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Distributed for Paul Holberton Publishing

Claude Gillot

Satire in the Age of Reason

The first English-language volume detailing the life and works of artist Claude Gillot as exhibited by the Morgan Library & Museum.

The history of eighteenth-century French art is dominated by great names, but Paris’s artistic scene at the dawn of the century was diverse, including creatives who forged careers outside of the Royal Academy. Among them was Claude Gillot (1673–1722).

Author Jennifer Tonkovich chronicles Gillot’s life, devoting six chapters to distinct aspects of his oeuvre. These intimate dissections span from his start as the son of a decorative painter to his arrival in Paris, culminating in one of the final projects of his career: designing costumes for the last royal ballet.

Exploring the inventive, renegade work of this designer, painter, and illustrator, Tonkovich skillfully contextualizes Gillot’s enduring impact on Paris’s artistic and intellectual landscape.


240 pages | 275 color plates | 9 1/2 x 11 | © 2023

Art: European Art


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Reviews

"Until now, there has been no full-length study of Gillot in English, which makes Jennifer Tonkovich’s book very welcome. . . . Tonkovich views Gillot as a distinctively modern figure, with a satirical bent that accords with a skeptical outlook typical of the Enlightenment. In significant respects, he seems rather to belong to a premodern world in which art was not yet set apart from everyday life."

The Art Newspaper

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