Anne de Pisseleu, the Duchesse d’Étampes

Anne de Pisseleu, the Duchesse d’Étampes

People often ask if our tours change over time, and the answer is absolutely yes, they change—both because the museum’s displays change, and because we discover things about the artworks. Here for instance is a portrait of a royal mistress that just came onto display at the Met. It isn’t certain who the artist is, but the subject is clearly Anne de Pisseleu, the Duchesse d’Étampes, who was one of the most important mistresses of François I, France’s most important Renaissance king. Anne was a typical Shady Lady: she was famously beautiful, but also famously intelligent. In fact, she was called “the most beautiful of the learned, and the most learned of the beautiful.” It was also typical of the French court that François married her off and gave her husband a title: the French always wanted their royal mistresses to be titled and married (perhaps to prevent their children from making claims on the throne). Want to know more about the Shady Ladies of art and history? Come on our Shady Ladies tours!



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