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Pierre Brissaud (23 December 1885, Paris - 17 October 1964, Paris), French illustrator, painter, and engraver. The son of a doctor, he trained at the École des Beaux-Arts and the Atelier Fernand Cormon. Students of the atelier drew, painted and designed wallpaper, furniture and posters; earlier, Toulouse-Lautrec, van Gogh, and Matisse had studied and worked there. Among his fellow students there was his older brother Jacques who would go on to become a portrait and genre painter. Their uncle Louis-Maurice Boutet de Monvel was a well-known illustrator whose son, their first cousin, was the celebrated artist and celebrity portrait painter Bernard Boutet de Monvel.
Brissaud is known for his pochoir prints for the fashion magazine Gazette du Bon Ton. His best-known illustrations are veritable genre scenes illustrating the designs of Paris fashion houses such as Lanvin, Chéruit, Worth, and Doucet. His illustrations would also appear in Vogue, House & Garden, and Fortune, and in books like Madame Bovary, Manon Lescaut, the memoirs of Saint-Simon, the autobiographical novels of Anatole France, and many others. In 1907 he exhibited at the Salon des Indépendants and the Salon d'Automne.
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