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The two 19
th century French prints I bought several weeks ago arrived yesterday. I must admit that in person they are large and impressive. There is some foxing and that light water damage but the overall effect is quality printing. I do not see a plate mark around the edges so exactly what they are (lithographs, etchings, engravings, or crayon manner prints) will remain up for speculation. My guess ...... engravings? The water damage-discoloration is not that obvious to the naked eye but the camera picks them up as quite distinct against the paper color. The first photograph was converted to gray-scale and gives pretty much the same look as the naked eye. The attribution in French at the bottom translates "
Drawing after nature by Hervier serious student of David and by Perrot." The "
Hervier" in question is possibly Marie-Antoine
Hervier (1783-?), who was a pupil of Jacques-Louis David (1748-1825). He was a
miniaturist painter of some fame. The "
Perrot" in question is most probably
Aristide Michel
Perrot (1793-1879), the famous French engraver-cartographer & essayist.
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Soldat Romain .......... Roman Soldier