Not currently on view
In the collection of Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland · as of July 2026
FROM THE CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART’S CATALOG
Boucher was one of the most prolific designers of ornament prints. With their aquatic motifs and gracefully curving and scalloped forms, these designs for fantastic, even bizarre fountains perfectly illustrate the whimsical Rococo approach. Derived from the French word for shell, rocaille, the Rococo was a light, playful style filled with shell motifs (which stemmed in part from a vogue for collecting shells), naturalistic curves, scrolls, and plant forms.
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Jacques François Saly (French, 1717–1776) — Suite of Vases:
Jacques François Saly (French, 1717–1776) — Suite of Vases:
Giovanni Benedetto Castiglione (Italian, 1609–1664) — Fete o
Jean-Baptiste Marie Pierre — Fountain with a Naiad Seated on
Louis Crépy (French) — Pastoral, Arabesque
Jean-Baptiste Marie Pierre — The Seated Nymph (Une fontaine
Auguste Pequegnot|Stefano della Bella — Ornamental design of
Jacques François Saly (French, 1717–1776) — Suite of Vases:
Edme Bouchardon|François Joullain|Etienne Fessard|Anne Claud
Dancker Danckerts|Michel Dorigny — Standing Woman with a Chi
Louis Desplaces|Charles Antoine Coypel — Blacksmith Cupids
Pierre Guérin (French, 1774–1833) — Grasp All, Lose All