:To celebrate the 300th anniversary of the birth of François
Boucher (1703-1770), an unprecedented international loan
exhibition of his drawings is on view at The Frick Collection
through December 14.
This is truly the first major survey of the artist's graphic work
to bring together a substantial number of loans from both
international and national public and private collections.
Presenting approximately 75 sheets of the highest quality, the
exhibition provides a deeper understanding of Boucher's prolific
output of works on paper and demonstrates his extraordinary
technique and style as a draftsman.
The artist's wide variety of subject matter is revealed by a
selection that includes depictions of pastoral scenes and
landscapes, various conceptions of mythology, religious
narratives, historical events, representations of literature and
allegory and contemporary scenes.
"The Drawings of François Boucher" makes its debut at the Frick
and then travels to the Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth, Texas
(January 17-April 18). It is curated by Alastair Laing, advisor
on paintings and sculpture to the National Trust, London.
Boucher is said to have made as many as 10,000 drawings over the
course of a career that spanned nearly five decades. Not only did
he make preparatory compositional and figure studies for his
paintings, but also used drawings in the process of designing
cartoons for Beauvais and Gobelins tapestries and as models for
Sevres porcelain. From early on in his career he provided
drawings to be engraved as thesis plates, book illustrations,
frontispieces and allegorical vignettes.
As a mature artist he pioneered the concept of the autonomous
drawing, creating individual works specifically for collectors.
Following innovations in printmaking in the 1740s, Boucher also
made drawings to be engraved in facsimile, which could,
therefore, reach broader audiences. Furthermore, he explored the
graphic medium in all its variety, drawing in sanguine (red
chalk); sanguine brûlée (reddish-brown chalk); pen and ink (both
black and brown); brush and wash; pastel; in the trios crayons
technique perfected by Watteau; and in black chalk heightened
with white on blue, gray or fawn paper.
The son of a master painter in the Paris Guild (the Académie de
Saint-Luc), Boucher spent a brief apprenticeship in the studio of
the brilliant, but unstable, history painter François Lemoyne.
During the early to middle 1720s, Boucher created etchings of
more than 100 drawings by Antoine Watteau (1684-1721) and was
thereafter strongly influenced by the artist's figural style and
use of color. In 1723, Boucher won the academy's annual Prix de
Rome, the premiere student prize that would enable him to study
classical and Renaissance art in Rome at the Académie de France.
Surviving drawings from this period (the trip was delayed and he
actually traveled to the Eternal City in 1728) suggest that he
was most interested in the vigor and grandiloquence of the
Italian Baroque. On this sojourn, he also encountered the work of
Northern mannerist Abraham Bloemaert (1566-1651), whose rustic
protagonists had a considerable influence on the young artist's
own peasant scenes and early pastorals.
Back in Paris by the summer of 1731, Boucher quickly ascended the
academy's hierarchy as a history painter and was made a full
professor by 1737. Among the most successful of the
extracurricular activities he undertook at the same time for
private, sometimes royal, clients was the set of illustrations
for a new edition of Molière's works in 1734-35. Setting the
narratives in contemporary Parisian interiors, Boucher approached
each episode as a miniature history painting and prepared his
compositions accordingly with figure studies of unprecedented
verve and spontaneity. Featured in the exhibition is an exemplary
study on loan from the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam, in which the
costume, tricorn, gestures and expressions of the protesting La
Flèche are masterfully delineated, while his pockets are being
picked by the suspicious figure of Harpagon.
Despite the caliber of such drawings, it was primarily as a
painter of mythological subjects that Boucher made his reputation
in the 1730s, one that became unassailable with Madame de
Pompadour's installation as titular mistress in 1745. Indeed,
under these circumstances, Boucher quickly gained ascendancy as
the foremost painter in her circle. His masterpieces, "The Rising
of the Sun" and "The Setting of the Sun" (now in the Wallace
Collection, London), from which a single set of Gobelins
tapestries was woven, were conceived as a part of mythological
decorations for Pompadour's Château de Bellevue. A drawing of a
male nude, based on the figure of Apollo in "The Rising of the
Sun," is included in the exhibition.
The exhibition includes "Landscape with the Aqueduct at Arcueil,"
a rendition of the structure created in the Seventeenth Century
for Marie de Médicis. Framed by overgrown trees, the scene evokes
the abandoned grounds of a château south of Paris where artists
of Boucher's generation flocked to make paintings and drawings en
plein air.
Although in the 1760s Boucher came under fire from progressive
critics for his attachment to a purely fictive universe, he
continued to produce monumental mythological and pastoral
decorations that display an inventiveness and acuity that would
be matched only by his pupil Jean-Honoré Fragonard in the next
decade. Still in royal favor, Boucher became premier peintre to
the aging Louis XV in 1765. The artist seems also, however, to
have been receptive to the emerging classicism that infiltrated
all aspects of French art, decorative arts and architecture in
this decade. An example of this aesthetic shift can be found in
the exhibition, which features the dignified and magisterial
"Study of a Despondent Woman in Drapery."
A fully illustrated catalog, published by the AFA in association
with Scala Publishers Ltd, accompanies the exhibition and
features entries that reassess the dating of many of Boucher's
drawings, trace their history of ownership, discuss the
relationship between drawings and specific paintings, and reveal
other new research. The catalog (264 pages, more than 100 color
illustrations) is available in English and French hardcover
editions at $55, and in an English softcover version at $37.50
through the museum shop of The Frick Collection, www.frick.org or
212-288-0700.
On Wednesday, December 10, at 6 pm, Katie Scott of The Courtauld
Institute of Art will give a free lecture entitled "Homo
Orientalis: François Boucher and China." Throughout his career,
Boucher was an avid collector of lacquer, Chinese ceramics and
prints. Boucher created prints and tapestries that reflected his
own distinct vision of China.
The Frick Collection is at 1 East 70th Street, near Fifth
Avenue.