Albert Brenet (1903-2005) was a French artist who painted primarily in gouache.
As a child he loved to paint pictures of ships in port. Ships remained a favorite theme all his life.
For seven months he sailed the Antilles on the Bonchamp, one of the last French sailing merchant ships.
He traveled widely and painted scenes of colorful locations around the world, including equatorial Africa and the West Indies.
His gouache paintings were relatively large, requiring a big board and easel.
His gouache paintings were relatively large, requiring a big board and easel.
He worked for many years for the magazine L’illustration, and he painted many posters depicting railroads, aircraft, ships, and architecture for the travel trade.
These subjects require accurate perspective and confident handling of detail.
These subjects require accurate perspective and confident handling of detail.
In the painting above, note how he simplifies the far silhouette and the foreground textures to put the focus on the middle-ground train and the overhead wires.
Josep Tapiró Baró
He delighted in tight cropping, active foregrounds, and immense scale. He achieved scale by alternating big and little strokes, choosing unusual viewpoints, and setting figures back in space.
Look how he blurred the feet of the walking figures, and parked that sales wagon right in the foreground.
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There's a 2003 Book on Albert Brenet, available here. It's 192 pages, written in French. Includes marine art, railroad art, and assortment of other subjects, mostly in gouache.
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Read more online about Albert Victor Eugene Brenet:
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Do you know these other artists?
Eugène Burnand
7 comments:
I really enjoy these posts introducing us to new/old friends.
Welcome home to you and Jeanette, and thanx for sharing your adventures w us.-RQ
Wow! Thanks for bringing this (hitherto unknown to me) master to our attention!
Looking at those gouaches felt like attending a gourmet five-course menu.
Wonderful! Thanks!
Wow. This is wonderful! Thanks for sharing!
Really stunning and exciting gouache works.
Thanks James, I have never heard of him, a great find.
BTW the link for Eugene Burnand isn't linking.
And on that note another great artist who worked in watercolor/gouache was automobile artist Walter Gotschke.
http://linesandcolors.com/2010/07/13/walter-gotschke/
The sense of scale on the ocean liner painting is impressive. Exceptionally well done. Just...wow!
I just found an original Brenet gouache...lovely and exciting..it's a scene from onboard a sailboat in a stormy sea..he is close to the sailors. I would like to sell. Where should I go.
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