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Washerwomen by François Boucher
Washerwomen dening François Boucher

Washerwomen

Washerwomen c1768 by French Painter François Boucher (1703 – 1770), sing uga dadi juru gambar lan etcher. Dheweke kerja ing Gaya Rococo lan dikenal kanthi tema klasik sing apik banget, pastoral scenes and decorative allegories.

A fanciful painting showing a group of women by the bank of a river with their children and animals washing clothing among a partial forest path.

In the background one can also see other women and men herding their cows above a stone bridge where the river passes under; with the roofs of homes just showing through the tree canopy.

Washerwomen is a retouched digital art old masters reproduction of a public domain image.

Info Ngisor Asalé Saka Wikipedia.org

A native of Paris, Boucher was the son of a lesser known painter Nicolas Boucher, who gave him his first artistic training. At the age of seventeen, a painting by Boucher was admired by the painter François Lemoyne. Lemoyne later appointed Boucher as his apprentice, but after only three months, he went to work for the engraver Jean-François Cars.

Ing 1720, he won the elite Grand Prix de Rome for painting, but did not take up the consequential opportunity to study in Italy until five years later, due to financial problems at the Académie royale de peinture et de sculpture.[1] On his return from studying in Italy he was admitted to the refounded Académie de peinture et de sculpture on 24 November 1731. His morceau de réception (reception piece) was his Rinaldo and Armida of 1734.

Boucher married Marie-Jeanne Buzeau in 1733. The couple had three children together. Boucher became a faculty member in 1734 and his career accelerated from this point as he was promoted Professor then Rector of the Academy, becoming inspector at the Royal Gobelins Manufactory and finally Premier Peintre du Roi (First Painter of the King) in 1765. Portrait of Marie-Louise O’Murphy c. 1752

Boucher died on 30 Mei 1770 in his native Paris. His name, along with that of his patron Madame de Pompadour, had become synonymous with the French Rococo style, leading the Goncourt brothers to write: “Boucher is one of those men who represent the taste of a century, who express, personify and embody it.

Boucher is famous for saying that nature istrop verte et mal éclairée” (too green and badly lit).

Boucher was associated with the gemstone engraver Jacques Guay, whom he taught to draw. He also mentored the Moravian-Austrian painter Martin Ferdinand Quadal as well as the neoclassical painter Jacques-Louis David in 1767.[4] Later, Boucher made a series of drawings of works by Guay which Madame de Pompadour then engraved and distributed as a handsomely bound volume to favored courtiers

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