Portrait of Marguerite de Sève, Wife of Barthélemy-Jean-Claude Pupil

Portrait of Marguerite de Sève, Wife of Barthélemy-Jean-Claude Pupil
Nicolas de Largillierre

1656-1746
Portrait of Marguerite de Sève, Wife of Barthélemy-Jean-Claude Pupil
1729
Oil on canvas
54-1/2 x 41-7/8 in.

Largillierre, who enjoyed a long and successful career as a portraitist, was sought out early in the eighteenth century by important new clients from the provinces of France. One of them was B.-Jean-Claude Pupil, who received two judicial appointments in Lyon after his marriage in 1722 to Marguerite de Sève, the subject of the companion portrait.

His wife wears a costume with an embossed and jeweled bodice that looks made of metal but may be silk mounted on molded buckram, a stiff material. The music she touches with her left hand and the words underneath it are for a drinking song of the kind that sophisticated women sang at an evening gathering at home.

Provenance: 

By a series of indirect inheritances to Comte Olivier de la Ferrière, his sale, 1969
Acquired by the Putnam Foundation, 1971

Provenance Notes: 

[1] Inscribed on the lining of the canvas on the reverse, evidently copying an inscription on the back of the original canvas, is the following legend: peint par / N. de Largillierre. / .1729