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Paul and Virginie series

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Paul and Virginie, 1

Paul and Virginie

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CHARLES-MELCHIOR DESCOURTIS, French, 1753-1820;
after JEAN FREDERIC SCHALL, French, 1752-1825
Paul and Virginie, 1
color aquatint, 1795
The William A. Whitaker Foundation Art Fund, 2001.9.4

Bernardin de Saint Pierre's novel Paul and Virginie was first published in 1788 and became an instant best seller. The story generated numerous visual illustrations produced independently of the text. Charles-Melchoir Descourtis' print series after Jean Frederic Schall is one such example.

The story centers around two children (Paul and Virginie) growing up in the secluded island of Mauritius (then known as the Īle de France). Living far away from France where civilization has brought many social evils, the two children embody an ideal notion of society based on love and innocence.

Though the real Īle de France was a French colony overshadowed by formidable slavery, such history is figured only suggestively in Paul and Virginie through the image of an "escaped Negress." Virginie provides the slave with food, and takes her back to her master, asking for his pardon. Yet the contrasting presence of the threatening master and the prostrated slave in the image suggests that Virginie's good will is not shared.

Kee Lee-Lee

 

 

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