
This is a portrait of Madeline Knoblock, Seurat''''s mistress. There is an atypical squalidness about this canvas, which could almost be seen in a gypsy wagon. Instead of the vase with flowers seen between the two panels of the folding mirror on the wall, Seurat had first painted his own portrait. When a friend who saw it told him it made him look silly, Seurat covered his face with the flower pot.
As for the plump model, she brings to mind the circus and carnival people and the music-hall artistes Seurat was seeing so much of at the time (he often went to the Gaite Rochechouart and the
The painting belonged to Madeline Knoblock. It is interesting to compare it with the drawing The Artist''''s Dressing Room of about 1887, in which we find this same atmosphere of backstage at a carnival or circus.