
Point de Convention (Absolutely no agreement)
Louis-Léopold Boilly 1797
A Merveilleuse is mistaken for a prostitute
and refuses the coin offered to her.
Aileen Ribeiro says of this image (les Incroyables) :
Caricaturists found a perfect subject in the form of the masculine fashions of the late 1790s. Both young men wear tight-fitting square-cut coats with huge lapels, and knee-breeches decorated with loops of fabric. Their political sympathies are not necessarily clear. Although their culottes date from the ancien régime, their printed cravats are working-class in origin; and, while the man on the left wears his hair plaited at the back à la victime, the man on the right has a revolutionary cockade prominently pinned to his hat. Both have shaggy hair, the side locks falling like spaniel's ears. The implications seems to be that fashion is more important than ideology.— Fashion in the French Revolution, Aileen Ribeiro
Les Merveilleuses, or Marvelous Women, ruled the live fast, die young social whirlwind that took over the salons of Paris after the Terror. At their front Thérésa Cabarrus Fontenay Tallien and Joséphine de Beauharnais (later Empress) both of whom just barely survived the Jacobin regime. It was partly on Thérésa's behalf, with whom Tallien had been conducting a torrid affair, that he spearheaded the Thermadorian take down of Robespierre and the Montagnards. The à la Grecque style typified by Thérésa, Joséphine, and Madame Récamier consisted of clinging, flowing classical Greek and Roman styles in white silks and muslins, draped with brightly colored shawls and ribbons edged with classical motifs. The once allegorical fashion left the painters studio and took to the streets and ballrooms, their dainty feet shod in golden sandals, and dresses dampened to enhance their cling (though wearing knitted flesh colored stays and stockings to preserve a vestige of modesty). Madame Tallien though was the real deal, and famously appeared at the Paris Opera wearing a white silk dress without sleeves and sans petticoats (gasp!). Charles Maurice de Talleyrand commented: "Il n'est pas possible de s'exposer plus somptueusement!" ("It is not possible to exhibit oneself more sumptuously!") [source: wikipedia]. Hair was worn curled and dressed with ribbons à la grecque or clipped short à la victime or à la titus, in emulation of the last haircut the condemned received before being sent to the guillotine so as not to impede the blade. This short and sassy style lasted amazingly til the early 1800s, but never caught on in England or other countries, unlike the empire waisted dress, which proved the silhouette du jour for nearly thirty years.

1795-96 A Merveilleuse as seen on the boulevard. Note the hair à la victime, in immitation of the toilette du condamne.

1798-99 Madame Raymond de Verninac, born Henriette Delacroix, elder sister of Eugène Delacroix by David
Journal des Dames et des Modes: Fashion plates and the followers of fashion 1797 - 1800. [source]

Plate No. 9, 1797
Chignon à la Grecque, entrelacé avec un Fichu de couleur, Bandeau en Cheveux, Collier de Perles, Ceinture à la Victime
Links & Sources:
- Fashion in the French Revolution, Aileen Ribeiro
- Incroyables et Merveilleuses: Du renouveau de la Canne
Follow the salle suivante button at the bottom of the page for a lovely tour! - Muscadin: at Wikipedia
- Jean-Baptiste Isabey: miniature portraits in France's museums
- Jean-Baptiste Isabey: A Bio
- Reign of Terror: (September 5, 1793 – July 28, 1794) or simply The Terror (French: la Terreur) was a period of about ten months during the French Revolution when struggles between rival factions led to mutual radicalization which took on a violent character with mass executions by guillotine.
- White Terror: Post Thermadorian Reaction to the Jacobins and their supporters
- Directory (Directoire): Held executive power in France from November 2, 1795 until November 10, 1799 (5 Brumaire year III to the 18 Brumaire year VIII): following the Convention and preceding the Consulate.
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