Answer :

- All fauvists used exaggerated colors.
- All fauvists considered color to be the most important element of the painting - the subject of the painting was secondary.
- It was well known that fauvists never mixed colors - they used "pure" colors and applied them in thick strokes.
- Vincent Van Gogh is the most well known fauvism artist.
-Fauvism never developed into a real movement such as Impressionism or Surrealism, but grew from the work of several acquaintances and friends who shared common ideas.
- Most people disliked the style.
- By 1908 most artists moved away from the style.
 All fauvists used exaggerated colors.- All fauvists considered color to be the most important element of the painting - the subject of the painting was secondary.- It was well known that fauvists never mixed colors - they used "pure" colors and applied them in thick strokes.- Vincent Van Gogh is the most well-known fauvism artist.-Fauvism never developed into a real movement such as Impressionism or Surrealism but grew from the work of several acquaintances and friends who shared common ideas.- Most people disliked the style.- By 1908 most artists moved away from the style.
Explanation:

“Fauvism” was a derogative term used by its artists.

Louis Vauxcelles coined the term throughout the 1905 Salon d’Automne. The name stems from the French word fauves, which means “wild beasts”.
2. Fauvism, within the strictest sense, isn't really a movement.


The Fauves were, however, loose cluster painters galvanized by the Post-Impressionists. All were French and plenty of were students of Symbolist painter Gustave Moreau.
Fauvism’s foremost goal is to represent the individual expression.

Artists used colors to project their personal mood towards a theme instead of realism. A tree could also be blue, the sky could also be orange and a face could also be inexperienced.

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