WATTEAU, Jean-Antoine
(b. 1684, Valenciennes, d. 1721, Nogent-sur-Marne)

Chinese Musician and Chinese Woman

1708-16
Oil on canvas, 23 x 18 cm (each)
Private collection

The pair of small paintings, the "Viosseu" or Chinese Musician, and Chinese Woman of Kouei Tchéou, are the only known surviving works that formed part of a decorative scheme executed by Watteau for a small room in the Château de la Muette, a 16th century hunting lodge on the edge of the Bois de Boulogne.

Watteau created thirty paintings for the room, known from a series of thirty prints. The engravers included François Boucher, Edme Jeaurat and Michel-Guillaume Aubert,

Datable to 1708-16, the decoration for La Muette is one of the earliest examples of chinoiserie used in a decorative scheme in France. Watteau's designs made a profound impact on other artists such as Boucher who took up similar themes in his own work in the 1730s and 1740s.