rocaille

[ roh-kahy; French raw-kah-yuh ]
/ roʊˈkaɪ; French rɔˈkɑ yə /

noun

Fine Arts. any of the fantastic ornamental, often asymmetrical, combinations characteristic of the Rococo period, consisting of rock, shell, and plant forms combined with artificial forms, esp C-curves.

Origin of rocaille

1855–60; < French: pebble-work, derivative of roc rock1

Example sentences from the Web for rocaille

  • He had a most marvelous power of invention and lavished ornament on everything, carrying the rocaille style to its utmost limit.

  • After the death of its owner society, in a fit of madness, plunged into the rocaille.

    The House in Good Taste |Elsie de Wolfe

British Dictionary definitions for rocaille

rocaille
/ (rɒˈkaɪ) /

noun

decorative rock or shell work, esp as ornamentation in a rococo fountain, grotto, or interior

Word Origin for rocaille

from French, from roc rock 1