Méry Laurent


Méry Laurent, born Anne Rose Suzanne Louviot, was a demi-mondaine and the muse of several Parisian artists. She used to run her own “salon” where she hosted many French writers and painters of her time: Stéphane Mallarmé, Émile Zola, Marcel Proust, François Coppée, Henri Gervex, James Whistler and Édouard Manet.

Biography

Anne Rose Suzanne Louviot was born in Nancy in 1849. She was the daughter of a woman who worked as a laundress at Marshal Francois Certain De Canrobert's, and of an unknown father. Her laundress mother sold her 15-year-old daughter's virginity to Canrobert, so that her daughter would become Canorbert's mistress and receive an annuity for life of 500 francs per month. When the young girl turned 16, this enabled her to go in Paris, where she started a brief career as an actress. She played light comedies at The Théâtre des Variétés; the role of her lifetime there was the Venus Anadyomene, posing naked on her shell; at the Théâtre du Châtelet, she also played Offenbach's féeries.
In 1874, after becoming a high-class prostitute, she met Thomas W. Evans, an extremely wealthy American dental surgeon who tended to many high-profile people, and even royal families. He made her his mistress and helped her settle down at 52, rue de Rome, where she held her “salon”, hosting all of the Parisian artistic avant-garde. Through this occasion, she became the mistress of Francois Coppée, Stéphane Mallarmé, Antonin Proust, as well as Edouard Manet's mistress and model.
When Laurent died, she bequeathed her wealth to Victor Margueritte, her last favorite and “protégé”, with the exception of her allegoric , which went to the Museum of Fine Arts of Nancy.
Laurent was buried in the Père-Lachaise cemetery.

Her "Salon"

The "salon" she ran was a place of exchanges which boosted the creative steps of those who patronized it: one could find there Edouard Manet and Henri Gervex, but also poets and writers such as Mallarmé, Coppée, Joris-Karl Huysmans, Proust, or even Zola. She also received sculptors, lyrical artists and musicians, such as Hortense Schneider and Reynaldo Hahn. Hahn would go on to become her testamentary executor.

Her portraits by Edouard Manet