● On view now — Gallery 216
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
This painting is based on a 1745 pantomime about a young shepherd’s awakening love for a shepherdess. The couple feed each other grapes—a fruit associated with Bacchus, god of pleasure—suggesting that their encounter is not entirely chaste. François Boucher’s compositions on pastoral themes comprise his most influential contribution to 18th-century French art. These lush and playful fantasies of rustic life, designed primarily for the private enjoyment of wealthy financiers and aristocrats, had little to do with the social realities of rural labor during the period.
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Jean Baptiste François Pater — Fête galante in a L
Jean Antoine Watteau — Fête champêtre (Pastoral Gathering)
Jean-Baptiste Joseph Pater — Concert Champêtre
Angelica Kauffmann — Mrs. Hugh Morgan and Her Daughter
Adriaen van de Velde — Ferry Boat
Nicolas Lancret (French, 1690–1743) — Declaration of Love
Drie kinderen spelend met een vogelnestje
Jean Ouvrier|François Boucher — Les deux Confidentes (The tw
René Gaillard|François Boucher — Le Panier Misterieux (The M
Jacques Philippe Le Bas|François Boucher — Pensant-ils au Ra
Marie Madeleine Igonet|François Boucher — The Amusement of a
Simon van der Does — Shepherdess Reading