Flute Player
Maker
Beauvais Tapestry Manufactory
(active 1664, combined with Gobelins 1940)
Maker
François Boucher
, designer (French, 1703 - 1770)
Makerunder the directorship of
Andre-Charlemagne Charron
(French)
AfterCommissioned by
Jean-Baptiste Oudry
(French, 1686 - 1755)
Additional Title(s)
- La Joueuse de Flûte
- The Noble Pastoral
- The Flutist
ClassificationsDECORATIVE ARTS
Date1757-1760
Mediumwool and silk with linen lining
Dimensions130 x 148 1/2 in. (330.2 x 377.2 cm.)
DescriptionTapestry depicts figural scene figures in a pastoral scene. One figure plays a flute.
SignedSigned F. Boucher 1755, in reverse, in the narrative field.
Credit LineThe Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens
Label TextThis set of five tapestries was woven by order of the French crown on behalf of Louis XV. The pastoral scenes, depicting pleasurable outdoor activities such as picnics and music-making, were popular subjects among the French elite. The Beauvais manufactory wove thirteen separate commissions of full or partial sets of The Noble Pastoral, but today The Huntington’s set is the only one to remain intact. Purchased by Henry Huntington in 1909, at Arabella’s request, they were his first major expenditure on art.Status
On viewObject number9.2
Gobelins Tapestry Manufactory
tapestry covers: mid 18th Century; chair frames: 19th Century
Object number: 9.29
Gobelins Tapestry Manufactory
1738-1740 or 1767; frame, 1909-1910.
Object number: 9.32
Gobelins Tapestry Manufactory
Tapestry woven covers ca. 1779; frames of nineteenth-century before 1892; modern
Object number: 9.27
Gobelins Tapestry Manufactory
Tapestry woven covers ca. 1779; frames of nineteenth-century before 1892; modern
Object number: 9.30
Gobelins Tapestry Manufactory
Tapestry woven covers ca. 1779; frames of nineteenth-century before 1892; modern
Object number: 9.31
Gobelins Tapestry Manufactory
Tapestry woven covers ca. 1779; frames of nineteenth-century before 1892; modern
Object number: 9.20
Gobelins Tapestry Manufactory
Tapestry woven covers ca. 1779; frames of nineteenth-century before 1892; modern
Object number: 9.21