Boucher, Francois

From New World Encyclopedia
(19 intermediate revisions by 6 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Contracted}}
+
{{Copyedited}}{{approved}}{{images OK}}{{Submitted}}{{Paid}}
{{epname}}{{claimed}}{{Started}}
+
{{epname|Boucher, Francois}}
[[Image:Boucher par Gustav Lundberg 1741.jpg|thumb|right|200px|François Boucher]]
 
:''For other uses, see [[Boucher (disambiguation)]]''
 
  
'''François Boucher''' (September 29 1703 – May 30 1770) had an unparalleled career as a was a [[France|French]] [[painter]]. His versatility in the popular style of [[Rococo]], led to great works that were consistently classical in subject and skill. His work was characterized by several themes and subjects, including [[pastoral]] occupations, such as coquettish milkmaids, allegorical paintings featuring voluptuous beauties, and classical themes including cupids and countryside. His work is a true reflection of eighteenth century France at its pinnacle. His prolific output included over 1,000 paintings and 10,000 drawings.  
+
[[Image:Boucher par Gustav Lundberg 1741.jpg|thumb|right|200px|François Boucher by [[Gustav Lundberg]] in 1741.]]
 +
'''François Boucher''' (September 29, 1703 – May 30, 1770) had an unparalleled career as a [[France|French]] [[painter]]. His versatility in the popular style of [[Rococo]], led to great works that were consistently classical in subject and skill. His playful style and frivolous subject matter exemplify the Rococo style and embody the elegant superficiality of French court life in the mid-eighteenth century. He is especially renowned for his sensuous portrayal of the [[human body]]. His prolific output included over 1,000 paintings and 10,000 drawings.  
  
One of the great painters and draftsmen of the 18th century, he mastered every branch of decorative and illustrative painting. His subject matter ran the gamut of [[History|historical]], [[Bible|Biblical]], [[Mythology|mythological]], [[Portraiture|portraiture]], [[Landscape art|landscape]], [[Still Life|still life]], and ordinary life events.
+
One of the great painters and draftsmen of the eighteenth century, he mastered every branch of decorative and illustrative painting. His subject matter ran the gamut of [[History|historical]], [[religion|religious]], [[Mythology|mythological]], [[Portraiture|portraiture]], [[Landscape art|landscape]], [[Still Life|still life]], and ordinary life events.<ref>[http://www.answers.com/topic/fran-ois-boucher ''Francois Boucher''] ''Answers.com''. Retrieved February 13, 2008.</ref>
 
+
{{toc}}
 +
Boucher raised the level of the preliminary drawing for the studio painting to a bona fide and finished art in its own right. His chosen instrument for drawing ranged from [[pencil]], to [[charcoal]], to [[pen and ink]], to [[pastel]], to watercolor wash, and to various [[chalk]]s of different colors.<ref>Raymond J. Steiner, 2003, [http://www.arttimesjournal.com/art/reviews/11'03boucher/Francois_boucher.htm ''Francois Boucher at the Frick Collection''] ''Arttimesjournal.com.'' Retrieved February 13, 2008.</ref>
 +
He dominated French painting until the emergence of [[Neoclassicism]], when criticism was heaped on him and his followers.
  
 
==Early Life and Education==
 
==Early Life and Education==
 
[[Image:Marie-Louise O'Murphy (1737-1818) painted by Francois Boucher (1703–1770).jpg|thumbnail|300px|right|[[Marie-Louise O'Murphy]] c. 1752]]
 
[[Image:Marie-Louise O'Murphy (1737-1818) painted by Francois Boucher (1703–1770).jpg|thumbnail|300px|right|[[Marie-Louise O'Murphy]] c. 1752]]
François Boucher was born in [[Paris]] to a family of little means. His father, [[Nicholas Boucher]], was a painter specializing in [[embroidery]] designs. These humble beginnings did not allow Boucher to receive any formal education as a young man. Instead, he received what knowledge he had from working under his father, helping with the family business.  
+
François Boucher was born in [[Paris]] to a family of little means. His father, [[Nicholas Boucher]], was a painter specializing in [[embroidery]] designs. These humble beginnings did not allow Boucher to receive any formal [[education]] as a young man. Instead, he received what knowledge he had from working under his father, helping with the family business.  
  
When Boucher turned 17, he became an apprentice to [[François le Moyne|François Lemoyne]] as a designer of embroidery patterns for three months. After that time the money ran out and Boucher went to work for [[Jean-François Cars]], an [[Engraving|engraver]]. It was under Cars that Boucher began to distinguish himself as a serious artist. He won the elite Grand [[Prix de Rome]]. The Prix de Rome was a [[scholarship]] for art students at the time. The various artists were required to prove their talents by completing a rigorous elimination process. The grand prize winner would receive a stay at the [[Mancini Palace]] in [[Rome]], all expenses paid by the King of France. The contest was organized by the [[Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture]]. Although Boucher was announced the winner of the prize, he declined going to [[Italy]] to study until four years later because he had received a commission from the honored painter [[Jean-Antoine Watteau]].
+
When Boucher turned 17, he became an apprentice to [[François le Moyne|François Lemoyne]] as a designer of embroidery patterns for three months. After that time the money ran out and Boucher went to work for [[Jean-François Cars]], an [[Engraving|engraver]]. It was under Cars that Boucher began to distinguish himself as a serious artist. He won the elite Grand [[Prix de Rome]] in 1723. The Prix de Rome was a [[scholarship]] for art students at the time. The various artists were required to prove their talents by completing a rigorous elimination process. The grand prize winner would receive a stay at the [[Mancini Palace]] in [[Rome]], all expenses paid by the King of France. The contest was organized by the [[Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture]]. Although Boucher was announced the winner of the prize, he declined going to [[Italy]] in order to work with [[Jean de Jullienne]] (1686–1766) making [[etching]]s after drawings by [[Antoine Watteau]] (1684–1721). These activities eventually financed his trip to Italy.  
  
Watteau commissioned Boucher to serve as engraver of several of Watteau's paintings. This experience taught Boucher several lessons. First, he gained exposure to the intricate delicacies of Watteau's famed style. He also began forming a reputation around Paris as an artist trusted by Watteau, thus credibility and respect ensued. Finally, the commission provided Boucher with the funds he needed to be able to live and study in Italy.  
+
Boucher left for Italy in 1728 and stayed for four years. His previous training as an engraver, and the skills he acquired as a draftsman under Jean Francois Cars proved to be a solid foundation for his studies in Italy. He learned the technique of the masters of the [[Baroque]], [[Caravaggio]], [[Rubens]], [[Rembrandt]], [[Giordano]] and [[Tiepolo]]. Boucher returned to Paris in 1731 and entered the [[Académie de peinture et de sculpture|Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture]] as a historical painter. Boucher increasingly turned his attention to large-scale mythological painting and soon found official recognition in the form of royal commissions. In just three short years, Boucher left the role of student and became one of the members of the prestigious faculty with the diploma piece ''Rinaldo and Armida''.
  
Boucher left for Italy in 1727 and stayed for four years. His previous training as an engraver, and the skills he acquired as a draftsman under Jean Francois Cars proved to be a solid foundation for his studies in Italy. He learned the technique of the master artists, while also studying [[history]], [[mythology]], and the [[classics]]. Boucher returned to Paris in 1731 and entered the [[Académie de peinture et de sculpture|Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture]] as a historical painter. In just three short years, Boucher left the role of student and became one of the members of the prestigious faculty.
+
In 1733 Boucher married Marie Jeanne Buzeau, who frequently modeled for his paintings. Two girls and a boy were born of the [[marriage]]. Juste, the son, died at a young age; both daughters, Elizabeth Victoire and Marie Emilie, married pupils of Boucher: the painters [[Jean Baptiste Deshays]] and [[Pierre Antoine Boudouin]], both of whom predeceased their father-in-law.<ref>[http://www.answers.com/topic/fran-ois-boucher ''Francois Boucher''] ''Answers.com''. Retrieved February 13, 2008.</ref>
  
 
==Artistic Career==
 
==Artistic Career==
 
[[Image:François Boucher 029.jpg|thumb|left|200px|''The Toilet of Venus'' (1751) typifies the superficially pleasing elegance of Boucher's mature style.]]
 
[[Image:François Boucher 029.jpg|thumb|left|200px|''The Toilet of Venus'' (1751) typifies the superficially pleasing elegance of Boucher's mature style.]]
  
In 1755 he was appointed head of the royal [[tapestry]] manufactory at Gobelins. Boucher reached the pinnacle of success in 1765 when he was appointed to the two highest positions in the French arts establishment: first painter to the king and director of the Royal Academy.
+
By far, Boucher's biggest fan was that of [[Marquise de Pompadour|Madame de Pompadour]] (mistress of King [[Louis XV of France|Louis XV]]). She adored his drawings, paintings, and especially the portraits he created of her. During the course of their acquaintance Boucher painted numerous portraits of Madame Pompadour. The artist became her friend and teacher, instructing her in drawing and etching and serving as artistic counselor for her art purchases. Boucher decorated her several residences, most notably the châteaux of Bellevue and Crécy. Thanks to the patronage of Madame de Pompadour and her brother, the Marquis de Marigny, Director of the King's Buildings, the painter soon enjoyed the favor of Louis XV.<ref>[http://www.bookrags.com/biography/francois-boucher/ Francois Boucher] ''Bookrags.com''. Retrieved February 13, 2008.</ref>
  
By far, Boucher's biggest fan was that of [[Marquise de Pompadour|Madame de Pompadour]] (mistress of King [[Louis XV of France|Louis XV]]). She adored his drawings, paintings, and especially the portraits he created of her. During the course of their acquaintance Boucher painted numerous portraits of Madame Pompadour.  
+
In 1755 he was appointed head of the royal [[tapestry]] manufactory at Gobelins. Boucher reached the pinnacle of success in 1765 when he was appointed to the two highest positions in the French arts establishment: First Painter to the king and director of the Royal Academy.
 +
 +
Boucher's artistic talents were many. In addition to his paintings, Boucher participated in designing costumes and sets for several Parisian theaters. He loved designing the [[comic]] [[opera]]s of [[Charles Simon Favart|Favart]] (1710-1792), and the sets were easily recognizable as his. His whimsical, signature style was clear in all he did. Boucher also tried his hand in designing [[tapestry|tapestries]]. He created pieces for the royal palaces of [[Palace of Versailles|Versailles]], [[Château de Fontainebleau|Fontainebleau]] and [[Choisy-le-Roi|Choisy]]. His designs were successful and sought after. Many of his paintings were made into engravings and reproduced on canvases, [[porcelain]] and [[biscuit-ware]] at the [[Vincennes porcelain|Vincennes]] and [[Manufacture nationale de Sèvres|Sèvres]] factories. He was one of the first artists to be able to successfully exploit his commercial value.
  
Pompadour was not Boucher's only rich person who commissioned Boucher to paint. It is well noted that several of his private commissions caused much speculation, as well as ridicule and disapproval of his person. His reputation came under attack again and again from fellow painter [[Denis Diderot|Diderot]], who claimed that Boucher used his wife as a model for the dark-haired nude in Boucher's painting, ''Odalisque''. Diderot stated that Boucher was "prostituting his own wife." He then went of to venture that the woman in the painting ''Blonde Odalisque'' was a detailed portrait of the extra-marital relationships of the King.
+
==Critics==
 +
Boucher's reputation came under attack again and again from eighteenth-century French [[philosophy|philosopher]] and father of modern art criticism [[Denis Diderot|Diderot]], labeling his work as over-ornate, empty, and immoral.
  
Boucher's style was at times a bit licentious and risque, but these paintings merely reflected his patrons' commissions. Much of his early work is celebration of the tranquil and idyllic life of the country, showing innocent rural landscapes and simplistic situations. One such intimate family scene is depicted in ''The Breakfast'' (1739). Here a simple family is shown, and Boucher often used his wife and children as his models. Boucher held that two of his biggest inspirations were the artists [[Antoine Watteau|Watteau]] and [[Peter Paul Rubens|Rubens]].
+
Previously French artists had been prohibited from showing female nudes under an edict from [[King Louis XIV]]. Only males were allowed to model nude in front of male artists. Boucher used prostitutes to model for him, which also earned Diderot's rebuke.<ref>Steve Meacham, 2005, [http://www.smh.com.au/news/Arts/Forgotten-master-of-Western-art/2005/03/10/1110417619852.html Forgotten Master of Western Art] ''Smh.com.'' Retrieved February 13, 2008.</ref>
  
Boucher's artistic talents were many. In addition to his paintings, Boucher participated in designing costumes and sets for several Parisian theaters. He loved designing the comic operas of [[Charles Simon Favart|Favart]] (1710-1792), and the sets were easily recognizable as his. His whimsical, signature style was clear in all he did. Boucher also tried his hand in designing [[tapestry|tapestries]]. He created pieces for the royal palaces of [[Palace of Versailles|Versailles]], [[Château de Fontainebleau|Fontainebleau]] and [[Choisy-le-Roi|Choisy]]. His designs were successful and sought after. Many of his paintings were made into engravings and reproduced on canvases, [[porcelain]] and [[biscuit-ware]] at the [[Vincennes porcelain|Vincennes]] and [[Manufacture nationale de Sèvres|Sèvres]] factories.
+
Many of his works are depictions of mythological paradises in which pretty, full-figured, and sometimes nude goddesses are portrayed in lush backgrounds. Turning away from the solemn [[Christian]] subjects that dominated the preceding [[Baroque]] era, Boucher's art was criticized for stimulating the viewer to thoughts of pleasure and delight.
  
 
==Death==
 
==Death==
Boucher's work earned the criticism of many when the French Revolution erupted in France. During the war people scorned the pretty and unrealistic portrayals of life that Boucher was known for. But, like his former student [[Jean-Honore Fragonard]], Boucher refused to conform to the new ideals in painting and kept working as he had always done up until his death. On May 30, 1770, Francois Boucher died in Paris. His lifelong devotion to painting in the French Rococo style gained him the fame of being the top artist in that genre. Upon his death the [[Goncourt brothers]] were inspired to write: "Boucher is one of those men who represent the taste of a century, who express, personify and embody it."
+
On May 30, 1770, Francois Boucher died in [[Paris]]. His lifelong devotion to painting in the French Rococo style gained him the fame of being the top artist in that genre.
 +
 
 +
==Legacy==
 +
The [[Louvre]] and the ''Wallace Collection'', [[London]], have excellent selections of Boucher's work. He is well represented in the [[United States]] by his ''Toilet of Venus'' and ''Birth and Triumph of Venus'' in the [[Metropolitan Museum]], [[New York City]]. Examples of his work are also found in the [[Frick Collection]], New York City, and the [[Philadelphia Museum of Art]].
  
 
==Works include==  
 
==Works include==  
[[Image:Boucher dejeuner.jpg|thumb|left|250px|''The Breakfast'' (1739).]]
+
[[Image:Boucher dejeuner.jpg|thumb|left|250px|''The Breakfast'' (1739)]]
  
 
* [http://www.wga.hu/html/b/boucher/index.html Web Gallery of Art]
 
* [http://www.wga.hu/html/b/boucher/index.html Web Gallery of Art]
Line 60: Line 67:
 
* ''Venus Consoling Love''
 
* ''Venus Consoling Love''
  
 +
==Notes==
 +
<references/>
 
==References==
 
==References==
*Hedley, Jo, and François Boucher. 2004. ''François Boucher: Seductive Visions''. London: Wallace Collection. ISBN 0900785721
+
*Boucher, François. ''François Boucher, 1703-1770''. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, February 17, 1986-May 4, 1986; the Detroit Institute of Arts, May 27-August 17, 1986; Reunion des musées nationaux, Grand Palais, Paris, September 19, 1986-January 5, 1987. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1986. ISBN 0810907437
*Laing, Alastair, François Boucher, and Pierre Rosenberg. 2003. ''The Drawings of François Boucher''. New York, N.Y.: American Federation of Arts in association with Scala Publishers. ISBN 1857592980
+
*Hedley, Jo, and François Boucher. ''François Boucher: Seductive Visions''. London: Wallace Collection, 2004 (original 1900). ISBN 0900785721
*Wakefield, David. 2005. ''Boucher''. London: Chaucer. ISBN 1904449352
+
*Hyde, Melissa Lee, and Mark Ledbury. ''Rethinking Boucher''. Issues & debates, 15. Los Angeles: Getty Research Institute, 2006. ISBN 089236825X
*Hyde, Melissa Lee, and Mark Ledbury. 2006. ''Rethinking Boucher''. Issues & debates, 15. Los Angeles: Getty Research Institute. ISBN 089236825X
+
*Hyde, Melissa Lee, and François Boucher. ''Making up the Rococo: François Boucher and His Critics''. Texts & documents. Los Angeles, CA: Getty Research Institute, 2006. ISBN 978-0892368259
*Hyde, Melissa Lee, and François Boucher. 2006. ''Making up the Rococo: François Boucher and His Critics''. Texts & documents. Los Angeles, CA: Getty Research Institute. ISBN 0892367431
+
*Laing, Alastair, François Boucher, and Pierre Rosenberg. ''The Drawings of François Boucher''. New York, N.Y.: American Federation of Arts in association with Scala Publishers, 2003. ISBN 1857592980
*Boucher, François. 1986. ''François Boucher, 1703-1770'': the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, February 17, 1986-May 4, 1986, the Detroit Institute of Arts, May 27-August 17, 1986, Reunion des musées nationaux, Grand Palais, Paris, September 19, 1986-January 5, 1987. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art. ISBN 0810907437
+
*Wakefield, David. ''Boucher''. London: Chaucer, 2005. ISBN 1904449352
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
* [http://www.metmuseum.org/TOAH/HD/bouc/hd_bouc.htm Timeline of Art History] ''Metmuseum.org''. Retrieved July 27, 2007.
+
All links retrieved April 25, 2017.
* [http://www.wga.hu/frames-e.html?/html/b/boucher/index.html Web Gallery of Art] ''Wga.hu.'' Retrieved July 27, 2007.
 
* Steiner, Raymind J. 2003.[http://www.arttimesjournal.com/art/reviews/11'03boucher/Francois_boucher.htm ''Francois Boucher at the Frick Collection''] ''Arttimesjournal.com.'' Retrieved July 27, 2007.
 
* Bruce, Donald. 2005. [http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G1-131808762.html Boucher at the Wallace Collection] ''Encyclopedia.com.'' Retrieved July 27, 2007.
 
* Russell, John. 1986. [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9A0DE3DE143BF935A25751C0A960948260 ''Homage to a Painter Who Celebrated Privilege''] ''New York Times.'' Retrieved July 27, 2007.
 
  
 +
* [http://www.metmuseum.org/TOAH/HD/bouc/hd_bouc.htm Timeline of Art History] ''Metmuseum.org''
 +
* [http://www.wga.hu/frames-e.html?/html/b/boucher/index.html Web Gallery of Art] ''Wga.hu''
 +
* Russell, John. 1986. [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9A0DE3DE143BF935A25751C0A960948260 ''Homage to a Painter Who Celebrated Privilege''] ''New York Times''
 +
* Meacham, Steve. 2005. [http://www.smh.com.au/news/Arts/Forgotten-master-of-Western-art/2005/03/10/1110417619852.html Forgotten Master of Western Art] ''Smh.com''
  
  
{{Commons|François Boucher}}
+
[[Category:Artists]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Boucher, François}}
+
[[Category:biography]]
  
[[Category:History and biography]]
 
 
{{Credit|132877244}}
 
{{Credit|132877244}}

Revision as of 18:47, 1 October 2022

François Boucher by Gustav Lundberg in 1741.

François Boucher (September 29, 1703 – May 30, 1770) had an unparalleled career as a French painter. His versatility in the popular style of Rococo, led to great works that were consistently classical in subject and skill. His playful style and frivolous subject matter exemplify the Rococo style and embody the elegant superficiality of French court life in the mid-eighteenth century. He is especially renowned for his sensuous portrayal of the human body. His prolific output included over 1,000 paintings and 10,000 drawings.

One of the great painters and draftsmen of the eighteenth century, he mastered every branch of decorative and illustrative painting. His subject matter ran the gamut of historical, religious, mythological, portraiture, landscape, still life, and ordinary life events.[1]

Boucher raised the level of the preliminary drawing for the studio painting to a bona fide and finished art in its own right. His chosen instrument for drawing ranged from pencil, to charcoal, to pen and ink, to pastel, to watercolor wash, and to various chalks of different colors.[2] He dominated French painting until the emergence of Neoclassicism, when criticism was heaped on him and his followers.

Early Life and Education

Marie-Louise O'Murphy c. 1752

François Boucher was born in Paris to a family of little means. His father, Nicholas Boucher, was a painter specializing in embroidery designs. These humble beginnings did not allow Boucher to receive any formal education as a young man. Instead, he received what knowledge he had from working under his father, helping with the family business.

When Boucher turned 17, he became an apprentice to François Lemoyne as a designer of embroidery patterns for three months. After that time the money ran out and Boucher went to work for Jean-François Cars, an engraver. It was under Cars that Boucher began to distinguish himself as a serious artist. He won the elite Grand Prix de Rome in 1723. The Prix de Rome was a scholarship for art students at the time. The various artists were required to prove their talents by completing a rigorous elimination process. The grand prize winner would receive a stay at the Mancini Palace in Rome, all expenses paid by the King of France. The contest was organized by the Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture. Although Boucher was announced the winner of the prize, he declined going to Italy in order to work with Jean de Jullienne (1686–1766) making etchings after drawings by Antoine Watteau (1684–1721). These activities eventually financed his trip to Italy.

Boucher left for Italy in 1728 and stayed for four years. His previous training as an engraver, and the skills he acquired as a draftsman under Jean Francois Cars proved to be a solid foundation for his studies in Italy. He learned the technique of the masters of the Baroque, Caravaggio, Rubens, Rembrandt, Giordano and Tiepolo. Boucher returned to Paris in 1731 and entered the Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture as a historical painter. Boucher increasingly turned his attention to large-scale mythological painting and soon found official recognition in the form of royal commissions. In just three short years, Boucher left the role of student and became one of the members of the prestigious faculty with the diploma piece Rinaldo and Armida.

In 1733 Boucher married Marie Jeanne Buzeau, who frequently modeled for his paintings. Two girls and a boy were born of the marriage. Juste, the son, died at a young age; both daughters, Elizabeth Victoire and Marie Emilie, married pupils of Boucher: the painters Jean Baptiste Deshays and Pierre Antoine Boudouin, both of whom predeceased their father-in-law.[3]

Artistic Career

The Toilet of Venus (1751) typifies the superficially pleasing elegance of Boucher's mature style.

By far, Boucher's biggest fan was that of Madame de Pompadour (mistress of King Louis XV). She adored his drawings, paintings, and especially the portraits he created of her. During the course of their acquaintance Boucher painted numerous portraits of Madame Pompadour. The artist became her friend and teacher, instructing her in drawing and etching and serving as artistic counselor for her art purchases. Boucher decorated her several residences, most notably the châteaux of Bellevue and Crécy. Thanks to the patronage of Madame de Pompadour and her brother, the Marquis de Marigny, Director of the King's Buildings, the painter soon enjoyed the favor of Louis XV.[4]

In 1755 he was appointed head of the royal tapestry manufactory at Gobelins. Boucher reached the pinnacle of success in 1765 when he was appointed to the two highest positions in the French arts establishment: First Painter to the king and director of the Royal Academy.

Boucher's artistic talents were many. In addition to his paintings, Boucher participated in designing costumes and sets for several Parisian theaters. He loved designing the comic operas of Favart (1710-1792), and the sets were easily recognizable as his. His whimsical, signature style was clear in all he did. Boucher also tried his hand in designing tapestries. He created pieces for the royal palaces of Versailles, Fontainebleau and Choisy. His designs were successful and sought after. Many of his paintings were made into engravings and reproduced on canvases, porcelain and biscuit-ware at the Vincennes and Sèvres factories. He was one of the first artists to be able to successfully exploit his commercial value.

Critics

Boucher's reputation came under attack again and again from eighteenth-century French philosopher and father of modern art criticism Diderot, labeling his work as over-ornate, empty, and immoral.

Previously French artists had been prohibited from showing female nudes under an edict from King Louis XIV. Only males were allowed to model nude in front of male artists. Boucher used prostitutes to model for him, which also earned Diderot's rebuke.[5]

Many of his works are depictions of mythological paradises in which pretty, full-figured, and sometimes nude goddesses are portrayed in lush backgrounds. Turning away from the solemn Christian subjects that dominated the preceding Baroque era, Boucher's art was criticized for stimulating the viewer to thoughts of pleasure and delight.

Death

On May 30, 1770, Francois Boucher died in Paris. His lifelong devotion to painting in the French Rococo style gained him the fame of being the top artist in that genre.

Legacy

The Louvre and the Wallace Collection, London, have excellent selections of Boucher's work. He is well represented in the United States by his Toilet of Venus and Birth and Triumph of Venus in the Metropolitan Museum, New York City. Examples of his work are also found in the Frick Collection, New York City, and the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

Works include

The Breakfast (1739)
  • Rinaldo and Armida (Louvre Museum)
  • The Rest on the Flight to Egypt
  • The Leda and the Swan
  • La Toilette
  • Diana Leaving her Bath
  • The Companions of Diana
  • Diana Returns from the Hunt
  • Bachantes
  • Interrupted Sleep
  • Portrait of Marie-Louise O'Murphy (Alte Pinakothek)
  • Autumn
  • Putti with Birds (L'Amour Oiseleur), ca. 1731-33 Honolulu Academy of Arts
  • The Visit of Venus to Vulcan
  • Christ and John the Baptist as Children
  • Pastorale
  • Naiads and Triton
  • Triumph of Venus
  • Venus Consoling Love

Notes

  1. Francois Boucher Answers.com. Retrieved February 13, 2008.
  2. Raymond J. Steiner, 2003, Francois Boucher at the Frick Collection Arttimesjournal.com. Retrieved February 13, 2008.
  3. Francois Boucher Answers.com. Retrieved February 13, 2008.
  4. Francois Boucher Bookrags.com. Retrieved February 13, 2008.
  5. Steve Meacham, 2005, Forgotten Master of Western Art Smh.com. Retrieved February 13, 2008.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Boucher, François. François Boucher, 1703-1770. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, February 17, 1986-May 4, 1986; the Detroit Institute of Arts, May 27-August 17, 1986; Reunion des musées nationaux, Grand Palais, Paris, September 19, 1986-January 5, 1987. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1986. ISBN 0810907437
  • Hedley, Jo, and François Boucher. François Boucher: Seductive Visions. London: Wallace Collection, 2004 (original 1900). ISBN 0900785721
  • Hyde, Melissa Lee, and Mark Ledbury. Rethinking Boucher. Issues & debates, 15. Los Angeles: Getty Research Institute, 2006. ISBN 089236825X
  • Hyde, Melissa Lee, and François Boucher. Making up the Rococo: François Boucher and His Critics. Texts & documents. Los Angeles, CA: Getty Research Institute, 2006. ISBN 978-0892368259
  • Laing, Alastair, François Boucher, and Pierre Rosenberg. The Drawings of François Boucher. New York, N.Y.: American Federation of Arts in association with Scala Publishers, 2003. ISBN 1857592980
  • Wakefield, David. Boucher. London: Chaucer, 2005. ISBN 1904449352

External links

All links retrieved April 25, 2017.

Credits

New World Encyclopedia writers and editors rewrote and completed the Wikipedia article in accordance with New World Encyclopedia standards. This article abides by terms of the Creative Commons CC-by-sa 3.0 License (CC-by-sa), which may be used and disseminated with proper attribution. Credit is due under the terms of this license that can reference both the New World Encyclopedia contributors and the selfless volunteer contributors of the Wikimedia Foundation. To cite this article click here for a list of acceptable citing formats.The history of earlier contributions by wikipedians is accessible to researchers here:

The history of this article since it was imported to New World Encyclopedia:

Note: Some restrictions may apply to use of individual images which are separately licensed.