Pierre Brissaud (23 December 1885 – 1964) 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.
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.
Brissaud is known for his pochoir (stencil) prints for the fashion magazine Gazette du Bon Ton published by Lucien Vogel, Paris.
Many of his illustrations are realistic leisure scenes of the well-to-do.