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La Bohémienne

Tapestry
1738-1759 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

The rococo artist, François Boucher (1703-1770), had a long and fruitful association with the Beauvais Tapestry Manufactory. This tapestry belongs to Boucher's 'Fêtes Italiennes' series. The title of the work 'La Bohémienne', refers to the young Romani woman engaged in reading the shepherdess's palm.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Titles
  • La Bohémienne
  • Fêtes Italiennes
Materials and techniques
Tapestry woven in wool and silk
Brief description
Tapestry 'La Bohémienne' woven in wool and silk, from 'Fêtes Italiennes', designed by François Boucher, made by Beauvais Tapestry Factory, France, 1738-1759
Physical description
Tapestry woven in wool and silk. 22 warp threads to the inch (8 to the cm). The design consists of a ruined building, with a capital supported by a herm overgrown with trees, sit three young women. A young man in a blue coat holds a wreath of flowers over the head of the foremost woman in a robe of reds and pinks over a yellow petticoat. The shepherdess at the back of the group, in the centre of the composition, wears a yellow robe. She has her fortune told by a young Romany with a baby on her back. In front are sheep, and to the right side is a tree and flowers and reeds. The tapestry is enclosed in a border imitating a gold frame.
Dimensions
  • Top edge width: 3250mm
  • Bottom edge width: 3260mm
  • Weight: 34kg
  • Proper left length: 3330mm
  • Proper right length: 3380mm
Weight including roller
Style
Object history
Francois Boucher designed the 'Fêtes Italiennes' in fourteen pieces for the Beauvais manufactory in 1736, and according to Badin, La manufacture des tapisseries de Beauvais, there were thirty-four weavings of varying numbers of tapestries from the set. 'La Bohémienne' was woven at least 14 times. Badin notes its production in 1738 (twice), 1739, 1740 (twice), 1741 (twice), 1745, 1750 (3 times), 1759 and 1762. Of these, one of the sets of 1750 was made for the King of Sweden and is still part of the royal collections, and the set of 1762 is in the Metropolitan Museum, New York. There were also sets made which went unrecorded Badin: in the Departmental collection of photographs are two pieces (including 'La Bohémienne') with the arms of Rohan-Soubise, probably ordered for the Hotel Soubise by the Duc de Rohan-Rohan (d. 1749).
Subjects depicted
Summary
The rococo artist, François Boucher (1703-1770), had a long and fruitful association with the Beauvais Tapestry Manufactory. This tapestry belongs to Boucher's 'Fêtes Italiennes' series. The title of the work 'La Bohémienne', refers to the young Romani woman engaged in reading the shepherdess's palm.
Collection
Accession number
T.216-1972

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Record createdJanuary 27, 2007
Record URL
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