This painting abounds with ingenious flourishes and many demonstrations of the painter's skill. A remarkable care is exercised, for example, in the painting of the sitter's face, the white lace, and the treatment of the utterly sumptuous drapery. The beautifully rendered lace engageante sleeves, held at the elbow by an elaborate golden band with jewels, are a prominent feature of the attire.
Jean-Baptiste Santerre (1651-1717), was a French Baroque Era Painter often associated with Jean-Honoré Fragonard but notable in his own right. Santerre was born at Magny-en-Vexin, in France. He was a pupil of the painters Bon Boullogne and François Lemaire. Although he was accepted as an academic on October 18, 1704 and exhibited in the famous Parisian Halls, he stood out for his creation in Versailles of an academy or school for women, for whose studies he designed interesting and numerous models. Undoubtedly, such works reveal his mastery in drawing, although he also showed a rich and diversified colour throughout his production on canvas.
He began his painting career as a portraitist and these works are remarkable. His most notable work is his Susanna at the Bath (Louvre), which was the diploma work executed by him in 1704 when he was received into the Académie. This work contributed to Santerre's fifty-year reputation as a painter of the erotic nude, in which field he was the forerunner to François Boucher (1730–1770) and Jean-Honoré Fragonard (1732–1806). These works were known not only for their quality but also for a sensual tone that surprised and even outraged his contemporaries. He was active between 1666 and 1717. He died in Paris.
Provenance: