Portrait of Mademoiselle Marie-Anne Adelaide Le Normand
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Cleveland Museum of Art Object Description
Mademoiselle Marie-Anne Adelaide Le Normand, a famous Parisian fortune teller, was born in Alençon, France, between 1768 and 1772. Little is known of her early years, but by 1790 she had already established a strong following in Paris. Fortune telling was a highly lucrative field perhaps due to the extreme political unrest that permeated Paris in the 1790s. Although the practice of fortune telling was illegal at the time, people from the highest social classes sought Le Normand's services. She prophesied the bloody deaths of the French revolutionaries Maximilien Robespierre, Louis Antoine de Saint-Just, and Jean-Paul Marat when they visited her salon. Additionally, Alexandre Dumas was one of many to describe Le Normand's prediction of the monumental rise and fall ...
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All Works in Curationist’s archives can be reproduced and used freely. How to attribute this Work:
François Dumont (French, 1751–1831), Portrait of Mademoiselle Marie-Anne Adelaide Le Normand, c. 1793, Cleveland Museum of Art. CC0.
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