Fauvism
noun /ˈfəʊvɪzəm/
/ˈfəʊvɪzəm/
[uncountable] (art- a style of painting that uses bright colours and in which objects and people are represented in a non-realistic way. It was popular in Paris for a short period from 1905.
野兽派,野兽主义(一种绘画风格,以鲜明色彩和非现实主义方式表现物体和人物,从 1905 年起在巴黎流行一时) 词源from French fauvisme, from fauve ‘wild beast’. The name originated from a remark of the French art critic Louis Vauxcelles at the Salon of 1905; coming across a quattrocento-style statue in the midst of works by Matisse and his associates, he is reputed to have said, “Donatello au milieu des fauves!” (“Donatello among the wild beasts”).