In literature In the picaresque novel
Gil Blas,
Alain-René Lesage gives what, though disputed, is usually thought to be a literary portrait of Desmares:
In art ,
Charlotte Desmares, oil on canvas,
Comédie-Française,
Paris In modern historiography, there are two portraits of Desmares regarded as authentic. One of them is a 1720s pastel by
Charles-Antoine Coypel, published in 1733 as an etching by
François-Bernard Lépicié; the pastel was mentioned in Desmares' inventory of 1746. In Coypel's pastel, now presumed lost, Desmares is shown holding a mask and a dagger, indicating her abilities in comedy and tragedy, stressed in the quatrain on Lépicié's print. An oil on canvas copy of the pastel, once attributed to Coypel and owned by the painter
Pierre-Nolasque Bergeret, was acquired from the latter in 1827 by the Comédie-Française, where it remains. Another authentic portrait of Desmares, painted by
Jacques Aved, was listed in Desmares' inventory of 1753; it then passed to her daughter Charlotte d'Amour, remaining until the latter's death in 1783. Aside from aforementioned works, Desmares is also widely associated by scholars, to various success, with numerous paintings by contemporaneous artists such as
Jean-Baptiste Santerre and
Antoine Watteau. As for Santerre, it had been claimed as early as the late 1870s that his painting of the 1700s,
Young Lady with a Letter, was a portrait of Desmares, with no concrete evidence to verify it though; in contrary to that point, it has been said that Santerre's subject does not at all resemble Desmares when compared with Coypel's pastel, and it is actually an imaginary figure in fancy dress, often present in Santerre's late-era art. Another portrait presumed to be of Desmares, attributed to
Jean Raoux, was in the writer
Arsène Houssaye's collection, sold in 1896. As for Watteau, it has been speculated by scholars that he had some connection to the actress. According to the Soviet scholar Inna Nemilova, Watteau was a life-long admirer of Desmares, to whom and her company-mates he was allegedly introduced by a friend, the librettist
Antoine de Laroque; in an article published in the 1984–1985 exhibition catalogue
Watteau, 1684–1721, the French theatre historian François Moureau says that Desmares also "had numerous reasons for meeting Watteau." It was long noted that a print by Louis Desplaces after Watteau, showing a woman dressed as pilgrim, has been captioned with Desmares' name; along with Coypel's pastel, it was also said to be an authentic portrait of Desmares. The figure appeared in Watteau's early painting,
The Isle of Cythera now in the
Städel,
Frankfurt, notably related to
Florent Carton Dancourt's play
The Three Cousins that was believed to feature Desmares as Colette, a pilgrim; a developed version of the subject appears in the lower left corner of Watteau's signature painting,
The Embarkation for Cythera. Other paintings by Watteau believed to depict Desmares include
The Coquettes, dit Actors of the Comédie-Française,
The Dreamer,
Fêtes Vénitiennes, and
Love in the French Theatre. The supposed connection between Watteau and Desmares became a topic of the 2007 French film on the painter, . == Notes ==