Montpellier, 1825 – Paris, 1908
Portrait of Count Chevalier de Frétons on February 15, 1800
Drawing, watercolour, ink and gouache on paper
Unsigned
Stamp of the estate
Drawing: 25 x 32 cm
Sold in sheet, unframed
Very good condition
Circa 1900
Drawing kept in a drawings board, so the paper is well preserved and the colors bright
Charles Brun has studied in the School of Fine Arts in Paris under the direction of François-Edouard Picot (1786-1868) then Alexandre Cabanel (1823-1889). His participation in the Salon began in 1851 with genre subjects (Young girl doing her morning prayer), but from 1853 he regularly sent Orientalist scenes, located in Algeria (The Prayer in 1859, Meeting in Constantine in 1861, Mauresque Woman in 1867), of great architectural rigor, animated by sharp contrasts in the lighting effects and showing a fine sensitivity in the modulations of gray. In addition to his many landscapes of Algeria, he also became known as a military portrait painter, painting uniforms with precision, and naturally became an official painter at the Ministry of War, where he collaborated with Alexandre Cabanel. He is also the author of church decorations, including that of Villemomble (Martyrdom of Saint Laurent, 1857). Brun became a member of French Artists from 1883.