Oil Painting, 1784, French.
By Jacques-Louis David.
Portraying Madame Charles-Pierre Pécoul.
Musée du Louvre.
Madame Charles-Pierre Pécoul, née Potain, belle-mère de l'artiste.

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Oil Painting, 1784, French.
By Jacques-Louis David.
Portraying Madame Charles-Pierre Pécoul.
Musée du Louvre.
Madame Charles-Pierre Pécoul, née Potain, belle-mère de l'artiste.
If👑💯youre🚫not🚫part🙊👀of🌙the🔝first🤴🏼🤑or💫second😜🙏estate☝️♥️you😈do🤪NOT🙄😱have🤦♂️to🤔worry👁about⭕Bidens⭕tax📄plan💶smh😒when🙅♂️will🗣y'all💢understand🤗that🤷♀️
first lorde was all and we’ll never be royals
and now she’s saying meet me at the tennis court, we’ll talk it up like yeah
so i’m not saying she participated in the french revolution but if the pantaloons fit...
The Third Estate: We will break from the ancien regime and seek political rights. But who will lead us in this noble effort?
Mirabeau:
Oil Painting, 1795, French.
By Jacques-Louis David.
Portraying Madame Émilie Sérizat, sister-in-law of the artist, with her son Émile.
Musée du Louvre.
Madame Pierre Sériziat, née Émilie Pecoul, soeur de Mme David, née Marguerite-Charlotte Pécoul, et un de ses fils, Émile, né en 1793.
Oil Painting, 1789, French.
By Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun.
Portraying Madame Rousseau, the wife of the architect Pierre Rousseau, with her daughter.
Musée du Louvre.
Femme de l'architecte Pierre Rousseau
Engraving, 1789, French.
Portraying a democrat woman, in a red skirt, yellow apron, white fichu, and a national cockade.
Musée Carnavalet.
Collé sur montage.