1716 – 1785

Jacques-Fabien Gautier-Dagoty

1716 – 1785

Jacques-Fabien Gautier-Dagoty

Interest in the three-colour printing process (also known as trichromy) at the Atelier de Saint-Prex arose after discussions between members on certain coloured compositions by Albert Yersin. Indeed, these compositions led Pietro Sarto and Michel Duplain to investigate the properties of coloured inks for themselves. Their purchase of Jacques Fabien Gautier-Dagoty's book La Myologie complète en couleur, featuring 17 trichromatic prints, prompted Atelier members and Florian Rodari to propose an exhibition on this process, which remains underknown. This major project was presented in 1996, first at the Bibliothèque nationale de France, then at the Olympic Museum in Lausanne, under the title Anatomie de la couleur.

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Jacques-Fabien Gautier-Dagoty is undoubtedly best known for his innovations in trichromy, a revolutionary coloured printing technique. This process involves three separate prints for each of the three primary hues, which combine to suggest the full chromatic spectrum. It was not, however, the fruit of Gautier's own work. Indeed, it was invented by the German engraver Jacob Christoph Le Blon (1667-1741). Gautier was only a young apprentice engraver when, in 1738, he spent a few weeks in Le Blon's Paris workshop, where Le Blon, after extensive research in Holland and England, was granted a royal privilege to use his invention. When Le Blon died in 1741, Gautier succeeded in obtaining, by royal decree, the exclusive right to the use of trichromy. Fully aware of its commercial potential, Gautier multiplied his scientific illustration projects. In order to obtain a higher degree of tonal contrast in his prints, he modified Le Blon’s process, adding a fourth black plate to the ensemble. This tended to deaden the colouristic sensitivity of his prints, yet Gautier's early production nevertheless demonstrated a real mastery of technique. One sees this clearly in his Myologie, a series of anatomical studies of human musculature, which includes the famous, disturbing plate known as L'Ange anatomique (The Anatomical Angel). Despite his fierce determination to make his mark in the world of scientific illustration, Gautier's venture ended in commercial failure. Accused of usurping Le Blon's invention, he withdrew to Marseille. After returning to Paris around 1764, Gautier-Dagoty - who had added his mother's name to his surname - conceived ambitious new scientific publishing projects involving his five sons, but his prints never regained their previous level of quality. Gautier's obstinacy and his determination to monopolize trichromy proved fatal to his commercial venture using this marvelous technique.

  • 99-Gautier-Dagoty_Jacques-Fabien_L'Ange_anatomique_615x464mm_6924

    Femme vue de dos, disséquée de la nuque au sacrum, appelée L’ Ange anatomique, planche 14 de la Myologie complète en couleurs et en grandeur naturelle (The Anatomical Angel or Dissection of a Woman’s Back)

    1746
    Colour mezzotint and burin (letter) on laid paper
    615 x 465 mm
    IFF X.45
    FWC&ASP-2017-0005

    © photo : Olivier Christinat
  • FWC&ASP-1996-0012

    Système vasculaire du cerveau et dure-mère, planche 3 de l’Anatomie de la tête (Vascular system of the brain and dura mater, plate 3 of Anatomy of the Head)

    1748
    Colour mezzotint on laid paper
    440 x 333 mm
    FWC&ASP-1996-0012

    © photo : Julien Gremaud
  • FWC&ASP-2017-0008

    Six figures représentant la main droite et l’aponévrose du palmaire, planche 17 de la Myologie complète en couleurs et grandeur naturelle

    1746
    Colour mezzotint and burin (letter) on laid paper
    620 x 467 mm
    FWC&ASP-2017-0008

    © photo : Julien Gremaud
  • FWC&ASP(d'Agoty)(HD,-Julien-Gremaud,-2019)

    Tête et épaules vues de dos, les muscles disséqués, planche 5 de la Myologie complète en couleur et grandeur naturelle

    1746
    Colour mezzotint and burin (letter) on laid paper
    FWC&ASP-2017-0001

    © photo : Julien Gremaud

Artists

B

  • 1721 – 1780

    Bernardo Bellotto

  • 1882 – 1951

    Henry Bischoff

  • 1867 – 1947

    Pierre Bonnard

  • 1822 – 1885

    Rodolphe Bresdin

C

  • 1697 – 1768

    Canaletto

  • 1907 – 1990

    Albert Chavaz

  • 1796 – 1875

    Camille Corot

D

  • 1943 – 2018

    Marianne Décosterd

  • 1834 – 1917

    Edgar Degas

  • 1471 – 1528

    Albrecht Dürer

F

  • 1836 – 1904

    Henri Fantin-Latour

  • 1909 – 1994

    Albert Flocon

G

  • 1716 – 1785

    Jacques-Fabien Gautier-Dagoty

  • 1746 – 1828

    Francisco Goya

L

  • 1930 – 2023

    Jean Lecoultre

  • 1600 – 1682

    Claude Gellée (Le Lorrain)

  • 1939 – ...

    Ilse Lierhammer

M

  • 1832 – 1883

    Édouard Manet

  • 1598 – 1688

    Claude Mellan

  • 1890 – 1964

    Giorgio Morandi

N

  • 1623 – 1678

    Robert Nanteuil

P

  • 1919 – 2012

    Gérard de Palézieux

  • 1881 – 1973

    Pablo Picasso

  • 1720 – 1778

    Piranèse (Giovanni Battista Piranesi)

  • 1830 – 1903

    Camille Pissarro

Q

  • 1942 – ...

    Edmond Quinche

R

  • 1840 – 1916

    Odilon Redon

  • 1606 – 1669

    Rembrandt van Rijn

S

  • 1930 – ...

    Pietro Sarto

T

  • 1905 – 1985

    Pierre Tal Coat

V

  • 1875 – 1963

    Jacques Villon

  • 1868 – 1940

    Édouard Vuillard

Y

  • 1905 – 1984

    Albert-Edgard Yersin