Jean-Antoine Watteau

1684-1721

He is one of the leading exponents of the rocaille movement. Inspired by the commedia dell'arte, he liked to represent the theatre in his paintings, whether through the heavy curtains or the themes. Despite a brief career lasting around fifteen years, he enjoyed success during his lifetime and left a considerable body of work.

Watteau's profound originality lies in the strange, melancholy world he was able to create. His art delicately evokes the evanescent moments when, for a moment, people manage to break their solitude through tenderness, sensuality and exchange.

Portrait art

Born Jean-Antoine Watteau in Valenciennes, he was one of the greatest French painters of the 18th century and one of the key representatives of the rocaille style, known as rococo. Born into a modest family, the artist demonstrated an exceptional talent for drawing from a young age. He trained with the painter, engraver and illustrator Claude Gillot, who encouraged his interest in theatre and depictions of commedia del arte. Works such as The Embarkation for Cythera (1717) reflect a world of elegance and dreams, and also the fragility of terrestrial pleasures, but it was his representations of "fêtes galantes" that would seal his reputation. Antoine Watteau also excelled in portrait art and figure studies of remarkable precision.

Watteau, Pierrot. Musée du Louvre ©GrandPalaisRmn / Mathieu Rabeau
Watteau, Pierrot. Musée du Louvre ©GrandPalaisRmn / Mathieu Rabeau
Watteau, Pierrot. Musée du Louvre ©GrandPalaisRmn / Mathieu Rabeau
Watteau, Pierrot. Musée du Louvre ©GrandPalaisRmn / Mathieu Rabeau
Watteau, Pèlerinage à l'île de Cythère. Musée du Louvre ©GrandPalaisRmn / Stéphane Maréchalle
Watteau, Diane au bain. Musée du Louvre ©GrandPalaisRmn / Michel Urtado
Watteau, Pierrot. Musée du Louvre ©GrandPalaisRmn / Mathieu Rabeau

Pierrot, formerly known as Gilles

Nothing was known about this work before it was discovered by Dominique Vivant Denon, director of the Louvre under Napoleon, and its origins have long been called into question. Gilles is this young man dressed in white (the luminous shade was achieved through the abundant use of Venetian white), who stands straight in front of the spectator while his friends play behind him unperturbed. If the Musée du Louvre finally chose to rename the painting Pierrot, it is because the characters resemble precisely those who accompany Pierrot in the commedia dell'arte: the doctor and his donkey, the lovers Leandro and Isabella, and the captain. Recently restored, this painting continues to fascinate today.

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