Not currently on view
In the collection of Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · as of July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
One of the most accomplished color printmakers of his era, Charles Melchior Descourtis produced a body of work that is small and relatively unknown. Descourtis learned his method of multiple-plate color printing from Jean Frarnçois Janinet and like him used toolwork on the plate rather than aquatint, an acid immersion process used to create general areas of shading. In this print, the governor of Mauritius, Monsieur Bourdonnais, has arrived for breakfast at the home of Paul and Virginie. He excitedly tells the family that Virginie’s wealthy aunt has requested for Virginie to join her at her house in Paris. The mothers agree, understanding that this could provide an opportunity for upward social mobility and a chance to inherit the aunt’s fortune. Additionally, they decide that separating their very close—but now adolescent—children could be the best way to prevent a relationship between them, which could ruin their social reputations and chances for future marriage.
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Philibert Louis Debucourt — Annette and Lubin
Jean Frédéric Schall|Blin le Jeune — Paul et Virginie
Charles Nicolas Varin — The Pleasant Concert
Pierre François Basan — The Carnival of Parnassus
Charles Melchior Descourtis|Nicolas Antoine Taunay — La Foir
Horace Vernet — Je hais, je veux punir des peuples odieux...
Victor Jean Adam — Rebecca of the Desert
Philibert Louis Debucourt (French, 1755–1832) — La Noce au C
Heinrich Guttenberg — Le mercure de France
Gérard Vidal — English Breakfast
Oliver Goldsmith|Abraham Solomon|Harvey Orrin Smith — An Awk
Charles Melchior Descourtis|Nicolas Antoine Taunay — La Noce