François Boucher

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François Boucher

Born: 1703

Died: 1770

Summary of François Boucher

King Louis XV and his lover, Madame de Pompadour, ardently backed Boucher’s ideas of a utopian society as Paris teetered on the brink of revolution. His flirty and eroticized explorations of beauty, as well as his appreciation of noble grace and elegance, adorned the polished spaces of aristocratic life. His sensual pictures caught the development of Enlightenment thought and the aristocratic Salons that fostered these intellectuals at the same time. Boucher’s art is a prominent example of a more sophisticated Rococo style, brimming with paradoxes that mix tradition, beauty, and invention.

Boucher’s paintings were treasured by the French nobility for their soft pastels, attractive surfaces, and sensuous figures. Even his commissioned pictures were frequently romanticised, with mythical heroes and heroines sometimes turned into allegorical interpretations. During the latter years of the Ancien Regime and the reigns of Louis XV and Louis XVI, his art was at the height of its popularity.

Following the demise of absolutist Louis XIV, nobles gained independence from the crown, creating a new market for Rococo art. Boucher was free to explore whimsical, personal, exotic, and pastoral subjects, free from the serious theological and historical topics forced by the authoritarian Baroque style that had dominated the previous generation and had been constrained by the expectations of the church and the state.

Whereas the Baroque style aimed to impress the audience with grandiosity and drama, the Rococo style was considerably more intimate and whimsical, and it was here that Boucher excelled. The asymmetrical and organic iconography of the Rococo supplanted the classical lines and harshness of Baroque design, which frequently drew from an idealised vision of nature.

Boucher symbolised the aristocracy’s degeneracy as Enlightenment opponents like Denis Diderot gained clout and the excesses of court culture came under investigation. Boucher’s work was soon criticised as superficial and ornamental as the typical Rococo artist; it was also regarded as a frivolous and short-lived fad in history records. Boucher’s virtuosity and attention to visual pleasure preserved his legacy among artists, but made him suspect to historians and theorists; it has only been in the last few decades that scholars have reconsidered these pejorative labels to recover more nuanced ideas – and even Enlightenment principles – in his work.

Early Life

François Boucher, the son of a draughtsman, painter, and embroiderer, came from poor yet artistic beginnings. His early schooling was with his father in Paris, until his work was discovered by François Lemoyne, a well-known painter. Although Boucher, then 17, only stayed under Lemoyne’s instruction for a few months before moving on to work for publisher Jean-François Cars, he immediately picked up on his first master’s scholarly approach. Boucher’s ability as a painter and engraver was appreciated by Jean de Jullienne, a well-known collector and patron of the arts, who entrusted the young artist with the duty of reproducing Antoine Watteau’s designs.

Internal politics within the Académie interfered with this prize, which should have supported a three-year scholarship to study in Italy. Boucher began accepting private contracts for paintings, sketches, and etchings, and his abilities were so impressive that he was able to pay his own journey to Italy in 1728. There, he studied Michelangelo’s and Raphael’s work, as well as that of Baroque artists like Bernini and Castiglione. Boucher was legally accepted to the Académie upon his return to Paris, and he became the talk of the French art community almost instantly. His pictures were much sought for by the Parisian aristocracy, with a clientele that included King Louis XV.

Mid Life

Boucher’s career as an academic took off. His mythological themes, as well as genre paintings, landscapes, and portraits, were in high demand by royal and aristocratic collectors. Less rich fans coveted more cheap prints and engravings after his art, which were extensively published and sold. Boucher’s fame grew even further in the late 1730s, when he was commissioned to develop tapestry patterns for the Beauvais tapestry factory. Boucher’s tapestry cartoons of pastoral landscapes were highly prized, and they were transported not just across Europe but even to China. Later in his career, he was promoted to Inspector of Works at the Gobelins tapestry factory.

Boucher remained essentially a painter, working for the aristocratic and cosmopolitan elite in Paris despite his numerous different undertakings. Madame de Pompadour, King Louis XV’s official mistress, became his most important patron, commissioning a series of large-scale portraits as well as grand mythological works like The Toilet of Venus (1751) and religious paintings like The Light of the World (1750), a maternal love and warmth nativity scene. Boucher was named Premier Peintre du Roi (official painter to the monarch) in 1765 with the help of Madame de Pompadour.

Late Life

Boucher succeeded the artist Carle Vanloo as Director of the Académie Royale in the same year he became the King’s official painter, strengthening his control over French art and its institutions. His reputation and power began to wane in the face of rising Enlightenment morals and philosophy, despite the fact that he had risen to the pinnacle of official accomplishment. He showed less at the Salon, possibly as a result of harsh criticism from renowned critics like Denis Diderot, who condemned his art as amoral, dishonest, and archaic.

The aristocratic topics and pastel palettes of Rococo artists like Boucher were viewed as indulgent and frivolous in comparison to the early incarnations of what would become Neoclassicism, an academically demanding and moralising school of painting. Despite the increasing trend of more restrained Neoclassicism and bourgeois morals, Boucher never wavered from his own style; he remained a favourite option for aristocratic commissions, carrying out his official duties at the Académie and in the court.

Boucher continued to work into the late 1760s, despite his bad health, which included vision problems. In 1770, he died unexpectedly in his workshop at the Palais du Louvre, having created over 10,000 sketches and 1,000 paintings during his career (according to his own, possibly inflated estimate).

The Rococo style had fallen out of favour among critics and artists by the time of Boucher’s death. Boucher’s name will rapidly become connected with the Ancien Régime’s outdated and immoral lifestyle. “Of all the painters of the French eighteenth century, Boucher has perhaps suffered the worst fate at the hands of posterity.” comments art historian David Wakefield. He was hailed as a master and dubbed “the painter of the graces.” during his lifetime.

Famous Art by François Boucher

The Breakfast

1739

François Boucher

Five people assemble around a tiny table, steam rising up from the freshly poured cups as they drink coffee from a beautiful service. The spectator is welcomed into the house of a rich Parisian family by this nicely furnished, stylish sitting room. Details like the Chinese porcelain figure on the shelf, the gilded sconces above the fireplace, and the roundel painting are all Rococo features that indicate this to be a contemporary picture of exquisite domesticity. (In fact, Rococo art gets its name from the term rocaille, which refers to the fashionable shell-shaped architecture and furnishings at the time.)

The Triumph of Venus

1740

François Boucher

Venus rises from the sea, borne aloft on a wave and surrounded by lovers on a mother-of-pearl shell. Winged cupids float above them while naiads, nymphs, and gods float amid dolphins and doves. From the mythical theme, which is humorously infused with sensuality, to the cold palette, dynamic, pyramidal arrangement, and pattern of interlocking arabesques, Boucher’s Triumph of Venus is an exemplar of Rococo style. The sensual skin of the characters is depicted in modulations of creams and pinks in this artwork, which is a celebration of love and passion. A white dove perches suggestively between her thighs while a female figure at left appears to fling back her head in pleasure.

Odalisque

1745

François Boucher

A voluptuous lady lies prone on a couch, bearing her behind and flirtatiously turning her head to the spectator, while somewhat diverting her gaze to preserve a coy posture. The milky tones of her skin and dressing robe are put into stark contrast by the rich textiles of deep blues, making the body shine luminously. Folds – of skin, cloth, pillows, and the rug – organise the entire picture, enticing the viewer’s eye to examine attentively over the topography of the canvas.

BULLET POINTED (SUMMARISED)

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  • King Louis XV and his lover, Madame de Pompadour, ardently backed Boucher’s ideas of a utopian society as Paris teetered on the brink of revolution.
  • His flirty and eroticized explorations of beauty, as well as his appreciation of noble grace and elegance, adorned the polished spaces of aristocratic life.
  • His sensual pictures caught the development of Enlightenment thought and the aristocratic Salons that fostered these intellectuals at the same time.
  • Boucher’s art is a prominent example of a more sophisticated Rococo style, brimming with paradoxes that mix tradition, beauty, and invention.
  • Boucher’s paintings were treasured by the French nobility for their soft pastels, attractive surfaces, and sensuous figures.
  • Even his commissioned pictures were frequently romanticised, with mythical heroes and heroines sometimes turned into allegorical interpretations.
  • During the latter years of the Ancien Regime and the reigns of Louis XV and Louis XVI, his art was at the height of its popularity.
  • Following the demise of absolutist Louis XIV, nobles gained independence from the crown, creating a new market for Rococo art.
  • Boucher was free to explore whimsical, personal, exotic, and pastoral subjects, free from the serious theological and historical topics forced by the authoritarian Baroque style that had dominated the previous generation and had been constrained by the expectations of the church and the state.
  • The asymmetrical and organic iconography of the Rococo supplanted the classical lines and harshness of Baroque design, which frequently drew from an idealised vision of nature.

Born: 1703

Died: 1770

Information Citations

En.wikipedia.org, https://en.wikipedia.org/.

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