Gustav Brock

Gustav Frederick Brock (1881–1945) was a portrait painter, portrait miniature artist, and an expert on the hand coloring of occupation pictures. He was the son of the Danish painter Gustav Brock (1849–1887).

He was born in San Francisco and educated in Copenhagen, at the Royal Academy in Dresden and well ahead in Paris taking into account M.A.F. Gorguet.

In 1910 he was the sole representative for Denmark at the International Art Exhibition at Buenos Aires. This exhibition included an official portrait of the Queen of Denmark which was far along awarded a silver medal at the Panama–Pacific International Exposition, San Francisco, 1915 where Brock was again the sole representative for Denmark.

In 1920 the French Government acquired Brock's painting of the 7th Regiment N.Y.H.G. reviewed by Marshall Joffre at Grant's Tomb. Other noteworthy portraits and miniatures are in the enduring collections of the Musee Nationale de Buenos Aires; a miniature of King George of Greece in the growth of Queen Alexandria; The Archbishop of Buenos Aires in the Cathedral of Buenos Aires; the wife of Marechal da Fonseca, President of Brazil, Salon des Artistes Francais 1914, etc. Brock is Officer d'Academie de France and Lieutenant in the Royal Danish Army.

Brock was a miniature artist and expert upon the hand-coloring of action pictures. In 1922 he was represented by Ehrich Galleries, New York, which published a folio in conjunction in imitation of an exhibition of miniature paintings held at their gallery.

During his professional career, Brock hand-colored scenes from a number of occupation pictures, including Erich von Stroheim's Foolish Wives (1922), The Death Kiss (1932) with Bela Lugosi, and the independently made feature film Adventure Girl (1934).

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