a Lake', by F. Whitlum-Cooper and Cleo Nisse, p. 10 - note 8

The Wild Men of Paris', 1910

 * Quotes from 'The Wild Men of Paris', by [[w:Gelett Burgess|Gelett Burgess] ], in 'The Architectural Record, Vol XXVII, May 1910, p. 406-407


 * What, after all, is a pretty woman? It's a mere subjective impression – what you yourself think of her. That's what I paint, another kind of beauty of my own.
 * p. 406


 * There is often more psychic appeal in a so-called ugly woman than there is in a pretty one; and, in my ideal, I reconstruct her to bring that beauty forth in terms of line or volume.
 * pp. 406-07


 * If I paint a girl in the sunlight, it's the sunlight I am painting, not the real girl; and even for that I should have the sunlight on my palette. I don't care for an accidental effect of light and shade, a thing of 'mere charm'.
 * p. 407


 * The Japanese see things that way. They don't paint sunlight, they don't cast shadows that perplex one and falsify the true shape of things. The Egyptian figures have simplicity, dignity, directness, unity; they express motion almost as if by a conventional formula, like writing itself, so direct it is. So I seek a logical method of rendering my idea.
 * p. 407


 * These Africans being primitive, uncomplex, uncultured, can express their thought by a direct appeal to the instinct. Their carvings are informed with emotions. So Nature gives me the material with which to construct a world of my own, governed, not by literal limitations, but by instinct and sentiment.
 * p. 407

Quotes about André Derain

 * sorted chronologically, by date of the quotes about André Derain


 * In the years that followed [i.e. 1905 onwards], Derain made a great series of compositions with life-size figures. Some of them he exhibited in the ['Salon des] Indépendants' – a bullfight, a painting with bathers. The bathers were luckily bought and remain preserved for us. Derain burnt all the others in 1908, you see. Not even photographs of them are in existence. Thus the most important original material for the investigation of his development in 1907 is missing.. .[During the 1905–1907 period] he pursued an entirely different path.
 * Quote by Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler, 1920; in his monograph André Derain, Leipzig, 1920, p. 5
 * Around 1908 Derain dropped the use of bright unbroken colors of Fauvism, like Maurice de Vlaminck did


 * Neither Derain, nor myself, were what was conveniently called in this period the bohemians, the bad men: we were simply nonconformists, the outsiders
 * Quote of Maurice de Vlaminck, c. 1929; as cited in Derain et Vlaminck: 1900-1915, by Jacqueline Munck and Maïthé Vallès-Bled; catalogue of Lodeve Museum, 2001, p. 24 - ISBN 10: 8820214903 / ISBN 13: 9788820214906


 * [K]nowing both [ Picasso and Derain], I feel personally (though I should like to express it as tentatively and hesitatingly as possible) that Derain, by pushing along the road which Picasso pointed down only to turn aside, has arrived at a weightier, more moving conception of pictorial expression.
 * Quote of Roger Fry, in Picasso' in Reed - A Roger Fry Reader, p. 344; as cited in 'Report Derain', by F. Whitlum-Cooper and Cleo Nisse, p. 16 - note 30