Gustave Brion

Gustave Brion was born at Rothau in the department of Bas-Rhin in 1824, and in 1841 entered at Strasbourg the studio of Gabriel Guérin, with whom he remained three years; he also received tuition from Andreas Friedrich, the sculptor; but he soon afterwards went to Paris, where his first work appeared at the Salon in 1847; it was entitled 'Interior of a Farm at Dambach.' Six years later he gained a medal of the second class for his 'Schlitteurs de la Foret-Noire' and the 'Potato Harvest during an Inundation,' the former of which was subsequently burned at Strassburg by the Prussians. His fame was further established by his 'Le Train de Bois sur le Rhin' in 1855, and from that time his works continued to increase in public favour, and gained considerable praise and recompense for their author. Brion received numerous medals in 1853, 1863, 1867, 1868, &c., and the decoration of the Legion of Honour in 1863. He died in Paris in 1877.

With few exceptions, such as the 'Siege of a Town by Romans under Julius Caesar,' painted on commission for Napoleon III, and at the cost of much research to the artist, Brion rarely indulged in historical subjects. He delighted to represent peasants in their natural avocations: here they gather in their potatoes or chat by the village well; there they conduct barges laden with wood down the river; now we see them at a marriage, now hearing mass or attending a burial. Putting aside several subjects drawn from Normandy and Brittany, from the Basque Provinces, and from a stay in Italy, Brion remained true to his love of Alsace, and it is of the doings of her peasantry that he tells us in his paintings. The following are his principal works:

Brion also illustrated 'Les Misérables' of Victor Hugo, and 'Notre-Dame de Paris' (see 'Flemish and French Pictures,' by F. G. Stephens).

References

This article incorporates text from the article "BRION, Gustave" in Bryan's Dictionary of Painters and Engravers by Michael Bryan, edited by Robert Edmund Graves and Sir Walter Armstrong, an 1886–1889 publication now in the public domain.