Baroque and Rococo

 

Baroque and Rococo Art Map



 


Francois Boucher



 

 



 

Francois Boucher

(b Paris, 29 Sept 1703; d Paris, 30 May 1770).

French painter, draughtsman and etcher. Arguably it was he, more than any other artist, who set his stamp on both the fine arts and the decorative arts of the 18th century. Facilitated by the extraordinary proliferation of engravings, Boucher successfully fed the demand for imitable imagery at a time when most of Europe sought to follow what was done at the French court and in Paris. He did so both as a prolific painter and draughtsman (he claimed to have produced some 10,000 drawings during his career) and through engravings after his works, the commercial potential of which he seems to have been one of the first artists to exploit. He reinvented the genre of the pastoral, creating an imagery of shepherds and shepherdesses as sentimental lovers that was taken up in every medium, from porcelain to toile de Jouy, and that still survives in a debased form. At the same time, his manner of painting introduced the virtuosity and freedom of the sketch into the finished work, promoting painterliness as an end in itself. This approach dominated French painting until the emergence of Neo-classicism, when criticism was heaped on Boucher and his followers. His work never wholly escaped this condemnation, even after the taste for French 18th-century art started to revive in the second half of the 19th century. In his own day, the fact that he worked for both collectors and the market, while retaining the prestige of a history painter, had been both Boucher’s strength and a cause of his decline.


 

Venus Demanding Arms from Vulcan for Aeneas

1732
Oil on canvas, 252 x 175 cm
Musée du Louvre, Paris


 


Adoration of the Shepherds

1750
Oil on canvas
Musée des Beaux-Arts, Lyon


 


The Rape of Europa

1732-34
Oil on canvas, 231 x 274 cm
Wallace Collection, London


 


La "Toilette"


 


The Interrupted Sleep

1750
Oil on canvas
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York


 

Resting Girl

1752
Oil on canvas, 59 x 73 cm
Alte Pinakothek, Munich


 

Girl Reclining (Louise O'Murphy)

1751
Oil on canvas, 59,5 x 73,5 cm
Wallraf-Richartz Museum, Cologne


 


Escena Pastoral