35 N°I 2025 MuseoMag NEW ACQUISITION specific significance to the sitter, as must the instru- ment. They both may refer to Pantaleon Hebenstreit (1668-1750), a famous German dance teacher, ins- trument maker, musician and composer. Pantaleon Hebenstreit invented a large instrument with strings, named after him, that was used all over Europe around 1700 for dance music, and can be compared to a dulcimer (a pre-form of the fortepiano). It is not yet clear if and how he is related to Thérèse Hebenstreit, but the fact that they share the same relatively uncommon family name suggests a connection. Since Jean Tinchant is portrayed in the military uniform of a non-combatant superior officer in the French army and was appointed physician in the Armée du Rhin on 15 April 1792, his portrait must have been completed after that date. Both he and Thérèse Hebenstreit came from a distinguished background: his wife’s father was a lawyer at the Alsace Supreme Court, and his own father was a surgeon and profes- sor at the medical faculty of Strasbourg. The occasion for being painted by one of the leading portraitists of the 18th century Strasbourg elite may very well have been the couple’s marriage on 11 February 1793 – a date that fits well with their attire and Daniche’s painting style, when compared to other works by her from that period. Another undated portrait attributed to Monique Daniche showing a young mother with a newborn baby bears a striking resemblance to Thérèse Hebenstreit and likely depicts her with Louis Auguste (1794-1871), the first son of the newly married couple and descendant of the Tinchant lineage. While this would, indeed, narrow the probable date of our companion portraits down to c.1793, we cannot rule out the possibility entirely that the portraits were painted after March 1809, when Tinchant was promoted to “Médecin principal” in Napoleon’s Grande Armée. Further research will surely reveal new findings. Monique Daniche, like her contemporary Elizabeth Vigée Le Brun, is an influential figure in the history of French female painters, but her works are rare and still largely unstudied. The fact that we can now show a representative part of this fascinating Strasbourg painter’s small oeuvre on our walls in Luxembourg is something we look forward to very much and hope to share with many visitors throughout 2025. Michelle Kleyr and Ruud Priem Monique Daniche (1737-1824), Portrait of Jeanne Louise Thérèse Hebenstreit (1770-1849) and Portrait of Jean Nico- las Michel Tinchant (1770-1835), c.1793. Oil on canvas, 76 x 62 cm (each). MNAHA collection. © Gros & Delettrez