Jean Revel
Jean Revel was a designer active during the early 18th century, with a documented period of activity spanning 1700 through 1733. Revel’s professional output focused predominantly on the creation of sophisticated textiles and woven furnishing materials.
Revel’s legacy is preserved through nine textile works currently represented in international museum collections. These pieces provide insight into 18th-century fabric design and include documented examples such as Fragment and several variations of Panel and Panel (Furnishing Fabric). The quality and design complexity of these artifacts mark them as definitive museum-quality examples of the period.
The significance of Revel's work is underscored by its presence in major American institutions, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and the Art Institute of Chicago. While the originals are textiles, reproductions of these designs are often made available as high-quality prints for study and preservation. Researchers seeking to study historic fabric design may locate records pertaining to Jean Revel prints through these collecting institutions.