Louis-Henri Brévière  

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"Work by Breviere, Bertrand, Rouget, Huyot, and others, may be classed, like the mass of contemporary English production, as fac-simile or from washed drawing (sometimes of course a mixture), but in either class had no remarkable difference except what was absolutely due to the subject or the draftsman." --The Masters of Wood-Engraving (1890) by William James Linton

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Louis-Henri Brévière, born at Forges-les-Eaux in 1797, was a French wood-engraver, to whom is due the honour of having revived the art of wood-engraving, which had been neglected in France since the 17th century. His works number about 3000, and among them may be especially noticed the Palais de Gaillon, the arch of the Gros-Horloge at Rouen, and his engravings from the designs of Chenavard, Grandville, Meissonier, Descamps, Fragonard, Girardet, Français, Tony Johannot, Raffet, Devéria, Gavarni, Gustave Doré, Bertall, and others. He died at Hyères in 1869.



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