Blind-Man's Buff is an 1812 genre painting by the Scottish artist David Wilkie.
While depictions of the game had appeared in art before, Willkie chose to portray a humbler settling than earlier versions generally set in drawing rooms.
[2] It was commissioned by George, Prince Regent who intended it to be a companion piece to a work already in his collection The Village Choristers (1810) by Edward Bird.
[2] It shows the influence of seventeenth century Old Masters on Wilkie's early genre paintings.
[3] The Regent was pleased with the work, which cost him 500 guineas, and hung it in his London residence Carlton House.