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
A shrewd entrepreneur, François Boucher worked across media and helped define the elaborately ornamental Rococo style. He produced paintings, drawings, book illustrations, and designs for porcelains and textiles that were collected by a diverse clientele, from the middle class to King Louis XV. Over 1,500 prints were made by other artists after Boucher’s compositions, greatly fueling his popularity. The Laundress , however, in a rare impression before lettering, is one of 32 prints drawn and etched by the artist himself. In this picturesque rendering of French life, a girl elegantly drapes linens on a clothesline as a small boy peeks out from behind a broken-down fence. The pleasant figures and light-hearted atmosphere are characteristic of Boucher’s scenes of country households.
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Anthonie Waterloo — Landscape with Zipphorah and her Son, fr
Anthonie Waterloo (Dutch, 1609/10–1690) — Six large upright
Jean François Millet — Peasant with a Wheelbarrow
Anthonie Waterloo (Dutch, 1609/10–1690) — Six large upright
Louis Gabriel Moreau — Vertical Landscape
Jean François Millet — Peasant with a Wheelbarrow
Claes Jansz. Visscher — Farmyard, with Prodigal Son Among th
Pierre François Laurent — Windmill Landscape
Benoît-Louis Prévost — Design: Landscape Study, from Encyclo
Salomon Gessner — Fishermen with Children, plate two from Pa
George Morland|John Constable — Landscape with Figure
Anthonie Waterloo — Zipporah Circumcising her Son