Background
He was the son of Jacques-Jean Barre who preceded him as the.
He was the son of Jacques-Jean Barre who preceded him as the.
Attracted to painting, Barre joined the École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts in 1838 and became a pupil of Paul Delaroche. His interest in ancient art led him to take several trips to Italy. He exhibited biblical themes at the Paris Salon from 1843 to 1851.
His career changed when his father, Jacques-Jean Barre, asked him to assist him at the mint in 1845.
Became his father"s closest collaborator, so much so that it becomes difficult to distinguish their respective contributions, especially for the early French stamp projects dating from 1848. In February 1855, he succeeded his father, to the post of of the Paris Mint.
He wrote Graveurs Généraux et particuliers des Monnaies de France", Contrôleurs Généraux des Effigies, Noms de quelques graveurs en Médailles de la Renaissance Française, published in 1867. In 1855, he resumed the work of his father, including engravings for French postage stamps.
Barre, unlike his father, did not work well with Anatole Hulot the contractor responsible for printing the stamps.
Hulot was an expert at electroplating, and utilized that technique to make the printing plates for the stamps. To compete with this technique for the reproduction of images on the printing plates, Barre embarked on striking tests with coining presses between 1858 and 1859. He produced, on the order of the Committee on Coins, test types of the Ceres stamp.
In the end, Hulot retained the contract by lowering his prices.
In 1861, thanks to the delay of Hulot, the technique of using the coin press, however, allowed Barre to take the contract to produce printing plates of the first postage stamps of Greece. Barre had designed the drawing and the dies for the new Hermes type, a few months prior.
In 1876, he provided the same work for the creation of two additional stamps. The strained relationship between Barre and Hulot caused delays in the production of new stamps in the early 1860s.
In disagreement with Hulot"s work, Barre delayed the delivery of the dies of the new laurel effigies of Napoleon III stamps which had been designed in early 1861.
On two occasions for the new denomination, Hulot returned the die damaged to Barre for retouching. In August 1866, although he has made the model in July, Barre refused to engrave the die of the new five francs stamp. Hulot has to make do with copies of old dies.