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Portfolios%3D%22621%22%20and%20Disp_Obj_Type%3D%22Painting%22%20and%20Century%3D%2218th%20Century%22
Painting
Venus and Cupid
Attributed to or after François Boucher, 1703 - 1770
Boucher, François
France
1703 - 1770
Male
15 7/8 x 12 5/8 in. (40.3 x 32.1 cm)
.
.
.
Oil
Oil
ca. 1732
1727
1737
1600-1800, 18th century, Cupid, flowers in art, paintings, Venus
Painting
Rococo, from the French word rocaille (rockwork or shell), was an 18th century decorative style that reacted against the classical tradition of the Academy and instead stressed color, light, movement, and a frank pleasure in living. The easy flowing brushwork and the luminous colors show the influence of Rubens.
As a rococo painter, François Boucher worked primarily in the service of Madame de Pompadour, mistress to Louis XV. His paintings satisfied the taste of a sophisticated public which was sensitive to the most subtle relations of color and liked pictures hung on the light paneling of even the smallest room.
This intimate painting of "Venus and Cupid," with its sensuously modeled nudes, embodies the French 18th century tendency to transform the Baroque style into one of more delicate elaboration and elegance. An 18th-century engraving, which P. Aveline made after the painting, is inscribed "F. Boucher pinxit."
[Gallery label text, 2008]
back of frameback of stretcherback of frame
1950.4
item
Memorial Art Gallery
1/25/2001
50.4SL1
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digital image
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50.4DI#4
digital image
5/27/2015
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x-ray
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Painting
Cleopatra Captured by Roman Soldiers after the Death of Mark Antony
Bernard Duvivier, 1762 - 1837
Duvivier, Bernard
France
1762 - 1837
Male
45 x 58 in. (114.3 x 147.3 cm)
.
.
.
without frame
Oil
Oil
1789
1789
1789
1600-1800, 18th century, Cleopatra, narratives, paintings
Painting
Duvivier received his initial training in Bruges and then moved to Paris, where he assimilated the severe Neoclassical style perfected by Jacques-Louis David. In this early work, Duvivier combined the poses of several antique statues to illustrate an episode recounted in Plutarch's "Life of Mark Anthony." Following Anthony's suicide, a Roman soldier attempts to forestall the Egyptian queen's own death by promising that Octavian Caesar will show her clemency. The subtle, glowing colors, precise attention to detail, and impeccable draughtsmanship presage the artist's occasional work as a miniaturist.
[Gallery label text, 2008]
lower rightback of frameback of stretcherback of stretcher, Very modernback of stretcher, On crossbar of stretcher
1984.40
item
Memorial Art Gallery
4/5/2000
84.40TR1
Transparency
Memorial Art Gallery
4 x 5
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84.40DI1
digital image
Memorial Art Gallery
Imaging complete
6/26/2000
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details
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