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Andre
Derain

André Derain, a founding figure of Fauvism, is renowned for his vibrant use of colour and dynamic compositions that reshaped early 20th-century painting. If you’re looking for original André Derain prints and editions for sale or would like to sell, request a complimentary valuation and browse our network’s most in-demand works.

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Biography

Born in 1880 in Chatou, France, André Derain initially studied to become an engineer but shifted his focus to art in the late 1890s. He met Henri Matisse in Paris, together co-founding the Fauvist movement after enrolling at Académie Julian. Derain's early works, characterised by their bold colours and simplified forms, epitomised the radical break from traditional representation that Fauvism depicted.

After Fauvism, Derain continued to explore different styles, influenced by the works of Cézanne and Cubism. He briefly experimented with cubist techniques before reverting to a more classical style, focusing on traditional subjects such as still life, landscapes, and portraits. This stylistic shift reflected his desire to return to the classical traditions of painting.

Derain’s experimentation was short-lived, and by the 1920s, Derain had adopted a more traditional style, known as “return to order.” This change reflected a broader cultural movement of the time, seeking to restore classical principles after the upheaval of World War I. Derain drew inspiration from Renaissance art and classical antiquity, creating serene landscapes, portraits, and still lifes that showcased his remarkable technical skill and appreciation for form and composition.

His experimentation with Fauvism may have been short-lived, but his later works exemplified a mastery that placed him among the leading figures of 20th-century art. Derain's work during this period embodied a calm and balanced aesthetic, contrasting the explosive colours and bold forms of his earlier works.


A vibrant landscape featuring a wooded area with purple and green trees and peach-coloured grass. A white house with an orange roof is visible on the horizon. The bold non-naturalistic colours are applied in mosaic-like patches. The bare canvas is visible between the brushstrokes.

Arbres À Collioure © André Derain 1905

1. £14.5M for Andre Derain's Arbres À Collioure

Achieving Derain's current auction record at Sotheby's London in June 2010, this vibrant landscape exemplifies the revolutionary Fauve aesthetic that Derain developed during his pivotal summer in Collioure with Henri Matisse in 1905. The painting doubled the previous record for the artist and established the highest price ever paid for any Fauve painting. The explosive use of pure, unmixed colour applied in mosaic-like patches represents a radical departure from traditional representation, capturing the Mediterranean landscape through emotional and atmospheric rather than visual truth. This masterpiece was part of the legendary Vollard Collection, locked away in a bank vault after the dealer died in a mysterious car accident in 1939, and only discovered four decades later in 1979. The extraordinary auction result reflects both the work's exceptional quality and its significance as a cornerstone in the development of modern art.

A painting of fishing boats in a Mediterranean harbour. The water is rendered as a patchwork of blues, yellows, and turquoise; the shoreline is depicted in warm oranges and reds, and the boats are a mixture of both colour palettes. The sky suggests a sunset. Bare canvas is visible between the patches of colour.

Bateaux À Collioure © André Derain 1905

2. £9.5M for Andre Derain's Bateaux À Collioure

Selling at Sotheby's London in February 2018, this smaller format Collioure work captures fishing boats in the harbour of the Mediterranean village where Fauvism was born. The canvas showcases Derain's use of vibrant, non-naturalistic colour, with the water rendered in a patchwork of blues, yellows, and greens, while the boats and shore are depicted in terracotta oranges and reds. Created during the same transformative summer of 1905 as Arbres À Collioure (1905), this painting exemplifies the artistic freedom that Derain and Matisse discovered in the southern French fishing village. The work's significant appreciation in value - having previously sold at Christie's London in February 2011 for £5.2 million - demonstrates the intensifying collector demand for Derain's finest Fauve period works.

A painting of boats moored in harbour, looking back across the water towards the shore. The boats are typically pink and purple with light yellow sails. The water’s surface is a mosaic of blue and green individual brushstrokes, with exposed canvas between them creating the effect of bright reflected sunlight.

Barques Au Port De Collioure © André Derain 1905

3. £7.6M for Andre Derain's Barques Au Port De Collioure

Holding the record for highest value sale outside Europe, Barques Au Port De Collioure (1905) sold at Sotheby's New York in November 2009. It is the third of three Collioure paintings at the top of this list, proving the enduring popularity of this historic series, created in just one summer, accompanied by Matisse. The painting depicts boats moored in the harbour of Collioure, rendered with the artist's characteristic Fauve palette of unmixed, saturated colours. The composition and style reveal the artist's development away from Pointillism toward a more distinct Fauvist approach, using broader patches of pure colour to construct the scene, with exposed canvas creating areas of bright reflection on the water’s surface.

A Thames riverside scene looking out over bright yellow-green water visible through leafless trees. The promenade of the embankment is a deep purple, with a horse-drawn carriage passing on the green grass beside it. The view of the other side of the river is hazy, painted a dusky blue.

Londres: Le Quai Victoria © André Derain 1906-07