Vintage 1965 Mid Century Eugene Biel Bienne 
Also Known As Egon Vitalis Biel
Repro Drawing Print
VIN ROUGE (Red Wine)
This is #18 From a Portfolio of 24 Reproduced in 1965 by Zibart Bros.
The original was done in Washington DC 1958
Drawing was done in Indian Ink On Ivory Hamilton Andorra Paper
16" x 12" in

Eugene Biel-Bienne was born as Egon V. Biel on November 27, 1902 in Vienna, Austria. 
His father served as the Austrian Ambassador to Japan.
He started his career as a painter in Paris, France, where he became associated with 
the School of Paris in the 1930s.
Biel served with the French army during the Second World War. He was critical of the 
Nazis on French radio and drew disparaging caricatures of their leadership.  
When they invaded France, he moved to the South of France, where he joined 
the French resistance. During that time, he received stipends from the American 
Guild for German Cultural Freedom and from Quakers.

Marie Norton Harriman, director of the Marie Harriman Gallery in New York City, helped him and his wife be evacuated from France.  Thanks to her help, the couple arrived in New York City in 1942. Once in New York, he was patronized by Baroness Hilla von Rebay, also a painter and the mistress of Solomon R. Guggenheim (1861-1949).  
He taught at Fordham University, Parsons The New School for Design and The New School for Social Research.  Meanwhile, he also exhibited his paintings at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and the Wehe Gallery.  
He also exhibited at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

From 1954 to 1956, he lived in Caracas, Venezuela, where his sister lived, and he exhibited his paintings in the Museo de Arte Contemporáneo. He moved back to the US and served as the Director of the French-American Art Institute in Washington, D.C. from 1956 to 1959. That year, after his wife died, he moved to Nashville, Tennessee and joined the Department of Fine Arts in the College of Arts and Science at Vanderbilt University as a faculty member and taught drawing and painting.However, he clashed with other faculty members, including the department chair, Walter Sharp, and the Chancellor, Harvie Branscomb (1894-1998). He also sided with Gordon D. Kaufman (1925-2011), who was teaching at the Vanderbilt University Divinity School, to support African-American activist James Lawson, who was expelled from the Vanderbilt campus in 1960. Meanwhile, he continued to produce paintings, and exhibited at the Cheekwood Botanical Garden and Museum of Art, the Parthenon and the Vanderbilt Art Gallery. However, he was fired by Vanderbilt University in 1963, though he stayed in his one-bedroom apartment close to campus overlooking the Centennial Park until he died six years later. Paul Harmon, another painter from Nashville, inherited the executorship of his estate.


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