Charles Georges Ferville-Suan was a French sculptor.
He was born in Le Mans, in Sarthe, on 16 January 1847, and was adopted by the painter Charles Suan. [1] He lived during a certain period in Montmartre, and died in Le Mans on 11 December 1925.
He studied at the École des Beaux-Arts of Paris, and was a pupil of François Jouffroy.
He realized medaillons and statuettes, in plaster, marble or bronze. He exhibited at the Salon, as early as 1872, and until 1909, and became a member of the Société des Artistes Français.
In 1878, he married Marie Ernestine Lavieille, daughter of Eugène Lavieille, and landscape painter as her father.
Pierre Brissaud was a French Art Deco illustrator, painter, and engraver whose father was Docteur Edouard Brissaud, a student of Docteur Charcot. He was born in Paris and trained at the École des Beaux-Arts and Atelier Fernand Cormon in Montmartre, Paris. His fellow Cormon students were his brother Jacques, André-Édouard Marty, Charles Martin, Georges Lepape. Students at the workshop drew, painted and designed wallpaper, furniture and posters. Earlier, Toulouse-Lautrec, van Gogh, and Henri Matisse had studied and worked there. His older brother Jacques Brissaud was a portrait and genre painter and his uncle Maurice Boutet de Monvel illustrated the fables of La Fontaine, songbooks for children and a life of Joan of Arc. A first cousin was the celebrated artist and celebrity portrait painter Bernard Boutet de Monvel.
The Benezit Dictionary of Artists is an extensive publication of bibliographical information on painters, sculptors, designers and engravers created primarily for art museums, auction houses, historians and dealers. It was published by Éditions Gründ in Paris but has been sold to Oxford University Press.
Henri-Pierre Picou was a French painter. His oeuvre began with portraits and classical historical subject matter but he later moved on to allegorical and mythological themes.
Benjamin Eugène Fichel son of Moise Mayer Fichel and Lili Abigail Sasias, was a French painter.
Marie Ernestine Lavieille was a French painter.
Lucien-Pierre Sergent was a French academic painter. He was known for his military art.
Paul Biva was a French painter. His paintings, both Realist, Naturalist in effect, principally represented intricate landscape paintings or elaborate flower settings, much as the work of his older brother, the artist Henri Biva (1848–1929). Paul Biva was a distinguished member of National Horticultural Society of France from 1898 until his untimely death two years later.
Paul-Joseph Blanc was a French painter who specialized in scenes from ancient history and mythology.
Jacqueline Comerre, née Paton was a French painter and sculptor, and the wife of the painter Léon-François Comerre (1850-1916).
Frédérique Vallet-Bisson was a French painter and pastellist.
Claire Bertrand-Eisenschitz, also known as Claire Bertrand, was a French expressionist artist born in Sèvres on 22 June 1890. She died on 8 December 1969. She was the wife of the painter Willy Eisenschitz, also a French painter and draftsman.
Willy Eisenschitz was a French painter of Austrian origin who mostly represented the landscapes of Provence and Drome in particular. His works are presented in a dozen European museums, and are the subject of retrospective exhibitions from 1957 to 2006.
Sini Manninen was a Finnish painter and artist, trained at the Académie des Beaux Arts de Helsinki in Finland. She produced the majority of her works in France, to which she moved in 1973, more precisely, to the Montmartre district of Paris. Mastering many painting techniques under various disciplines, naïve art remained her fondest style.
Charles-Henri Pourquet, born Henri Charles Justin Pourquet was a French sculptor.
Louis-Denis Caillouette was a French sculptor. His pupils included the medallist Adrien Baudet
Zoé Goyet was a French portrait painter, pastel artist, and teacher. Her works were exhibited in the Paris Salon from 1834 to 1841. She was the wife of painter Eugène Goyet and daughter-in-law of painter Jean-Baptiste Goyet.
François Théodore Devaulx, or Théodore-François Devaulx, was a French sculptor.
Michel-Marie Poulain was a French transgender performer and painter whose style and technique were compared to those of Bernard Buffet and Marc Chagall.
Joseph-Marius Avy was a French painter. He painted landscapes, genre scenes, especially on the elegant Parisian environment, and wall decorations. He was also a skilled illustrator and an accomplished pastelist.
Maurice Paul Jean Asselin was a French painter, watercolourist, printmaker, lithographer, engraver and illustrator, associated with the School of Paris. He is best known for still lifes and nudes. Other recurring themes in his work are motherhood, and the landscapes and seascapes of Brittany. He also worked as a book illustrator, particularly in the 1920s. His personal style was characterised by subdued colours, sensitive brushwork and a strong sense of composition and design.