Melissa Percival is Senior Lecturer at the University of Exeter, and an expert in eighteenth-century French studies. She has published widely on theories of physiognomy and facial expression.
'In this smartly written, thoroughly researched work, Fragonard and the Fantasy Figure, Melissa Percival explodes the myth that Fragonard's fantasy figures are dazzling but impenetrable images; she offers instead a wide range of interpretive perspectives that provides the ground for a renewed appreciation of these works. In a book that is a model of scholarly clarity, Percival has made a valuable contribution to Fragonard studies.' Julie-Anne Plax, University of Arizona, USA 'Melissa Percival has written the first monograph devoted to this group of paintings... Her book offers a spirited and wide-ranging examination of these universally admired pictures; it is cross-cultural and interdisciplinary in its references, scope and discussion; and it aspires to present an expansive, socio-cultural reinterpretation of the fantasy portraits, here considered emblematic of the eighteenth-century imagination.' The Burlington Magazine '... a conscientious and thoughtful piece of scholarship, which makes a valuable contribution to Fragonard studies.' French Studies '... convincingly argues that Fragonard's famous set of paintings was situated within a tradition of portraits, ranging from Dutch tronies, Italian teste capriciosi, English fancy pictures, to Greuze's highly affective but anonymous girls.' Oxford Art Journal 'Like the drawing, Percival's study provides new information that adds to our appreciation of Fragonard's interpretive puzzles set up by the fantasy figures-portraits or non-portraits.' H-France