Auguste Brouet

Auguste Brouet
Born (1872-10-10)October 10, 1872
Paris, France
Died November 8, 1941(1941-11-08)
Paris, France
Nationality French
Known for Etching

Auguste Brouet (1872–1941) was a French etcher and book illustrator.

Biography

Cour à Clichy (etching, 1910)
Les blessés - Parc de Saint-Cloud (etching, 1915)

Auguste Brouet was born and raised in a poor family in the popular north-east quarters of Paris and in Les Lilas, in the near suburbs. While apprenticed to a lithographer, he struggled for artistic education through the evening drawing classes of Eugène Quignolot (1858-1918), also briefly attending Gustave Moreau's atelier.[1] Starting from around 1895 he would make a living by doing hack work for fashionable artists and also crafting reproductive etchings in color, in the workshop of Eugène Delâtre.. Around 1902 he started to devise original etchings, sometimes larger pieces in color, more often smaller works in black and white,[2]:381 as was the growing trend at the time.

In the 1920s, his etchings came under strong demand both in France and in the United States,[2]:380 in the wake of the Print Revival. At that time, he also produced a significant body of book illustrations,[3] most notably for Devambez, under the direction of Edouard Chimot. This period of prosperity ends with the Great Depression, from which the print market never quite recovered. Brouet died in 1941 in poverty.[4]

Style

The art of Auguste Brouet belongs to the classical tradition. Brouet remained almost completely impervious to the modernist trends developing at the time. There are two characteristics which make a Brouet etching unmistakable:

As to books, he devised illustrations for a dozen volumes. Not surprisingly he came out at his best with texts inspired by Naturalism, such as Edmond de Goncourt's novel Les Frères Zemganno[5] or Joris-Karl Huysmans's collection of short stories Le Drageoir aux Epices.[6]

Catalogs

His work is listed in:

Notes

    References

    1. Heubert, Jean (June 1914). "Auguste Brouet". La Gravure et la Lithographie Française 104: 196.
    2. 1 2 Delteil, Loÿs (1925–1927). Manuel de l'amateur d'estampes des XIXe et XXe siècles 2. Paris: Dorbon-Aîné.
    3. Hesse, Raymond (1930). Auguste Brouet - étude ; lettre-préface de Henri Focillon. Paris: H. Babou.
    4. Descaves, Lucien (1946). Souvenirs d'un ours. Paris: Les Éditions de Paris.
    5. de Goncourt, Edmond (1921). Les Frères Zemganno. Eaux-fortes dessinées et gravées par Auguste Brouet. Paris: F. Grégoire.
    6. Huysmans, Joris-Karl (1929). Le Drageoir aux épices. Illustré de 54 eaux-fortes originales gravées par Auguste Brouet. 194, rue de Rivoli, Paris: les Graveurs modernes.
    7. Boutitie, Gaston (1923). Auguste Brouet : catalogue de son oeuvre gravé. précédé d'une étude de Gustave Geffroy. Paris: G. Boutitie. (with online preview)
    8. Laran, Jean; Adhémar, Jean. Inventaire du fonds français après 1800 / Bibliothèque nationale, Département des estampes. Tome troisième, Bocquin-Byon. pp. 451 et ff.
    9. "Auguste Brouet - Etchings". Retrieved 4 October 2014.

    External links

    Wikimedia Commons has media related to etchings by Brouet.


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