Pierre Filloeul, Jean-Baptiste-Siméon Chardin
Les Bouteilles de Savon (Soap Bubbles)
1738
Scroll
Pierre Filloeul, Jean-Baptiste-Siméon Chardin
Les Bouteilles de Savon (Soap Bubbles)
1738
Physical Qualities
Etching and engraving, Sheet: 289 x 207 mm. (11 3/8 x 8 1/8 in.)
Plate: 282 x 200 mm. (11 1/8 x 7 7/8 in.)
Credit Line
Purchased in Memory of Joan Rappeport with funds contributed by her Family and Friends; and Print and Drawing Acquisition Fund
Object Number
2008.73
The painter Jean-Baptiste-Siméon Chardin worked closely with several printmakers to reproduce his work in etching and engraving. (The Game of Knucklebones is a reproduction of Chardin’s oil painting by the same name, on view nearby.) These reproductive prints not only made Chardin’s work known to a larger audience, but also provided the artist with another source of income, one more lucrative than his paintings. Pierre Filloeul made The Game of Knucklebones and Soap Bubbles in 1739, the year he advertised them in a contemporary journal as works influenced by seventeenth-century Dutch genre painting, in which there was great interest at the time. Soap Bubbles is a charming scene of two boys at play, but like its seventeenth-century source of inspiration, its bubble imagery suggests the fragility and transience of life itself.
The Baltimore Museum of Art by purchase, 2008; Susan Schulman and Carolyn Bullard; C. Bayard
Signed: 1
Inscribed: Recto: in plate, at lower left: "Chardin Pinx."; in plate, at lower center: "LES BOUTEILLES DE SAVON"; in plate, at lower right: "Filloeul Sculp."; in plate, at bottom center: "AParis chez Filloeul, à l'entrée de la rue du Fouare, au batiment neuf par la rue Gallande"; Verso: none
Markings: CM: verso: C. Bayard (Lugt 496)