The Bird Catchers

Getty Museum

The Bird Catchers

Creator

François Boucher

French Artist · 1703–1770

All works by this person →
Designer

For François Boucher, "art" meant "artifice." He could paint straightforward genre scenes and portraits when appropriate, but the times called for enchantment and frolic, with just the right touch of titillation. Boucher's paintings and drawings celebrated a silvery, shimmering world of perfumes and powders, inspiring copies of his designs in media ranging from textiles and marquetry to porcelain.

More on Getty ULAN
Date
1748
Medium
Oil on canvas
Culture
French
Department
Paintings
Institution
Getty Museum

Responding to the contemporary rage for pastoral scenes depicting amorous countryside games, François Boucher here exhibited young, fashionable couples in the act of catching birds. In the 1700s, small birds played an important symbolic role in courtship ritual: the gift of a caged bird from a man to a woman signified her capture of his heart. Posed in front of the ruins of the Temple of Vesta, young women dressed in exquisite finery play with small birds; some tether them with strings while others daintily hold them on their fingers. *The Bird Catchers* and its pendant, [*The Fountain of Love*](http://www.getty.edu/art/collection/objects/589/francois-boucher-the-fountain-of-love-french-1748/), were finished cartoons or models for a series of tapestries known as the *Noble Pastorales*. Eventually, the cartoons were cut into sections and sold separately. In the surviving tapestries these scenes contain additional sections that are now missing from the cartoons, revealing that Boucher paintings were originally even larger.

The authoritative record is held by Getty Museum. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.

Get printable QR codes

Open QR codes for this object page and the museum record. They stay collapsed until needed.

Open this page
See at Getty Museum

Related across collections

Semantically similar works from Getty Museum and other institutions.