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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Boucher, by Haldane Macfall
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-
-
-
-Title: Boucher
- Masterpieces in Colour Series
-
-Author: Haldane Macfall
-
-
-
-Release Date: January 30, 2013 [eBook #41947]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BOUCHER***
-
-
-E-text prepared by sp1nd, Matthew Wheaton, and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made
-available by Internet Archive (http://archive.org)
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustrations.
- See 41947-h.htm or 41947-h.zip:
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/41947/41947-h/41947-h.htm)
- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/41947/41947-h.zip)
-
-
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- http://archive.org/details/boucherocad00macfuoft
-
-
-
-
-
-Masterpieces in Colour
-Edited by T. Leman Hare
-
-BOUCHER
-1703-1770
-
- * * * * *
-
- "MASTERPIECES IN COLOUR" SERIES
-
-
- ARTIST. AUTHOR.
- BELLINI. GEORGE HAY.
- BOTTICELLI. HENRY B. BINNS.
- BOUCHER. C. HALDANE MACFALL.
- BURNE-JONES. A. LYS BALDRY.
- CARLO DOLCI. GEORGE HAY.
- CHARDIN. PAUL G. KONODY.
- CONSTABLE. C. LEWIS HIND.
- COROT. SIDNEY ALLNUTT.
- DA VINCI. M. W. BROCKWELL.
- DELACROIX. PAUL G. KONODY.
- DUERER. H. E. A. FURST.
- FRA ANGELICO. JAMES MASON.
- FRA FILIPPO LIPPI. PAUL G. KONODY.
- FRAGONARD. C. HALDANE MACFALL.
- FRANZ HALS. EDGCUMBE STALEY.
- GAINSBOROUGH. MAX ROTHSCHILD.
- GREUZE. ALYS EYRE MACKLIN.
- HOGARTH. C. LEWIS HIND.
- HOLBEIN. S. L. BENSUSAN.
- HOLMAN HUNT. MARY E. COLERIDGE.
- INGRES. A. J. FINBERG.
- LAWRENCE. S. L. BENSUSAN.
- LE BRUN, VIGEE. C. HALDANE MACFALL.
- LEIGHTON. A. LYS BALDRY.
- LUINI. JAMES MASON.
- MANTEGNA. MRS. ARTHUR BELL.
- MEMLINC. W. H. J. & J. C. WEALE.
- MILLAIS. A. LYS BALDRY.
- MILLET. PERCY M. TURNER.
- MURILLO. S. L. BENSUSAN.
- PERUGINO. SELWYN BRINTON.
- RAEBURN. JAMES L. CAW.
- RAPHAEL. PAUL G. KONODY.
- REMBRANDT. JOSEF ISRAELS.
- REYNOLDS. S. L. BENSUSAN.
- ROMNEY. C. LEWIS HIND.
- ROSSETTI. LUCIEN PISSARRO.
- RUBENS. S. L. BENSUSAN.
- SARGENT. T. MARTIN WOOD.
- TINTORETTO. S. L. BENSUSAN.
- TITIAN. S. L. BENSUSAN.
- TURNER. C. LEWIS HIND.
- VAN DYCK. PERCY M. TURNER.
- VELAZQUEZ. S. L. BENSUSAN.
- WATTEAU. C. LEWIS HIND.
- WATTS. W. LOFTUS HARE.
- WHISTLER. T. MARTIN WOOD.
-
- _Others in Preparation._
-
- * * * * *
-
- [Illustration: PLATE I.--MADAME DE POMPADOUR. Frontispiece
-
- (In the National Gallery of Scotland)
-
- Edinburgh is fortunate in possessing this, one of the
- world-famous examples of Boucher's exquisite portraiture. He
- painted with rare charm more than once this wonderful woman,
- "the king's morsel," Jeanne Poisson, Madame Lenormant d'Etioles,
- who became the notorious Marquise de Pompadour. He gives us
- perhaps too dainty a butterfly; for, of a truth, this woman's
- prettiness masked an iron nerve, an unflinching courage, and a
- capacity and talents which must have reached to fame in any
- human being whose frame they illumined. Nor is there hint of
- those hard qualities that robbed her of mercy, nor allowed her
- to bend an ear to suffering.]
-
-
-
-
-BOUCHER
-
-by
-
-Haldane Macfall
-
-Illustrated with Eight Reproductions in Colour
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-London: T. C. & E. C. Jack
-New York: Frederick A. Stokes Co.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
- Page
-
- I. The Small Beginnings 11
-
- II. The Student 16
-
- III. Venus and Marriage 27
-
- IV. Le Monde qui s'amuse 35
-
- V. The Chateauroux 42
-
- VI. The Pompadour 55
-
- VII. The End 75
-
-
-
-
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- Plate
-
- I. Madame de Pompadour Frontispiece
- In the National Gallery of Scotland
-
- Page
-
- II. Madame de Pompadour 14
- In the Wallace Collection
-
- III. Diana leaving the Bath 24
- In the Louvre
-
- IV. Pastorale 34
- In the Louvre
-
- V. Pastorale 40
- In the Louvre
-
- VI. Portrait of a Young Woman 50
- In the Louvre
-
- VII. Interieur de Famille 60
- In the Louvre
-
- VIII. La Modiste 70
- In the Wallace Collection
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-THE SMALL BEGINNINGS
-
-
-The year after good Queen Anne came to rule over us, Louis the
-Fourteenth being still King of France, on an autumn day in the October
-of 1703, that saw the trees of Paris shedding their parched leaves as
-a carpet to the feet of the much-bewigged dandified folk who stepped
-it swaggeringly down the walks of the Palais Royal, swinging long
-canes, and strutting along the shaded promenades of the more
-fashionable places of the city, there stood in the vestry of the
-parish church of Saint Jean-en-Greve a little group of the small
-burgess folk, gathered about a little infant, whilst the tipstaff to
-the king's palace, one Francois Prevost, signed solemnly as witness to
-the birth-certificate and as acknowledged godfather to the aforesaid
-morsel of humanity, which, as the certificate badly set forth in black
-and white for ever, was henceforth to be known for good or ill as
-Francois Boucher, first-born son, on the 29th of September, four days
-past, of the tipstaff's friend, Nicolas Boucher, "maitre-peintre," who
-stood hard by, and of his wife Elizabeth Lemesle.
-
-The worthy tipstaff's writing done, he bowed in the best Court manner
-to Mademoiselle Boullenois, daughter to yonder consequential fellow,
-the law officer from the Police Court; and handed her the inked quill
-to bear witness in her turn as godmother.
-
- [Illustration: PLATE II.--MADAME DE POMPADOUR
-
- (In the Wallace Collection)
-
- Here we have one of the handsomest portraits of his great patron
- and friend, the notorious Marquise de Pompadour, painted by
- Boucher at the most brilliant phase of his art. It is a
- glittering achievement. The figure is superbly placed in its
- surroundings. The play of limpid light upon the beautifully
- gowned woman, of which Boucher was such a master-painter, proves
- it to be of his best period. The Pompadour stands, wreathed in
- smiles, as the mistress of a great domain; and masks as usual
- behind her pretty ways all hint of that calculating hand and
- remorseless will that sent her enemies without a sigh to the
- Bastille or banishment or worse--she who was past-mistress of
- the art of the _lettre de cachet_.]
-
-The sand being flung upon the wet ink, and the blotting done,
-there was exchange of compliments in the stilted manner of
-good-fellowship of the day between priest and party--tapping of
-snuff-boxes and taking of snuff, with more than a little gossip of the
-Court and some shaking of heads, and under-lips solemnly thrust forth;
-the gossip is not without authority and weight, for is not godfather
-Prevost tipstaff to the king's majesty, therefore in the whirl of
-things?
-
-The child, indeed, was born into a Paris agog with stirring affairs.
-Well might heads be shaken solemnly. The French arms were knowing
-defeat. The Englishman, Marlborough, was flinging back the French
-armies wheresoever he gave them battle. Europe was one great armed
-camp. France was suffering terrible blood-letting. Defeat came on
-defeat. These were sorry times. On land all went wrong. Good generals
-were set aside; intriguing good-for-nothings led the veterans into
-disaster. But there was still France upon the high seas.
-
-Then the women folk, bored with high politics, would draw back the
-talk to the infant Francois, and there would be genial banter about
-the morsel; for was he not a Saturday child, therefore bound to be a
-bit of a scamp!
-
-And so, off to Monsieur Boucher's modest little home in the Rue de
-Verrerie to a glass of wine and further compliments and banter, and
-more vague surmises as to what lay upon the knees of the gods for
-little Francois Boucher.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-THE STUDENT
-
-
-Yes, the sun of the Grand Monarque was setting. Louis Quatorze was
-nearing the end of his long lease of splendour. Our little Francois
-was not a month old when Admiral Rooke whipped Chateau-Renaud off the
-high seas, destroying the French and Spanish fleets in Vigo Bay, and
-carrying off some millions of pieces of eight from the galleons as
-treasure. The child's first year saw the English troopers ride down
-the French at Blenheim--a day that made "Malbrook" a name of dread to
-every French child, a name to frighten into good behaviour. To the
-little fellow's home came the horror-spoken talk of Ramilies; then of
-Oudenarde; then of Lille--to his six-year-old ears the terrible news
-of Malplaquet.
-
-But there was Paris a-bellringing in his ears at seven; for there was
-born to the king's grandson a sickly child that was to succeed him as
-Louis the Fifteenth. And Francois Boucher is one day to step from his
-modest home and stand nearer at this child's side than he thinks.
-
-The boy Boucher, at sturdy twelve, would recall the death of the old
-king in his lonely last years, and the setting upon the ancient throne
-of France of the five-year-old child as Louis Quinze--a comely little
-fellow--with Orleans as Regent. Young Francois Boucher was to spend
-his youth and grow up to manhood in a France that lay under the
-regency of this dissolute, brilliant Orleans.
-
-Nicolas Boucher, the father, seems to have been an obscure, honest
-fellow, given to the _trade_ of art, and that too in mediocre fashion
-enough, designing embroideries, covers for chairs, and the like--"an
-inferior designer, little favoured by fortune," runs the recorded
-verdict of his day. But he had the virtue of recognising his
-mediocrity, and the desire to save his son from the sordid cares of
-mediocre artistry; since, having himself given the boy his schooling
-with pencil and brush, and brought the lad up in an atmosphere of art
-and in the company of artists, he had the astuteness to send him to
-the studio of Lemoyne, a really great painter and rapidly becoming
-famous--he who painted the ceilings of Versailles with gods and
-goddesses in handsome fashion.
-
-Lemoyne was a well-chosen master for the promising youth of seventeen.
-He had founded his art upon that of Correggio and Veronese, had rid
-himself of hard academic tendencies, and was painting in a sound
-French fashion. The youth Boucher, with the quick and astounding gift,
-that he displayed all through his life, of rapidly making his own what
-he wanted to acquire, picked up from Lemoyne at once a French way of
-stating what he desired to state, in a large, broad manner, without
-having to go through the long years of drudgery to Italian models of
-style which was then the only schooling for an artist--was therefore
-enabled to free himself from the equally long years that it would have
-taken him to rid the Italian style from his artistry. In short, the
-youth of seventeen made Lemoyne's art his own in a few weeks; and, on
-the eve of manhood, he so rivalled his master in accomplishment that
-it is dangerous to attribute a picture of this time to the master or
-the pupil without most careful evidence.
-
-Yet the youth vowed that he was but three months with Lemoyne, who,
-said he, took scant interest in his pupils. But it must be remembered
-that Boucher was a prodigious worker, with a passionate love for his
-work that lasted until death took the brush from his fingers, and that
-he had a quick and alert mind and hand, free from the hesitances of a
-student, and always daring in experiment. To wish to achieve a thing,
-for Boucher, was to set him to its achievement. He rested neither
-night nor day until he mastered that which he had set out to do. On
-the day he left Lemoyne's studio he stepped out of it a finished
-artist, a sound painter, fully equipped with all the craftmanship,
-trade-secrets, and tricks of thumb that it had taken his master his
-life to learn--and a facile copyist of his style and handling. It was
-the sincerest form of flattery; and Boucher, to the end of his days,
-held the art of Lemoyne in the greatest reverence--as is proved by his
-answer, when at the very height of his fame, to one who asked him to
-complete a picture by his master: "Such works are to me sacred
-vessels," said he--"I should dread to profane them by touching them."
-
-Lemoyne's admiration for his pupil was not lacking in return. The
-youth painted, whilst with his master, a picture of a "Judgment of
-Susanna," before which Lemoyne stood astounded, then burst into
-prophecy of Boucher achieving greatness in the years to come.
-
-From Lemoyne's studio, the young fellow went to live with "Pere Cars,"
-the engraver, whose son, Laurent, was a friend of the youth, and who
-engaged him to design the drawings for his engravers, allowing him in
-return his food, lodging, and sixty livres (double-florins) a
-month--some twelve pounds. Boucher accounted his fortune made.
-
-The cheery youth went at his work with energy and enthusiasm, blithely
-setting his hand to anything that was wanted of him, bringing charm
-and invention to all he did--tailpieces, frontispieces, emblems, coats
-of arms, freemason's certificates, first-communion cards, initial
-letters. He was soon set to work upon important designs for
-engravings. He searched out the publishers of books, and let no
-chance escape of working for them.
-
-Thus and otherwise he filled his scanty purse--that needed filling,
-for he was quick at its emptying, being of a free hand and generous
-disposition. And hard as he worked, so did he play. Work and pleasure
-were his joy in life.
-
-And all the time he was taking part in the students' competitions for
-the Academy.
-
-It was in his nineteenth year that, in this same Paris, in the house
-of one of its rich families, was born a little girl-child who was to
-come into Boucher's life in after years. The father, a financial
-fellow, one Poisson, was a man of shady repute; indeed he was under
-banishment for mis-handling the public moneys at the time of the
-birth of the little girl-child, christened Jeanne Antoinette
-Poisson--destined to be the Jane of the scurrilous street songs of the
-years to come. But the careless student knew little of it as yet, nor
-that destiny had put into the pretty child's cradle the sceptre and
-diadem of France as plaything.
-
-Boucher, on the eve of manhood, took as little heed of the child's
-coming as did the thirteen-year-old lad who sat upon the throne, and
-who, in little Jane Poisson's first year, was declared to be of man's
-estate and ruler of France, no longer requiring Regent Orleans to
-govern for him.
-
-It was in this his nineteenth year that Boucher took the first prize
-at the Academy with his picture of "Evilmerodach, son and successor of
-Nebuchadnezzar, delivering Joachin from chains, in which his father
-had for a long time held him."
-
-This success set the collectors buying pictures by the brilliant
-youngster. But Francois Boucher needs no paying orders to make him
-work--he paints for the love of the thing, declares that his "studio
-is his church," and seeks to display his art and spread the repute of
-it abroad. And his fame grows apace, if at a cost. Nay, he courts fame
-even to the extent of hanging his pictures upon the tapestries and
-carpets and such like draperies that the police oblige the citizens to
-hang out from their houses along the Place Dauphin and the Pont-Neuf
-during the procession of the Fete-Dieu--called the _Exposition de la
-Jeunesse_.
-
-There was a thing happened about this time that was to be of large
-significance to the young fellow's craftsmanship. Watteau had lately
-died, his eager will burning out the poor stricken body. His friend De
-Julienne, anxious to publish a book to Watteau's memory, strolled into
-the engraving-studio behind "Pere Cars'" shop, where Boucher and his
-comrade, Laurent Cars, were wont to spend a part of their time; and he
-commissioned Boucher to engrave 125 of the plates after the dead
-master. Watteau's essentially French influence was the impulse above
-all others to thrust forward the development of Boucher's genius along
-its right path, and sent his art towards its great goal. The business
-was a rare delight to the young artist, and in the doing of it he
-learnt many lessons which added greatly to the enhancement of his
-style; whilst the payment of twenty-four livres (double-florins) a day
-still further increased his delight and contentment.
-
- [Illustration: PLATE III.--DIANA LEAVING THE BATH
-
- (In the Louvre)
-
- The "Diana leaving the Bath with one of her Companions" is
- amongst the most beautiful of those so-called Venus-pieces that
- Boucher created and painted in large numbers with decorative
- intent. It shows his art at its most exquisite stage, when his
- painting of flesh was at its most luminous and subtle
- achievement; and his treatment of the human figure in relation
- to the landscape in which it was placed, at its most perfect
- balance.]
-
-He completed the series with his wonted fiery zeal and rapid facility,
-and thus and otherwise, hotly pursuing his study of nature and his
-art, he arrived at the moment when his education should receive its
-inevitable finishing state in the Italian tour; so to Rome he went
-with Carle Van Loo and his two nephews, Francois and Louis Van Loo.
-
-Of Boucher's wander-years in Italy little is known. He seems to have
-shown scant respect for the accepted standards of the schools and the
-critics, to have found Michael Angelo "contorted," Raphael "insipid,"
-and Carrache "gloomy." He, in fact, was drawn only to such artists as
-were to his taste, and he had the courage to say so. However, whether
-he were kept idle from ill-health or not; whether his stay were short
-or not, he appears again in Paris in three years--suspiciously like
-the three years' conventional Italian study of a first-prize winner of
-the Academy--with a large number of religious pictures to his
-credit--pictures that were hailed by the Academicians and critics
-alike for their beauty, their force, and their virility--pictures
-which, perhaps fortunately for Boucher's repute, have vanished, or
-hang in galleries under other names.
-
-Here we see Boucher grimly putting aside his own taste and aims in
-art, and doggedly bending his will and hand to a prodigious effort to
-win the reputation and standing of a "serious painter," without which
-he could not hope to attain academic honours. He won them; for, in
-this his twenty-eighth year, on his return to Paris, he was
-"nominated" to the Academy. He had but to present an Historical
-Painting in order to take his seat as an Academician.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-VENUS AND MARRIAGE
-
-
-Back in his beloved Paris again; thrilled by the atmosphere and gaiety
-of its merry life; in the full vigour of manhood on the eve of his
-thirties; amongst congenial friends; done with the drudgery of winning
-to Academic honour, Boucher saw that the public were not falling over
-each other to purchase religious or historic pictures; he straightway
-turned his back upon these things, and on the edge of his thirtieth
-year he gave to the world his "Marriage of the Children of God with
-the Children of Men," in which Venus is the avowed mistress of his
-adoration. It caused a fine stir, and greatly increased his repute.
-
-In this picture he ends his Italian period and strikes his own
-personal note. Both this and the "Venus asking arms for Aeneas from
-Vulcan," together with the "Birth of Adonis" and the "Death of
-Adonis," of about the same period, still show Boucher strongly under
-the influence of his master, Lemoyne. Indeed, the "Birth" and "Death
-of Adonis," their record lost during the scuffle and confusion of the
-Revolution, for long hung side by side as pictures by Lemoyne, until,
-being cleaned about 1860, Boucher's initials were discovered upon
-them, and, contemporary engravings being hunted up, still further
-proved their origin. But in the Venus that now figures in all his
-works there is that flesh-painting of the nude, and that rosy touch
-upon the flesh of the female figure, that are a far more certain
-signature of Boucher's handiwork than any written name.
-
-Unfortunately the Salons were closed during Boucher's earlier years
-until he was thirty-four, and the record of his work during these
-years is difficult to follow; but with his service to Venus his
-personal career begins, and the stream of his Venus-pieces steadily
-flows from his hands.
-
-He came to her service rid of all prentice essays in craftsmanship, a
-finished and consummate artist. He found in his subject a goddess to
-whom he could devote his great and splendid gifts. He painted her
-dainty body with a radiant delight and a rare colour-sense such as
-France had never before seen or uttered. He remains to this day the
-first painter of the subtle, delicate, and elusive thing that is
-femininity; he caught her allure, her charm, as he was to catch the
-fragrance and charm of children and flowers; and he set the statement
-of these things upon canvas as they have never been uttered.
-
-The whole of his life long, Boucher gave himself up with equal and
-passionate devotion to work and to pleasure--working at his easel
-often twelve hours of his day without losing, to the end when the
-brush fell from his dead fingers, his blitheness of heart or his
-generosity of act, and without weakening the pleasure-loving desires
-of his gadding spirit. Out of his splendid toil he made the means to
-indulge his tastes for pleasure; and the gratifying of his tastes in
-turn renewed and created the ideas that made the subjects of his
-artistry. He brought to all he did a joy in the doing that made of his
-vast labour one long pleasure--of his pleasures a riot of industry. He
-played as he toiled, scarce knowing which was play and which toil.
-
-The gossip of his love-affairs makes no romantic story--they were but
-commonplace ecstasies with unknown frail women. But hard as he worked
-and lived and played, he found time to get himself married in his
-thirtieth year to pretty seventeen-year-old Marie Jeanne Buseau, a
-little Parisian--and for love of her, so far as he understood the
-business; for she brought him no dowry.
-
-The young couple settled down for the next ten years in the Rue
-Saint-Thomas-du-Louvre. Here Boucher lived through his thirties.
-
-Madame was a pretty creature, if we had but Latour's pastel portrait
-alone to prove it. But the pretty features were the crown to as pretty
-a body, for she sat often to her lord; and it is clear from his
-correspondence with a friend, Bachaumont, that she is the Psyche of
-his illustrated fable--and Psyche runs much to the Altogether.
-Marriage, however, was not likely to imprison Boucher's gadding eyes;
-and it did not. Madame Boucher seems to have had as frail a heart, and
-avoided strife by amusing herself, amongst others, with the Swedish
-Ambassador, Count de Tessin, who, to gain access to the lady,
-commissioned Boucher to do the Watteau-like illustrations to
-_Acajou_--a dull affair. Boucher's pretty wife, herself no mean
-artist, worked in his studio, and painted several smaller canvases
-after his pictures, gaining some fame as a miniaturist and engraver.
-
-Nor did Marriage turn Boucher from his art. Two years were gone by
-since his nomination to the Academy; he had now to paint the formal
-Historical Picture and present it in order to take his seat as
-Academician; and it was in this his thirtieth year that he painted and
-won his academic rank with the "Renauld et Armide" now at the Louvre.
-Here he sufficiently subordinated his own style to the academic to
-ensure success; and the work was hailed by Academicians and critics,
-including Diderot, with enthusiasm. But even here we have his cupids
-peeping round the mythologic event; and Armide herself has pretty
-French lips that knew no Greek.
-
-Once secure of his position, he straightway flung the last remnants of
-the academic style out of his studio door; and it is a grim comment on
-criticism that it was just exactly in proportion as he developed his
-own personal genius and uttered the France of his day, that he was
-attacked; whilst the stilted things that he knew were third-rate, and
-which he wholly rejected from henceforth, were exactly the things that
-were praised!
-
-His election to the Academy, and the enthusiasm over the picture that
-won him his seat thereat, brought his name before the young king; the
-following year he received his first order from the Court whose
-painter he was destined to become. The decorations in the queen's
-apartments were gloomy and had grown black; and he painted in their
-stead the "Charity," "Abundance," "Fidelity," and "Prudence" still
-there to be seen. Indeed, with his gay vision, his pretty habit of
-culling only the flowers from the garden of life, and his quickness to
-set down the pleasing thing in every prospect, Boucher was the
-destined painter of a Court weary of pomposity and the pose of the
-mock-heroic, and which was wholly giving itself up to pleasure and the
-elegances.
-
-But neither his new dignity of Academician nor the royal favour, kept
-him from the bookshops; and he illustrated, with rare beauty and a
-charm worthy of Watteau, the great edition of the _Works of Moliere_
-in his thirty-first year. It is true that he made as free with
-Moliere's world as with the Gods of Olympus; he peoples the plays with
-characters of his own day, arrayed in the dress and habit of that day,
-and moving in surroundings that he saw about him.
-
- [Illustration: PLATE IV.--PASTORALE
-
- (In the Louvre)
-
- The "Pastorale," painted a few years after the famous "Diana,"
- also belongs to Boucher's greatest years, and is another of the
- glories of the Louvre. It is one of his masterpieces in the
- realm of the Pastoral which he also created--those pleasant
- landscapes of France in which he places handsomely dressed
- Dresden shepherds and shepherdesses playing at a dandified
- comedy of the Simple Life.]
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-LE MONDE QUI S'AMUSE
-
-
-The Homely had come upon the town out of Holland, painted with most
-consummate artistry by Chardin, and was soon in the vogue. Boucher had
-a quick eye for the mode. And he straightway set himself to the
-painting of "La Belle Cuisiniere." Still-life and homely subjects need
-an accuracy of realism and a Dutch sense of these things, a sense of
-sincerity and an appreciation of the dignity of the work-a-day life of
-the people, in which Boucher was wholly lacking. Above all, it calls
-for a sense of "character," which, in Boucher, was always weak. It was
-a sneer against him that his very broomsticks called for pompons and
-ribbons--and there was more than a little truth in the spite. He is
-more concerned with the accident of the kissing of a kitchen-maid than
-with the kitchen's habit. He cannot even peep into a scullery without
-dragging in Venus by the skirts, and tricking her out in a
-property-wardrobe of a scullery-wench, in which the girl is clearly
-but acting the part.
-
-However, these passing vogues and experiments in different methods
-were only gay asides--he was working the while upon his own subjects;
-and, to the display by its several members ordered by the Academy, he
-sent four little paintings of fauns and cupids which won him the
-honour of election as deputy-professor. His brain and hand were very
-busy, and he turns from one thing to another with amazing facility,
-bringing distinction to all that he does.
-
-But he painted about this time two pictures of infants, "L'Amour
-Oiseleur" and "L'Amour Moissonneur," which were the beginning of that
-host of cupids that he let fly from his studio; they frolic across his
-canvases and join the retinue of Venus, peeping out from clouds, over
-waves, round curtains, painted with a perfection that has never been
-surpassed in the portrayal of infants. He painted their round limbs,
-their lusty life, their delightful awkwardnesses, their jolly fat
-grace, their naive surprise at life and glory in it, as they had never
-been painted before, and have never been painted since.
-
-He also gave forth in this his thirty-third year a "Pastoral" and a
-"Shepherd and Shepherdess in Conversation," with sheep about them and
-in a pleasant landscape, which were his first essays in the style that
-he created and which made him famous.
-
-His friend Meissonnier, the inventor of the rococo, stood godfather to
-Boucher's first-born son in the May of 1736.
-
-From the very beginning Boucher seems to have been engraved. And these
-engravings, done by the best gravers of his day, greatly extended his
-reputation and popularised him; he fully realised the value of the
-advertisement as well as his profits from it. Before his thirty-third
-year was run out he published his well-known "Cries of Paris."
-Boucher's description of them, "studies from the low classes," holds
-the key to that something of failure to realise the dramatic verities
-that is over all; it gives also the attitude of the France that he
-knew towards the France that he did not, and could not understand. He
-created that dainty, pleasant atmosphere that comes floating up to the
-windows on a fresh morning in Paris from the musical cries of
-the street vendors; but of the deeper significance of the
-street-sellers--of the miserable accent in their life, of their weary
-toil, of the dignity of their labour--he knew nothing; his brush could
-not refrain from making elegance and fine manners peep from behind the
-street-porter's fustian or the milkmaid's skirt.
-
-But his thirty-third year was to contain a more far-reaching
-significance even than the creation of his cupid-pieces and pastorals.
-The "Cries of Paris" were scarce printed when Boucher's illustration
-to "Don Quixote" appeared--"Sancho pursued by the servants of the
-Duke." This design was to have far-reaching results that Boucher
-little suspected.
-
-The painter Oudry had been called to the conduct of the great tapestry
-looms at Beauvais a couple of years before; and in his efforts to
-furnish the looms with good designs, he now called Boucher to his aid,
-whose original and fresh style, colour, and arrangement, together with
-his personal vision, and the enthusiasm and zeal with which he threw
-himself into the work, at once increased the reputation and the
-products of the famous looms. This large designing for the tapestries
-was, in return, of immense value to the development of the genius of
-the man, enlarging his breadth of style and giving scope to that great
-decorative sense that was his superb gift. Thenceforth he was destined
-to play a supreme part in the history of the world-famed factories. He
-now produced painting after painting for the Beauvais looms.
-
- [Illustration: PLATE V.--PASTORALE
-
- (In the Louvre)
-
- This Pastoral, known as "The Shepherd and Shepherdesses," is
- another canvas painted at the height of Boucher's career, in
- which dandified shepherds and shepherdesses seem to have stepped
- out of the Opera in order to play their light comedy of
- beribboned simple living in a pleasant landscape of France. It
- was of these pastorals a waggish critic complained that the
- shepherds and shepherdesses look as if they must soon be off to
- the Opera again. But what the carpers omitted was to praise the
- painting of the pleasant lands of France in which these dainty
- comedies were set. Boucher has never received his meed of honour
- as one of the finest landscape-painters of eighteenth-century
- France.]
-
-Life is now one long triumph for Boucher, only disturbed in this year
-by the sad news of the suicide of his old master, Lemoyne. It was in
-this, Boucher's thirty-fourth year, that the Salon was opened for the
-first time since Boucher's infancy, and he contributed several
-canvases to it.
-
-Rigaud, the old Academician, now close upon eighty, straggling through
-the great galleries, might well blink and gasp at the change that had
-come over French art since he last exhibited there, thirty-three years
-gone by; but his scoffs and regrets held no terrors for the younger
-Academicians gathered about. He stood in a new world. A new generation
-was in possession. The grand manner, the severe etiquette, formal
-mock-heroics, and solemn pomposity of Louis the Fourteenth were
-vanished, and the Agreeable and the Pleasant Make-Believe of Louis the
-Fifteenth reigned in their stead. Old Rigaud might blink indeed! Just
-as the imposing and stilted etiquette of the reception-room had given
-place to the easy manners and airy etiquette of the dainty boudoir, so
-had light chatter and gay wit and the quick repartee usurped the heavy
-splendours of a consequential age. France, weary of an eternal pose of
-the grand manner, was seeking change in joyousness and amusement.
-Gallantry and gaiety were become the object of the ambition of a
-dandified and elegant day. France became a coquette; dressed herself
-as a porcelain shepherdess; and with beribboned crook and sheep,
-seeking pleasant prospects to stroll through, gave herself to
-dalliance--her powder-puff and patch-box and fan a serious part of her
-unseriousness.
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-THE CHATEAUROUX
-
-
-At thirty-five Boucher has arrived. He is in the vogue; in favour at
-Court--as well as in the fashion. In his three years from taking his
-seat at the Academy to the opening of the first Salon he has created a
-new and original style--his cupid pieces, his pastorals, his
-Venus-pieces, his tapestry. Boucher's kingdom lay in the realm of the
-decorative painter--and he has found it. Torn from the surroundings
-for which he designed them, as part and parcel of the general scheme,
-his pictures are as out of place as an Italian altarpiece in an
-English dining-room, yet they suffer less. Several may still be seen,
-as he set them up in frames of his own planning, as overdoors in the
-palace of the Soubise, now given up to the national archives.
-
-The ghost of the Prince of Soubise, who commissioned them, may haunt
-his palace, but his kin know the place no longer. The overdoors
-wrought by Boucher's skill look down now on the nation's collection of
-historic documents. The "Three Graces enchaining Love," the fine
-pastoral of "The Cage," and the pastoral of the "Shepherd placing a
-Rose in his Shepherdess's Hair," were to see a mightier change than
-the usurpation of Louis the Fourteenth's pompous age by the elegant
-years of Louis the Fifteenth. But this was not as yet. Here at least
-we see Boucher's art rid of all outside influences, and at the full
-tide of creation; here we have the inimitable lightness of touch, the
-figures and landscape bathed in the airy volume of atmosphere.
-
-He seems at this time to have played with pastel, due probably to his
-friendship with Latour, who sent a portrait of Boucher's wife to this
-Salon. Boucher showed in the use of chalks the artistry and skill that
-were always at his command.
-
-He also was putting to its full use his innate sense of landscape,
-raising to high achievement that astonishing balance of landscape and
-figures in his design--a balance that has never been surpassed; his
-figures never override his landscape; his landscape never overpowers
-his figures. His earnest counsels to his pupils and his constant
-deploring of the lack of the landscape art in France prove the great
-stress he laid upon it.
-
-The designing of a frontispiece for the catalogue of a personal
-friend, one Gersaint, a merchant of oriental wares, started Boucher in
-his thirty-third year upon that series of Chinese pictures and
-tapestries known as the "Chinoiseries," in which he frittered away
-only too many precious hours, for they were received with great favour
-by the public. The paintings of Chinese subjects designed for the
-looms of Beauvais are still to be seen at Besancon.
-
-But busy as were his brain and hand in the exercise of his wide and
-versatile gifts, pouring out "Chinoiseries," illustrations for books,
-tapestries on a large scale, landscapes, models for the gilt bronze
-decorations of porcelain vases, scheming handsome frames for his
-pictures, designing furniture and fans--Boucher was true, above all,
-"to his goddess," and painted the famed "Birth of Venus," which,
-thanks to the Swedish Ambassador's fondness for Madame Boucher, now
-hangs at Stockholm; our amorous Count de Tessin, to be just, seems to
-have had a rare flair for the artistic--besides artist's wives. It was
-on the 15th of April in 1742, the last year of his thirties, that the
-Royal favour was marked by the grant of a pension of 400 livres
-(double florins) to Boucher with promise of early benefits to follow.
-Two years afterwards it was raised to 600 livres.
-
-This was the year that he painted the beautiful canvas of "Diana
-leaving the Bath with one of her Companions," now at the Louvre. It
-was also the year that saw his landscape, the "Hamlet of Isse" at the
-Salon. This "Hameau d'Isse" was to be enlarged for the Opera, proving
-him to be decorator there, where he was arranging waterfalls,
-cascades, and the rest of the pretty business, without staying his
-hand from his art.
-
-At forty Boucher has come into his kingdom. The ten years of these
-forties were to be a vast triumph for him. He was to produce
-masterpiece after masterpiece. His art had caught the taste of the
-day. He was at the height of his powers. He had done great things--he
-was to do greater. During these ten years of his forties he poured
-forth vivid and glowing works of sustained power and originality.
-
-We have a picture of him as he was in the flesh at this time--the
-pastel portrait by Lundberg, now at the Louvre--a gay, somewhat
-dissipated, handsomely dressed dandy of the time, smiling out of his
-careless day, the debonnair man of fashion, the laughing eyes showing
-signs of the night carousals, which were the rest from the prodigious
-toil of this vital and forthright spirit.
-
-It was in this our artist's fortieth year that the gifted old Cardinal
-Fleury, who had guided the fortunes of France with rare skill, died,
-broken by his ninety years and the blunders of the disastrous war that
-he had so strenuously opposed; and Louis, essaying the strut of
-kingship, became king by act. His indolent character, unequal to the
-mighty business, his indeterminate will fretted by the set of
-quarrelling and intriguing rogues that he gathered about him as his
-ministers, he fell into the habit that became his thenceforth, the
-only thing to which he paid the tribute of constancy--he ruled France
-from behind pretty petticoats. He had early shown the adulterous blood
-of his great-grandfather; two, if not three, of five sisters of the
-noble and historic house of De Nesle had yielded to his gadding fancy;
-the youngest now ousted her sister De Mailly from the king's favour,
-was publicly acknowledged as the king's mistress, and became Duchess
-of Chateauroux. Boucher painted her handsome being as a shepherdess in
-one of his pastorals. She was no ordinary toy of a king. A woman of
-talent, with hot ambitions for the king's majesty, fired with the
-pride of race of the old French noblesse, it was during her short
-years of ascendancy over the king that he roused from his body's
-torpor and made an effort to reach the dignity and eminence befitting
-to the lord of a great and gallant people. He stepped forth awhile
-from his drunken bouts and manifold mean adulteries, and set himself
-at the head of the army in Flanders, and strutted it as conqueror.
-Poor Chateauroux only got the hate of the people for reward, Louis the
-honours; for the people resented the public dishonour of her state.
-Power she found to be a dead-sea apple in her pretty mouth. The glory
-of it all, the splendours, were not the easily won delights for which
-she had looked. She had to fight a duel, that never ended, with the
-king's witty, crafty, and scurrilous Prime Minister, the notorious
-Maurepas--and Maurepas willed that no woman should ever come between
-him and the king--Maurepas who knew no mercy, no decency, no chivalry,
-no scruple. At Chateauroux's urging, Louis placed himself at the
-head of the army; and France went near mad with joy that she had
-again found a king. Crafty Maurepas urged on the business; the
-Chateauroux suddenly realised his cunning glee--it separated her from
-the king.
-
- [Illustration: PLATE VI.--PORTRAIT OF A YOUNG WOMAN
-
- (In the Louvre)
-
- Of the rare portraits painted by Boucher, it is strange that the
- sitter to this finely painted canvas is now wholly forgotten.
- But the picture remains to prove to us the wide range of
- Boucher's genius.]
-
-Out of the whirl of things Boucher's fortune was ripening, little as
-he might suspect it.
-
-He was painting masterpieces that make his name live. To his fortieth
-year belong the famed "Birth of Venus," the "Venus leaving the Bath,"
-the "Muse Clio," the "Muse Melpomene," and the three well-known
-pastorals now at the Louvre--"The Sleeping Shepherdess," the "Nest,"
-and the "Shepherd and Shepherdesses." Of the many famous Venus-pieces
-that his hand painted during these years it is not easy to write the
-list. But having signed the "Marriage of Love and Psyche" at
-forty-one, he turned his experimental hand to the homely, realistic
-Dutch style that was having a wide vogue, and painted the
-"Dejeuner"--a family of the prosperous class of the day at
-breakfast--showing with rare charm the surroundings and home life of
-the well-to-do of his time.
-
-All goes well with Boucher. He changes into better quarters in the Rue
-de Grenelle-Saint-Honore, where he lived for the next five years,
-until 1749; but his eyes are fixed upon a studio and apartments at
-the old palace of the Louvre, though the hard intriguing of his
-powerful friends at Court on his behalf failed for some time. He had,
-indeed, to make another move before he arrived at his longed-for goal.
-Pensions Boucher, like others, had found to be somewhat empty affairs;
-but rooms at the Louvre were a solid possession eagerly sought after
-by the artists.
-
-In this year of 1744 Boucher created a new fashion at the annual Salon
-by sending studies and sketches instead of finished pictures; and it
-set a value upon such things not before realised by artists, for
-success was instant and loud.
-
-Towards the end of the next, Boucher's forty-second year, the Swedish
-Ambassador, Count de Tessin, who was to take his leave of Paris,
-commissioned four pictures to represent the day of a woman of fashion,
-and to be entitled "Morning," "Midday," "Evening," and "Night."
-Boucher painted one of these for him, now known as the "Marchande de
-Modes." The others were painted later, and all had a wide vogue as
-engravings. The correspondence has interest since it reveals Boucher's
-business habits; he was paid for a picture on its delivery, and for
-each of these he was to receive 600 livres (double florins or
-dollars)--about a hundred and twenty pounds.
-
-In an official document of the Director of Buildings to the king (or
-Minister of Fine Art, as we should say), written in this year of 1745,
-Boucher being forty-two, is a "list of the best painters," in which
-Boucher is singled out for distinction as "an historic painter, living
-in the Rue de Grenelle-Saint-Honore, opposite the Rue des Deux-Ecus,
-pupil of Lemoyne, excelling also in landscape, grotesques, and
-ornaments in the manner of Watteau; and equally skilled in painting
-flowers, fruit, architecture, and subjects of gallantry and of
-fashion."
-
-Not so bad for dry officialdom; the critics could learn a lesson. For
-he was nothing less. What indeed does he not do? and wondrous well!
-this painter of the age.
-
-And the mighty rush of events is about to sweep him into further
-prominence; the very things which he probably passed by with a gay
-shrug are to enrich him, to help him to his highest fulfilment.
-
-Poor Chateauroux saw that she must lose the king's gadding favour in
-the conflict with Maurepas unless she joined her lord, now with the
-army. She realised full well that she had created the new Louis of
-Ambition--that her going must bring the people's hate to her. But she
-dared not lose the king. And she went. Maurepas had overdone his
-jibings. The indiscretion at once rang through the land; became the
-jest of the army--and Maurepas was not far from the bottom of the
-business. The discreet indiscretion of covered ways between the king's
-lodgings and hers only added to the mockeries, and increased the
-people's hate against, of course, the Chateauroux. Then upon a day in
-August the small-pox seized Louis at Metz; poor Chateauroux fought for
-possession of the king in the sick room, until his fear of
-death--Louis' sole piety--sent her packing--shrinking back in the
-hired carriage at each halting-place for change of horses, lest she
-should be seen and torn from her place and destroyed by the populace.
-But Louis recovered; Paris rang with bells at joy on his recovery, and
-he entered the city amidst mad enthusiasm, hailed as The Well-Beloved.
-He sent for the Chateauroux to find her dying, Maurepas having to
-deliver the message of recall. She died suddenly and in great agony,
-swearing that Maurepas had poisoned her--died in the arms of her poor
-discarded sister, the De Mailly.
-
-But this year of 1745 Boucher hears a mightier scandal that is to mean
-vast things to all France--and not least of all to Francois Boucher.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-THE POMPADOUR
-
-
-A young bride had become the gossip of the rich merchant society of
-Paris--that class that was ousting the old noblesse from power. She
-was a beautiful, a remarkable woman; her wit was repeated in the
-drawing-rooms, she had all the accomplishments; her charming
-name--Madame Lenormant d'Etioles.
-
-Draw aside the curtains of the past and we discover our little Jeanne
-Poisson--grown into this exquisite creature. It has come about in
-strange fashion enough. The father--a scandalous fellow--having
-fingered the commissariat moneys in ugly ways to his own use, had been
-banished for the ugly business. Nor is Jeanne's mother any better than
-she should be; and the wags wink knowingly at the handsome and rich
-man of fashion, Monsieur Lenormant de Tournehem, who has been the
-favoured gallant during the absence of the light-fingered Poisson.
-And, of a truth, Lenormant de Tournehem takes astonishing interest in
-the little Jeanne--watching over her up-growing and giving her the
-best of education at the convent, where she wins all hearts, and is
-known as "the little queen." The truth spoken with wondrous prophecy,
-if unthinkingly, as we shall see. Complacent Poisson came home, and
-took the rich and fashionable, bland and smiling Lenormant de
-Tournehem to his arms. Has he not wealth and estates? therefore as
-excellent a friend for Poisson as for Madame Poisson. The girl Jeanne
-leaves the convent to be taught the accomplishments by the supreme
-masters of France, the wits foregather at Madame Poisson's, and the
-brilliant Jeanne is soon mistress of the arts--coquetry not least of
-all; has also the most exquisite taste in dress. Under all is a heart
-cold as steel; calculating as the higher mathematics. She has but one
-hindrance to ambition--her mean birth. Lenormant de Tournehem rids her
-even of this slur by making his nephew, Lenormant d'Etioles, marry
-her, giving the young couple half his fortune for dowry, and the
-promise of the rest when he dies--also he grants him a splendid
-town-house, as splendid a country seat. And consequential
-self-respecting little Lenormant d'Etioles is lord of Etioles, amongst
-other seignories. So Jane Fish appears as Madame Lenormant d'Etioles,
-seductive, beautiful, accomplished, to whose house repair the new
-philosophy, the wits, and artists. She has a certain sense of virtue;
-indeed openly vows that no one but the king shall ever come between
-her and her lord. But, deep in her heart, she has harboured a fierce
-ambition--that the king shall help her to keep her bond. She puts
-forth all her gifts, all her powers, to win to the strange goal;
-confides it to her worldly mother and "uncle," Lenormant de Tournehem;
-finds keen allies therein to the reaching of that strange goal. The
-death of the Chateauroux clears the way. At a masked ball the king is
-intrigued as to the personality of a beautiful woman who plagues him
-with her art; he orders the unmasking. Madame Lenormant d'Etioles
-stands revealed, drops her handkerchief as by accident; the whisper
-runs through the Court that "the handkerchief has been thrown!" The
-king stoops and picks it up. A few evenings later she is smuggled into
-the "private apartments." She goes again a month later; in the morning
-is seized with sudden terror--she daren't go back to her angry lord
-lest he do her grievous harm; he will have missed her. The king is
-touched; allows her to hide from henceforth in the secret apartments;
-promises the beautiful creature a lodging, her husband's banishment,
-and early acknowledgment as titular mistress--before the whole Court
-at Easter, says the pious Great One. But he has to join the army to
-play the Conqueror at Fontenoy; and it is later in the year
-(September) before Madame d'Etioles is presented to the Court in a
-vast company and proceeds to the queen's apartments to kiss hands on
-appointment. Thus was Jeanne Poisson raised to the great aristocracy
-of France in her twenty-third year as Marquise de Pompadour.
-
-Boucher had been one of the brilliant group of artists of the
-d'Etioles' circle. That the Pompadour's influence had much effect upon
-his position at Court for a year or two is unlikely; for she had to
-fight for possession of the king day and night, as the Chateauroux
-had done, against the queen's party and the unscrupulous enmity of
-Maurepas. To set down Boucher's favour at Court to her is ridiculous.
-He was painting for the queen's apartments at thirty-one when the
-Pompadour was a school-girl of twelve. But in the year following her
-rise to power, Boucher painted four pictures for the large room of the
-Dauphin, which were "placed elsewhere"; and, the year after that, he
-was at work upon two pictures for the bedroom of the king at the
-castle of Marly. It is likely enough that the Pompadour directed this
-order. She had almost immediately secured the office of the
-Director-General of Buildings, which covered the direction of the
-royal art treasures, for "uncle" Lenormant de Tournehem, who was also
-a friend of the artist. And from this year it is significant that
-Boucher paints no more for the opposing camp of the Queen and Dauphin.
-
- [Illustration: PLATE VII.--INTERIEUR DE FAMILLE
-
- (In the Louvre)
-
- Boucher had a quick ear for the vogue. Twice he found the Home
- to be in the artistic fashion; and each time he painted Home
- life in order to be in the mode. This interior, showing a
- well-to-do French family of the times at the midday meal, is not
- only rendered with glitter and atmosphere, but it is valuable as
- a rich record of the manners and furnishments of his day.]
-
-He was now giving all his strength to the "Rape of Europa" that he
-painted for the competition ordered by the Academy at the command of
-Lenormant de Tournehem in the king's name, in which ten chosen
-Academicians were to paint subjects in their own style for six prizes
-and a gold medal, to be awarded in secret vote by the competing
-artists themselves. Boucher won, by his amiable nature, the good-will
-of them all by proposing that they should so arrange as to share the
-prizes equally, and thus prevent any sense of soreness inevitable in
-the losers.
-
-But greatly as he won the good-fellowship of his fellow-artists by it,
-this picture caused a murmur to rise amongst the critics who,
-aforetime loud in his praise, now began to complain of his "abuse of
-rose tints" in the painting of the female nude. The fact was that
-Diderot and the men of the New Philosophy were turning their eyes to
-the whole foundations upon which France was built, art as well as
-society, and were beginning to demand of art "grandeur and morality in
-its subjects." They were soon to be clamouring for "the statement of a
-great maxim, a lesson for the spectator." Diderot, with bull-like
-courage, picked out the greatest, and turned upon Boucher, blaming him
-for triviality.
-
-The nations, weary of war, concluded the peace of Aix-la-Chapelle in
-the October of 1748. No sooner was peace concluded than Louis
-relapsed into his old habit of dandified indolence and profligate
-ease; and, putting from him his duties as the lord of a great people,
-he gave himself up to shameless intrigues. He allowed the Pompadour to
-usurp his magnificence and to rule over the land. He yielded himself
-utterly, if sometimes sulkily, to her domination; and for sixteen
-years she was the most powerful person at Court, the greatest force in
-the state--making and unmaking ministers, disposing of office,
-honours, titles, pensions. All political affairs were discussed and
-arranged under her guidance; ministers, ambassadors, generals
-transacted their business in her stately boudoirs; the whole patronage
-of the sovereign was dispensed by her pretty hands; the prizes of the
-Church, of the army, of the magistracy could be obtained solely
-through her favour and good-will. Her energy must have been
-prodigious. Possessed of extraordinary talents and exquisite tastes,
-she gave full rein to them, and it was in the indulgence of her better
-qualities that Destiny brought Boucher into the friendship of this
-wonderful woman. She became not only his patron but his pupil,
-engraving several of his designs.
-
-But this, her sovereignty over the king, easy and light in its outward
-seeming, was a haggard nightmare to the calculating woman who had so
-longed for it. She knew no single hour's rest from the night she won
-to the king's bed. She had to fight her enemies, secret and open, for
-possession of the king's will, day and night; and she fought--with
-rare courage. She won by consummate skill and unending pluck. She made
-herself an essential part of the king's freedom from care. The Court
-party fought her for power with constant vigilance. Maurepas brought
-all his unscrupulous art, all his ironic mimicry, all his vile jibes
-and unchivalrous hatred to bear against her. He had made himself a
-necessity to the king; and he never slept away a chance of injuring
-her. He knew no mercy, no nobility, no pity. He made her the detested
-object of the people. With his own hands he penned the witty verses
-and epigrams that were sung and flung about the streets of Paris.
-
-But she had an enemy more subtle than any at the Court--hour by hour
-she had to dispute the king with the king's boredom. And it was in the
-effort to do so that she created her celebrated theatre in the
-private apartments, calling Boucher and others to her aid in the doing
-of it. Here the noblest of France vied with each other to obtain the
-smallest part to play, an instrument in its orchestra, an invitation
-to its performances.
-
-Boucher left the Opera to become its decorator in 1748, and did not
-return until her death. For her, he also decorated her beautiful rooms
-at Bellevue. She bought at high prices many of his greatest
-masterpieces.
-
-The Pompadour's power so greatly increased that she openly took
-command of the king's will; dared and succeeded in getting his
-favourite Maurepas banished; and herself took to the use of the kingly
-"we." Her rascally father was created Lord of Marigny; her brother,
-whom the king liked well and called "little brother," was created
-Marquis de Vandieres; her only child, Alexandrine, signed her name as
-a princess of the blood royal, and would have been married to the
-blood royal had she not caught the small-pox and died. She amassed a
-private fortune, castles, and estates such as no mistress had dreamed
-of; and into them she poured art treasures that cost the nation
-thirty-six millions of money. She created the porcelain factory of
-Sevres, kept keen watch over the Gobelins looms, and founded the great
-Military School of St. Cyr amidst work that would have kept several
-statesmen busy, and of deadly intrigues at Court that would have
-broken the spirit of many a brilliant man.
-
-It was in her hectic desire to keep the king from being bored that she
-stooped, and made Boucher stoop, to the employment of his high
-artistry in the painting of a series of indecent pictures wherewith to
-tickle the jaded desires of Boredom, and thereby gave rise to the
-widespread impression that Boucher's art was ever infected by base
-design. But Boucher was, at his very worst, but a healthy animal; and
-even in these secret works for the king he did not reach so low as did
-many an artist of more pious memory who painted with no excuse but his
-own pleasure.
-
-As a matter of fact, the Pompadour has been blamed too much for this
-evil act, and too much forgotten for her splendid patronage of the man
-who, under it and during these great years of his forties, produced a
-series of masterpieces that place him in the foremost rank of the
-painters of his century. It is impossible to reckon the number of the
-pastorals and Venus-pieces that his master-hand painted and loved to
-paint, during these the supreme years of his genius. It is significant
-that they were painted during the years that saw the Pompadour in
-supreme power.
-
-Boucher was so firmly established in 1750, his forty-seventh year,
-that he moved into a new house in the Rue Richelieu, near the Palais
-Royal. Disappointed in not receiving a studio and apartments at the
-Louvre, he was allowed to use a studio in the king's library. He was
-now making money so easily that he was able to collect pictures and
-precious stones and the gaily coloured curiosities that appealed to
-his tastes.
-
-The critics were becoming more and more censorious; and one of them
-hits true with the comment that in his pastorals his shepherdesses
-look as if they had stepped over from the Opera and would soon be off
-again thereto.
-
-In his forty-eighth year Boucher's art was at its most luminous
-stage--his atmosphere clear and subtle and exquisitely rendered; his
-yellows golden; his whites satin-like and silvery; his flesh-tones
-upon the nude bodies of his goddesses unsurpassed by previous art. The
-beauty of it all was not to last much longer.
-
-Lenormant de Tournehem died suddenly in the November of 1751; the
-Pompadour's brother, Abel Poisson de Vandieres, was appointed
-Director-General in his stead at the age of twenty-five--and soon
-afterwards, on the death of his father, created Marquis de Marigny--a
-shy, handsome youth, a gentleman and an honourable fellow, whom the
-king liked well, and against whom his sister's sole complaint was that
-he lacked the brazen effrontery of the courtiers of the day. No man
-did more for the advancement of the art of his time. A pension of a
-thousand livres falling vacant, the young fellow secured it for
-Boucher; and almost immediately afterwards, a studio becoming vacant
-at the Louvre owing to the death of Coypel, first painter to the king,
-Boucher came to his coveted home, eagerly moving in with his family as
-soon as its wretched state could be put into repair.
-
-The decoration of the new wing to the palace at Fontainebleau brought
-the commission for the painting of the ceiling and the principal
-picture in the Council Chamber to Boucher, who had already decorated
-the Dining-Room. This was the period of his painting the "Rising" and
-the "Setting of the Sun" for the Pompadour, now in the Watteau
-collection, two canvases that were always favourites with the painter,
-bitterly as they were assailed by the critic Grimm.
-
- [Illustration: PLATE VIII.--LA MODISTE
-
- (In the Wallace Collection)
-
- The "Modiste" that now hangs at the Wallace is a slight
- variation on the "Toilet" that went to Stockholm, commissioned
- by the Swedish Ambassador as "Morning" (with three others, to
- represent the Midday, Evening, and Night of a fashionable
- woman's day, but which were never painted). The "Modiste" or
- "Morning," was engraved by Gaillard as "La Marchande de Modes,"
- which adds somewhat to the confusion of its title.]
-
-He was turning out so much work that it was impossible to give as much
-care to his pictures as he ought. For he refused sternly, his life
-long, to raise his prices; by consequence he had to create a larger
-amount of work in order to meet his expenditure. It was about this
-time that Reynolds, passing through Paris, went to visit him and found
-him painting on a huge canvas without models or sketches. "On
-expressing my surprise," writes Reynolds, "he replied that he had
-considered the model as necessary during his youth until he had
-completed his study of art, but that he had not used one for a long
-time past."
-
-He soon had not the time, not only to paint from nature but even to
-give his pictures the work necessary to complete them. The feverish
-haste which took possession of him in his frantic endeavour to meet
-the vast demand for his pictures, and the eager efforts of his
-engravers to satisfy the public call for engravings after his works,
-gave him less and less leisure to joy in their doing. And his eyesight
-began to fail. His flesh-tints deepened to a reddish hue; and he
-stands baffled before his work, suspecting his sight, since what every
-one cries out upon as being bright vermilion, he only sees as a dull
-earthy colour. Boucher has topped the height of his achievement; he
-has to "descend the other side of the hill." Boucher begins to grow
-old.
-
-In Boucher's fifty-first year an ugly intrigue of the queen's party at
-Court to sap the Pompadour's influence over the king by drawing away
-the king's affections towards Madame de Choiseul-Romanet, a reckless
-young beauty of the Court, brought about a strange alliance. The Count
-de Stainville, one of the Pompadour's bitterest enemies, was shown the
-king's letter of invitation to his young kinswoman; and he, deeply
-wounded in his pride that his kinswoman should have been offered to
-the king, went to the Pompadour and exposed the plot. A close
-alliance followed; and De Stainville thenceforth became her chief
-guide in affairs of state. It was at her instance that the king called
-him to be his Prime Minister, raising him to the Duchy of Choiseul--a
-name he made illustrious as one of the greatest Ministers of France.
-
-In his fifty-second year Boucher was appointed to the directorship of
-the Gobelins looms, to the huge delight of the weavers and all
-concerned with the tapestry factory. This was the year of his painting
-the famous portrait of the Pompadour, to whom he several times paid
-this "tribute of immorality." For the Gobelins looms he produced many
-handsome designs; and he was painting with astounding industry. But
-his hand's skill began to falter. His art shows weariness in his
-sixtieth year, and sickness fell upon him, and held him in servitude
-now with rare moments of respite. The critics, notoriously Diderot,
-were now attacking him with shameless virulence. Boucher passed it all
-by; but he felt the change that was taking place in the public taste.
-The ideas of the New Philosophy were infecting public opinion; the Man
-of Feeling had arisen in the land; and France, humiliated in war, and
-resenting the follies and the greed of her shameless privileged class,
-was openly resenting it and all its works. Choiseul had planted his
-strength deep in the people's party, and was come near to being its
-god. His masterly mind had checked Frederick of Prussia to the North;
-and the nations, exhausted by the struggle, signed the Peace of Paris
-in 1763. Choiseul, with France at peace abroad, turned to the blotting
-out of the turbulent order of the Jesuits at home. Their attempt to
-end the Pompadour's relations with the king made this powerful woman
-eager to complete his design; the chance was soon to come, and the
-Order was abolished from France and its vast property seized by the
-state.
-
-The Pompadour lived but a short while to enjoy her triumph. Worn out
-by her superhuman activities, assailed by debt, she fell ill of a
-racking cough, dying on the 15th of April, 1764, in her forty-second
-year, keeping her ascendancy over the king and the supreme power in
-France to her last hour. Death found her transacting affairs of state.
-Louis, weary of his servitude, had only a heartless epigram to cast
-at the body of the dead woman as she passed to her last resting-place.
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-THE END
-
-
-The death of the Pompadour robbed Boucher of a friend; but her
-brother, Marigny, remained faithfully attached to the old artist, and
-seized every chance to honour him. On the death of Carle van Loo,
-Boucher, at sixty-two, was made first painter to the king, with all
-his pensions and privileges that were consistent with this the supreme
-appointment in the art world.
-
-There had been serious intention of making Boucher the head of the
-Ecole des Eleves Proteges; he had the art of making himself liked and
-of inspiring the love of the arts. He was very popular with the
-students and artists, owing to his kindliness, his eagerness to render
-service, his readiness to encourage the youngsters or to console them.
-When the riot took place, provoked by the Academicians by their award
-of the Prix de Rome in 1767, the students insulted the Academicians,
-but hailed Boucher with enthusiastic applause. The reason was not far
-to seek. When a student came to the old master for advice he did not
-"play the pontiff," and, scorning the false dignity of big phrases, he
-took the brush in his hand and showed the way out of all difficulties
-by simplehearted example, despising rules, and putting himself out in
-order to make things clear to a young artist.
-
-However, the Academicians feared he would be an unorthodox master for
-youth, and appointed another in his place.
-
-A long and serious illness thwarted his keen energies. Diderot was
-giving himself up to outrageous violence against him. If the old
-painter exhibited at the Salon, Diderot fiercely assailed his art; if
-he did not exhibit, Diderot as bitterly assailed him for his
-negligences. Above all, he attacked Boucher in that he did not paint
-what Diderot would have painted--but could not. "When he paints
-infants," cries Diderot, "you will not find one employed in a real act
-of life--studying his lesson, reading, writing, stripping hemp."
-
-Poor unfortunate infants! for whom Philosophy could find no happier
-joy in life than _stripping hemp_! Boucher was but an artist. He
-painted his generation as far as he could see it, and, with all his
-faults and weaknesses, he never debauched his art with foreign and
-alien things that had no part in the nation's life; he painted fair
-France into his landscapes, not a make-believe land he did not know
-with preposterous Greek ruins; and best of all, to his eternal honour,
-he painted infants glad in their gladness to be alive, with no desire
-to send their happy little bodies to school, with no sickly ambition
-to make them into budding philosophers, with no thought of making them
-pose and lie as Men of Feeling. He had no joy in setting their little
-bodies to toil--in making them "teach a lesson to the spectator," in
-making them stoop their little shoulders to the "picking of hemp."
-
-He continued to paint as he had always painted--except that he painted
-less well. The wreath of roses was wilting on a grey head. The blood
-jigged less warmly in the frail body. The features showed pallid--the
-eyes haggard. The sight failed. The hand alone kept something of its
-cunning.
-
-He went to Holland with his friend Randon du Boisset, but health
-shrank farther from him. Diderot had near spent his last jibe.
-
-In 1768, Boucher's sixty-fifth year, the neglected queen went to her
-grave. The king's grief and contrition and vows to amend his life came
-too late, and lasted little longer than the drying of the floods of
-tears over the body of his dead consort. A year later he was become
-the creature of a pretty woman of the gutters, whom he caused to be
-married to the Count du Barry--the infamously famous Madame du Barry.
-
-But neither the remonstrances of Choiseul with the king against this
-further degradation of the throne of France, nor his unconcealed scorn
-of the upstart countess, nor the dangerous enemy he made for himself
-thereby, signified now to Boucher, first painter to the king.
-
-Boucher was failing. His son was a prig and a disappointment. His two
-favourite pupils, Baudoin and Deshayes, who had married his two girls,
-died.
-
-To the Salon of 1769 he sent his "Caravan of Bohemians." It was his
-last display. He had been going about for some time like a gaunt ghost
-of his former self, afflicted with all the ills inevitable to a life
-feverishly consumed in work and the pursuit of pleasure.
-
-They went to his studio at five of the clock one May morning, and
-found him seated at his easel, before a canvas of Venus, dead, with
-the paint-filled brush fallen out of his fingers.
-
-So passed he away on the 30th of May 1770, in his sixty-seventh year.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When Boucher died, the generation of which he was the limner was near
-come to its violent end. The rosy carnivals and gay gallantries of his
-age gave way to the blood-stained romance and fierce tempest of the
-Revolution. The garrets of the old curiosity-shops received the
-discarded canvases of the master. His shepherds and shepherdesses were
-put to rout by the Romans of his pupil, citizen David. The old order
-was brought into contempt and overthrown. And with it, Boucher's art,
-like much that was gracious and charming and good in the evil thing,
-went down also, and was overwhelmed for a while.
-
-For a while only. For just as, out of the blood and terror of the
-Revolution, a real France arose, phoenix-wise, from the ruin, and in
-being born, whilst putting off the vilenesses of the thing from which
-she sprang, took on also to herself the gracious and winsome qualities
-that place her amongst the most fascinating peoples of the ages; so
-Boucher has come into his kingdom again--the most gracious of painters
-that the years have yielded.
-
-
-The plates are printed by BEMROSE & SONS, LTD., Derby and London
-
-The text at the BALLANTYNE PRESS, Edinburgh
-
-
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