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Mystification (Diderot)

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Mystification,
or the story of the portraits
1954 second printing
AuthorDenis Diderot
Original titleMystification
ou l'Histoire des portraits
IllustratorPicasso
LanguageFrench
Genrecomédie de caractères
Publication date
1951
Publication placeFrance

Mystification or l'Histoire des portraits is an unfinished work from 1768 by Denis Diderot. It was published in 1951. A second edition in 1954 by Pierre Daix, annotated by Yves Benot was illustrated with four sketches by Pablo Picasso, for Les Éditeurs français réunis. A film based on the work was directed by Sandrine Rinaldi in 2005.[1]

Plot

The story is based on a true story in which Diderot was also involved. The Russian Ambassador to France, Prince Dmitri Alekseyevich Gallitzin, wanted to marry the 19-year-old Amalie von Schmettau, but had given his former mistress Mlle d'Ornet (in Diderot spelled "Mlle Dornet") several portraits, which he wanted to retrieve before his marriage. The scene takes place in the Paris studio of the Prussian painter Anna Dorothea Therbusch (in Diderot spelled "Mme Therbouche"), where present are the painter, then Miss Dornet, who reclines ill on a sofa, a certain Bonvalet-Desbrosses, allegedly a Turkish doctor, and Diderot himself. The Prince, who is not present, has made use of the artist, the author and the doctor to diagnose to his former mistress that she can only be healthy when she separates herself from the mementos of her lover.[2] The narrative is deliberately unfinished, according to the author, because of the interruption of the project due to the death of Bonvalet-Desbrosses.

References

  1. ^ "Avis sur le film Mystification ou l'histoire des portraits". Allocine.fr. Retrieved 21 August 2017.
  2. ^ Julia Luisa Abramson - Learning from Lying: Paradoxes of the Literary Mystification 2005 0874139007 Page 36 "When Prince Dimitri Gallitzin (1735-1803), Catherine the Great's ambassador to France, requested Diderot's help in reclaiming portraits from a former mistress named Mlle Dornet, the resulting negotiation inspired the convoluted plot ."