I forbid there to be any moustaches here ... under any pretext!, p. 12, 1804 - 1866
Paul Gavarni
What a beautiful play! Always the same: its been forty years that that lover has been marrying his beloved., p. 13, 1804 - 1866
Paul Gavarni
And so, my uncle, tell me ... these lovely little flowers, where do they come from and what do they become? -Manure, p. 14, 1804 - 1866
Paul Gavarni
Well then, Sir, you are going to see what my little one did to us one day, when she was very little, p. 15, 1804 - 1866
Paul Gavarni
Come on! Madame Highness, just between us does Monsieur respect himself so much that he wouldn't give Madame a blow? p. 9, 1804 - 1866
Paul Gavarni
Some say that your Monsieur, Monsieur Polyte, wants, despite the respect he owes you, to eat his estate in [truffes] truffles ... You mean in [turf] the racetrack, old man Pigaud., p. 11, 1804 - 1866
Paul Gavarni
Toinon! I'm not worth anything when one harasses me: I know my mind! What a damned knowledge you have there!, p. 17, 1804 - 1866
Paul Gavarni
Ruins of the Theater at Taormina, 1792 - 1847
Friedrich Gaertner
Elevation and Plan of the Temple of Concord at Agrigento, 1792 - 1847
Friedrich Gaertner
Sections of the Temple of Concord at Agrigento, 1792 - 1847
Friedrich Gaertner
Elevation and Section of the Temple of Concord at Agrigento, 1792 - 1847
Friedrich Gaertner
Temple of Segesta, 1792 - 1847
Friedrich Gaertner
Ruins of the Temple of Jupiter at Selinus, 1792 - 1847
Friedrich Gaertner
Groundplans of the "Ear of Dionysius" and Temple of Segesta, 1792 - 1847
Friedrich Gaertner
Tomb of Theron, 1792 - 1847
Friedrich Gaertner
View of the "Ear of Dionysius" in Syracuse, 1792 - 1847
Friedrich Gaertner
Ancient Tombs at Syracuse, 1792 - 1847
Friedrich Gaertner
Ancient Quarries near Syracuse, 1792 - 1847
Friedrich Gaertner
Elevation and Section of the Temple of Concord at Agrigento, 1792 - 1847
Friedrich Gaertner
Architectural Details of the Temples of Concord and Juno at Agrigento and the Temple of Minerva at Syracuse, 1792 - 1847
Friedrich Gaertner