The line drawing in the brass frame is of Jean-Francois de La Perouse, the person our boat is named for. He was the first French explorer to come to the Pacific Northwest.
In 1785 he crossed the Atlantic, rounded Cape Horn sailed over to Hawaii (he was the first European to visit Maui), then sailed to SE Alaska and explored north to Mt. Elias and Lituya Bay (origionally named La Perouse Bay) before heading south down the west coast to California. He then sailed across to the northwest Pacific around Japan, Korea, and Kamchatka and then down to Australia and the southwest Pacific.
His two ships were wrecked in a storm on a reef in 1788. They built a boat from the wreckage and La Perouse and a small crew headed out for New Zealand to get help. They were never seen again.
La Perouse commanded a French naval frigate during the American War of Independence and captured several British warships in Hudson's Bay. He was quite different in character from most naval commanders of the day in that he treated his crews extremely well. He was fascinated by all sorts of things--- geology, panets, animals, etc., and carried several scientists on his voyage of discovery.
His two ships were the Bussole (compass) and the Astrolabe. This painting shows the Bussole, which was the ship captained by La Perouse. The Astrolabe is in the background.
I got the little portrait when we visited the La Perouse museum in Albi, France. Albi is where La Perouse was from (as was the artist Toulouse Lautrec).
My father was French (from France), hence the connection with regards to our boat's name. Our current dog is named Albi for the same reason.