The See-Saw is an oil-on-canvas painting by French Rococo artist Jean-Honoré Fragonard, created c.1750–1752 during the artist's early career.
The painting forms a pair with another Fragonard work entitled Blind Man's Bluff.
[1] Blind Man's Bluff focuses on courtship while The See-Saw, and the metaphor of the rocking motion of the seesaw, suggests the relationship has been consummated.
[2][3] The See-Saw depicts young children playing with a seesaw in a forest grove.
It is seen as an important precedent to Fragonard's masterpiece The Swing.