
The Swing
Jean-Honoré Fragonard
€39,90
Select sizeSize guide
- 380g/m² cotton canvas — certified museum quality
- Solid wood stretcher bar with 0.75” gallery wrap
- HD Giclée print — colour-true to the original
- Ready to hang — hanging hardware included
Les Hazards heureux de l'Escarpolette (known in English as The Swing) is an etching and engraving by the French engraver Nicolas de Launay, made around 1782 after the celebrated composition by Jean-Honoré Fragonard. In an era before mass photography, engravings like this one were the primary way an iconic image circulated beyond the private collection of the patron who commissioned it — carrying Fragonard's playful Rococo vision of a young woman on a garden swing, her admirer hidden in the bushes below, into homes across Europe.
De Launay was among the most sought-after reproductive engravers of eighteenth-century Paris, prized for translating the delicate light and movement of Rococo painting into the more restrained vocabulary of etched line — a technical achievement that made this image one of the most widely disseminated of its century, and one that continues to define the visual language of French Rococo art.
This museum-quality canvas print reproduces the engraving held in the Drawings and Prints department of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, printed on premium matte canvas and hand-wrapped around a solid 0.75-inch gallery wrap frame — ready to hang and built to last.
| Artist | Nicolas de Launay, after Jean-Honoré Fragonard |
| Year | ca. 1782 |
| Medium | Etching and engraving |
| Dimensions | 24 1/8 x 18 3/8 in. (61.3 x 46.7 cm) |
| Collection | The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York |
| Movement | Rococo |



