His illustrations of contemporary manners and costumes are known to have influenced
English artists. Gravelot revitalized illustrative engraving in
England, and after his return to Paris, a group of accomplished engravers continued to work in his manner. The descriptive precision and elegance of his line and the variety of his inventions can be seen in the drawings for two of his more important commissions, the second volume of Gay’s
Fables and the second edition of L. Theobald's
The Works of Shakespeare in Eight Volumes, and in his illustrations for the first French translation of Boccaccio
Le Decameron, 1757. The books are listed by Gordon Ray as one of the most outstanding illustrated books of all time. Gravelot's designs for the decorative arts were limited to a suite of engravings for wrought iron work, but his
rocailles, his
cartouches for maps, his rococo borders provided inspiration for goldsmiths and silversmiths,
cabinet-makers like
Thomas Chippendale, tapestry cartoons made at the Soho works, and china painters at the
Chelsea porcelain manufactory. Gravelot's older brother was the geographer
Jean-Baptiste Bourguignon d'Anville, whose "Éloge de M. Gravelot" appeared in
La Nécrologie des hommes celebres de France (Paris 1774). • See ''Drawings for the illustrations of Boccaccio's Decamerone
and Original Drawings'' From the Collections at the
Library of Congress ==Notes==