Exhibition Archive
Andre Derain, The London Paintings
27 October 2005 to 22 January 2006

André Derain
(1880-1954) came to London in 1906 to paint a series of works that
would rival Claude Monet’s earlier celebrated views of the
city. The result was an extraordinary group of large-scale paintings
which overthrew conventions with their unrestrained use of pure colour
and exuberant brushwork. This was the first exhibition dedicated
to these masterpieces of 20th century art and showed 12 of the most
important works from galleries around the world together in one room.
When the Parisian art dealer Ambroise Vollard dispatched Derain to London in
March 1906 the young artist had much to live up to. The previous year, Derain
emerged as one of the most radical artists in Paris following the now famous
exhibition at the Salon d’Automne where Derain and Matisse had first revealed
their groundbreaking new approach to painting. Characterised by the liberation
of colour from its representational function, fused with an overwhelming sense
of creative energy, their work represented what Derain described as, “a
complete renewal of expression”. Such was their break with conventions
of painting that the critic Louis Vauxcelles branded the group Fauves,
or wild beasts. Accordingly, Derain’s London paintings offer an unprecedented
vision of the city. Whereas earlier artists such as Monet and James Abbott McNeill
Whistler had painted London through the haze of its rising blue-grey mist and
smog, Derain offers us exhilaratingly bright, multicoloured views of the city,
showered in golden light or else empathically constructed through bold contrasts
of colour.

Derain chose a variety of London subjects, including emblematic views of historical
sights, such as the Palace of Westminster, and activity in the city’s parks
and great streets. Like Monet before him, he concentrated on the river, producing
no less than six views of Tower Bridge, one of the most popular tourist attractions
in the city. However, Derain was also fascinated by the working life of the river,
particularly the Pool of London, with its busy international commercial traffic,
wharves and industrialised banks. Recent research into Derain’s previously
little-known London sketchbook and his letters allow us to track the artist’s
movements through the city as he sketched rapidly along the river, either in
among the docks or else looking down from one of the bridges. It also reveals
that he spent time in the British Museum studying the ethnographic collections
which were a source of inspiration for his Fauve paintings.

Vollard bought Derain’s London series in its entirety, 30 paintings
in total of which 29 are known today, but did not exhibit them as a
group. Although some have been included in general exhibitions of Fauvism,
they have never before been the specific focus of a museum exhibition.
By displaying 12 of the major paintings from the series, André Derain:
The London Paintings aimed to reassess his remarkable achievement.
Itl considered the background to the commission, including Derain’s
response to Monet, the searching experimental qualities of the technique,
the choice of subject matter and the evidence provided by the sketchbook
and letters. The exhibition was accompanied by a fully illustrated
catalogue, reproducing all 29 paintings in the series together with
essays by Jacqueline Munck, curator of the Musée d’Art
Moderne de la Ville de Paris, John House, the Courtauld Institute’s
Walter H. Annenberg Professor and Nancy Ireson a specialist on early
twentieth century French art. Organised at the Courtauld Institute
Gallery, in close proximity to many of Derain’s river views,
this exhibition provided a significant contribution to our understanding
of this pivotal moment in the history of twentieth century art.


