The short answer is Yes.
The long answer is; It depends on your priorities and the other decks you're looking at. The old cards were first printed as black line drawings, using carved wood blocks. The colors were added by using stencils. So the decks using solid, unshaded colors and black outlines are more traditional in using art that follows that use of line and color. (Even though today's cards aren't carved on blocks of wood and colored by stencils, not by a long shot.)
On the other hand, most of us think that the actual pictures on the Hadar and the Jodo-Camoin depart here and there from the images of any specific historical TdM. The Hadar combines images from various different decks, the Jodo-Camoin purports to restore details that had become obscured in the history of the Conver deck, on which it is based. The Fournier images, in the sense of who, dressed how, is doing what with what, are those of the Conver, without such notable changes. Or perhaps more accurately, they reproduce the Grimaud's images, which are basically Conver images. They are shaded paintings, not the pseudo-woodcuts of other decks. But what those paintings show are pretty much what you'll see on an original Conver, in a different rendition.
But the change in style is a really big change. So the short answer to your question is "Yes." And I suspect that's the answer you were looking for. I'd still recommend the Grimaud.