1751, Francois Boucher, The Toilette of Venus -- Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York)
From the museum label: Boucher executed this painting for Madame de Pompadour, the powerful, official mistress of Louis XV and Boucher's most significant patron for nearly two decades. It was originally inserted into the carved and painted wood-panel walls of her Château de Bellevue, the construction of which prompted many commissions that became textbook examples of Rococo art. Boucher's depiction of the goddess of love adorning herself with the help of putti encapsulates key features associated with this movement: overt theatricality, voluptuous flesh, and an asymmetrical unfurling of luxurious furniture, fabric, flowers, and pearls.
1751, Francois Boucher, The Toilette of Venus -- Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York)
From the museum label: Boucher executed this painting for Madame de Pompadour, the powerful, official mistress of Louis XV and Boucher's most significant patron for nearly two decades. It was originally inserted into the carved and painted wood-panel walls of her Château de Bellevue, the construction of which prompted many commissions that became textbook examples of Rococo art. Boucher's depiction of the goddess of love adorning herself with the help of putti encapsulates key features associated with this movement: overt theatricality, voluptuous flesh, and an asymmetrical unfurling of luxurious furniture, fabric, flowers, and pearls.