Perrot worked during a period when women in France achieved increasing prominence in literature and intellectual life, although their recognition in the visual arts remained limited. Alongside figures such as Henriette Stresor, Antoinette and Madeleine Hérault, and
Catherine Duchemin, Perrot belonged to a small group of women who achieved professional visibility in painting under
Louis XIV. Her admission to the Academy places her among the earliest officially recognised women artists in France. Perrot trained under Nicolas Robert, a prominent botanical painter of Louis XIV’s court. Under his guidance, she learned the techniques of miniature painting, focusing on flowers, animals, and other natural subjects. Her treatises on miniature painting drew extensively on Robert’s engravings as models for study and instruction.
Publications •
Les leçons royales ou la manière de peindre en mignature les fleurs & les oyseaux (1686) –
Royal Lessons, or How to Paint Flowers and Birds in Miniature • Perrot’s first treatise, based on the engravings of her teacher Nicolas Robert, providing detailed instruction on copying and colouring flowers and birds in miniature. •
Traité de la mignature (1693) –
Treatise on Miniature Painting • An expanded edition of her 1686 work, incorporating additional subjects such as landscapes, biblical figures, and saints. This edition also included theoretical reflections, a lexicon of technical terms, and an index. ==References==