François Boucher, 1748 - The Fountain of Love - fine art print

713 kr

Tax included. Shipping calculated at checkout.

Things you should know about this more than 270 years old work of art

The Fountain of Love is a painting created by the painter François Boucher. The painting has the following size: 294,6 x 337,8 cm and was manufactured on the medium oil on canvas. The piece of art is included in the The J. Paul Getty Museum's digital collection located in Los Angeles, California, United States of America. With courtesy of: The J. Paul Getty Museum (public domain license).: . Further, the alignment is in landscape format with an image ratio of 1.2 : 1, which implies that the length is 20% longer than the width. The painter François Boucher was an artist, whose style was primarily Rococo. The European artist was born in 1703 and passed away at the age of 67 in the year 1770 in Paris.

Choose your material

For every product we offer a range of different sizes & materials. You can choose your favorite size and material among the following preferences:

  • Canvas: The canvas direct print is a printed canvas stretched on a wooden stretcher. The advantage of canvas prints is that they are relatively low in weight. That means, it is easy to hang up the Canvas print without additional wall-mounts. That is why, a canvas print is suitable for any type of wall.
  • Aluminium dibond print: These are metal prints on aluminium dibond with an outstanding depth. For your Print On Aluminum Dibond, we print your work of art onto the aluminium white-primed surface. The bright sections of the artpiece shine with a silky gloss but without glare. The colors are luminous, fine details appear clear and crisp.
  • The acrylic glass print: A glossy print on acrylic glass, which is often referred to as a fine art print on plexiglass, will convert the original work of art into beautiful décor. The work of art is being manufactured with state-of-the-art UV printing machines. The result of this are stunning, vibrant color tones.
  • Printed poster (canvas material): Our poster print is a UV printed sheet of cotton canvas paper with a granular surface structure, which resembles the actual work of art. The poster print is designed for putting your art print using a personal frame. Please bear in mind, that depending on the size of the poster print we add a white margin 2-6cm round about the print motif, which facilitates the framing with your custom frame.

Disclaimer: We try everything in order to describe our art products as accurately as possible and to demonstrate them visually on the respective product detail pages. Please bear in mind that some pigments of the print products, as well as the printing may differ slightly from the image on the device's screen. Depending on your screen settings and the nature of the surface, colors might not be printed as realistically as the digital version on this website. Considering that all the fine art prints are processed and printed by hand, there may also be minor differences in the size and exact position of the motif.

About the article

Article type: wall art
Reproduction method: digital reproduction
Manufacturing process: digital printing
Product Origin: Germany
Stock type: production on demand
Product use: wall picture, art reproduction gallery
Image orientation: landscape alignment
Side ratio: 1.2 : 1 length to width
Image ratio interpretation: the length is 20% longer than the width
Fabric variants: poster print (canvas paper), canvas print, acrylic glass print (with real glass coating), metal print (aluminium dibond)
Canvas on stretcher frame (canvas print) size options: 60x50cm - 24x20", 120x100cm - 47x39", 180x150cm - 71x59"
Acrylic glass print (with real glass coating) size variants: 60x50cm - 24x20", 120x100cm - 47x39", 180x150cm - 71x59"
Poster print (canvas paper) variants: 60x50cm - 24x20", 120x100cm - 47x39"
Aluminium print (aluminium dibond material) sizes: 60x50cm - 24x20", 120x100cm - 47x39"
Framing of the artprint: without frame

Details on the original artpiece

Title of the painting: "The Fountain of Love"
Artwork categorization: painting
Category: classic art
Artwork century: 18th century
Created in the year: 1748
Age of artwork: around 270 years
Original medium: oil on canvas
Dimensions of the original work of art: 294,6 x 337,8 cm
Museum: The J. Paul Getty Museum
Location of the museum: Los Angeles, California, United States of America
Museum's webpage: www.getty.edu
License type: public domain
Courtesy of: The J. Paul Getty Museum

Contextual artist data

Artist name: François Boucher
Gender of the artist: male
Nationality of artist: French
Professions of the artist: painter
Country of the artist: France
Classification: old master
Styles of the artist: Rococo
Died aged: 67 years
Born: 1703
Year died: 1770
City of death: Paris

© Copyright - intellectual property of - www.artprinta.com (Artprinta)

Original artwork information by the museum's website (© Copyright - by The J. Paul Getty Museum - The J. Paul Getty Museum)

A youth with a flute gazes languidly at his companionwhile another youth offers a shell full of fresh water to a dainty maiden in a diaphanous gown of purple-gold and red satin. A rosy-cheeked, barefoot woman dressed in red silk looks longingly at the man with the flute. Suitors woo and babies frolic in an idyllic setting of lush, green, leafy trees under a pale blue sky with gray-pink clouds.

By blending sensuality, covert eroticism, and refinement, pastoral paintings such as these brought the world of aristocratic society and amorous games to the countryside. The pastoral genre in which François Boucher excelled delighted his patrons, answering the contemporary nostalgia for nature and excluding coarse reality.

The Fountain of Love,dated 1748, originally served as a finished cartoon for a tapestry, one of a series of six known as the Noble Pastorales. Beginning in 1755, the Beauvais tapestry manufactory wove the tapestries directly over the cartoons. Eventually, the cartoons were cut up into sections and sold separately. The tapestries remain, showing scholars how large the cartoons were and what is missing from them now.

You may also like

Recently viewed