A. Duval

Duval's earliest known work is a highly detailed watercolor of a dungeon, signed and dated 1769.

[1] A drawing of a "design for the top and side of an oval, enamelled, gold, neo-classical snuffbox," at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, bears an identical signature and the date 1770.

[2][3] Engravings of Duval's depictions of French furniture were published by Jean-François Daumont [fr] in Paris, c.1770.

[4][5][6][7] His engravings of architectural studies by Juste-Nathan François Boucher [fr] (also called Boucher fils), published by Jacques-François Chéreau [fr] around 1775, include a stylized and dated signature "ADUVAL fecit 1774" with conjoined letters A and D.[4][8][9][10] Four architectural studies of tombs drawn and engraved by the artist (inscribed "Duval inv.

[4][11] Later works include his engravings after illustrations by Antoine-Denis Chaudet, François Gérard, Jean-Guillaume Moitte, and Nicolas-Antoine Taunay for the first volume of the complete Oeuvres de Jean Racine published by Pierre Didot in Paris in 1801.

A dungeon, watercolor, 1769.