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
François Boucher, whose art epitomized the light-hearted sensuality of the Rococo style, was the most famous painter and decorator during the reign of Louis XV (r. 1715–74), and was championed by Madame de Pompadour, the king’s powerful mistress. Boucher seldom ventured from major paintings and decorative ensembles to do finished, independent works on paper. Nor did he pursue portraiture, apart from his depictions of royal patrons and members of his family. This engaging and fresh portrait of a boy, perhaps a studio apprentice, may well be one of Boucher’s first, and finest, forays into pastel drawing. With this adaptable and newly fashioned medium, Rococo artists were able to imbue their images with a spirited directness and sense of life. Here Boucher captured the dimple-cheeked lad just as he seems to turn, lips parted as if to speak. The youth’s attentive gaze, tousled hair, and delicately elegant city clothes herald the artist’s suave later manner as court painter. The same young model, again holding a carrot, appears in at least two paintings of pastoral subjects by Boucher.
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French (?)|Antoine Watteau — The Rommelpot Player
Giovanni Battista Piazzetta — Portrait of a Young Boy
Jean-Baptiste Perronneau — Portrait of a Young Boy with Blue
Gilles Demarteau|François Boucher — The Soap Bubble
Eugène-Ernest Hillemacher — Sketch of a Young Boy
Giovanni Battista Piazzetta (Italian, 1682–1754) — A Portrai
Carle van Loo — Study: Head of a Young Girl Facing to the Le
Jacob Cornelis Ploos van Amstel — Ein Jungling (Titus)
Carle van Loo — Young Girl Facing to the Right
Gilles Demarteau|Jean François Clermont — Le Marchand d'Huît
Jean-Baptiste Greuze — Head of a Young Boy
Willem Witsen — Portret van een meisje