Not currently on view
In the collection of Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · as of July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Jean-Baptiste Tilliard and Augustin de Saint-Aubin’s series of prints depicting traditional children’s games also included horseshoes and jump rope. Although some of the leap-frogging “urchins” in this etching are barefoot and disheveled from their athletics, their trappings would not be out of place for the more adult and aristocratic game of the hunt. The moralizing verse at the bottom of the print notes that while this pastime is good exercise for forgetting the woes of schooling, the delicately etched, rosy-cheeked boys also symbolize ambitious members of society or politics, those who unduly elevate themselves before their reputation comes crashing down.
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Charles Louis Lingée — Morning Walk, from Monument du Costum
Richard Purcell — Va de Bon Coeur; Dédié aux Milords de l'Am
Jacques Couché — La Coquette Fixee
Louis-Marin Bonnet — Paternal Complacency
Anonymous, French, 18th century — L'Anglais a la Promenade T
Pierre François Basan — The Carnival of Parnassus
Jean de La Fontaine|Jean Honoré Fragonard|Jean Dambrun|Pierr
Jean-Baptiste Le Prince — The Washerwomen (Les Laveuses)
Henri Mauperché — Flaying of Marsyas
Nicolas Ponce — L'Enlevement Nocturne
François Boucher|Pierre François Tardieu|Pierre Etienne Falc
Pierre Parrocel — Garden Party