A Sceaux faience plate decorated by Fidelle Duvivier in petit feu colors with two figures in an autumnal landscape set in a medallion outlined with greenery and flowers emerging from a large fruit, the edge fretted and painted with peignés bleus (illustration 35 in my book).

(“Sceaux, assiette à bord déchiqueté, à fin décor d’une scène animée de deux hommes dans un cartouche bordé de guirlande de fleurs et fruits, petits fruits et feuilles à l’aile, peigné bleu en bordure. XVIIIe siècle. Diam. 23.2 cm.”)

Here are center details from two similarly decorated plates by Fidelle Duvivier in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC, Accession Numbers 17.190.1906, 17.190.1909, Gallery 545.

These Sceaux plates were part of the vast gift to the museum in 1917 from J. Pierpont Morgan (1837-1913) and had originally belonged to the private collection of Gaston Le Breton (1845-1915), a leading nineteenth-century historian of French ceramic art and former director of the Musée de la Céramique in Rouen, France.