The work depicts the 15 or 16 year old
woman Marie Joséphine Charlotte du Val d'Ognes (1786 - 1868) drawing in front of a broken window. Behind d'Ognes, a couple stand on a
parapet. In the
Concise Dictionary of Women Artists (2001), Valerie Mainz describes the broken window as a "
tour de force of the painter's art distinguishing, in its ''
trompe-l'oeil'' effect, the view of the scene outside as to be seen as only partly through glass." The room depicted in the painting is actually a gallery of the
Louvre, as discovered by art historian Anne Higonnet. During the time when the picture was presumed to be David's, it was assumed that the woman in the painting was his student, drawing him as he painted her.
Andre Maurois said that it was "a perfect picture, unforgettable." Critical response to the work prior to attributing the work to Charpentier was often positive. After Sterling admitted the picture may not be David's, he called it a "merciless portrait of an intelligent, homely woman." He also felt that the anatomy of the portrait was incorrect. Other critics suddenly found faults in the portrait, now that it was no longer considered a David and ascribed to Charpentier instead.
James Laver wrote of the painting in 1964, "Although the painting is extremely attractive as a period piece, there are certain weaknesses of which a painter of David's calibre would not have been guilty." In a more modern take,
Germaine Greer wrote that the picture "does not seek to charm, nor does it seek to portray the sexual vitality of its sitter" and felt that it was a
feminist painting in nature. Other feminist critics began to ascribe a
feminine aspect to the painting. The Louvre gallery discovered by Higonnet in 2014 was used by women to teach and be instructed in art. Higonnet therefore believes the painting is a portrait of a woman by a woman. The named woman, Charlotte du Val d'Ognes, once wanted to be a professional artist, but chose instead to give up art when she was married. Bridget Quinn describes the painting as a moment where "two young women longing to make art found themselves in a brief period of opportunity, when instruction, exhibition and even fame were possible." ==References==