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Auguste Toulmouche’s “The Hesitant Fiancée” Gains Popularity on TikTok as an Expression of Women’s Frustration

How long could you maintain your most withering glare? A minute? An hour?

Try 157 years. That’s how long the bride at the center of a painting by Auguste Toulmouche has been glowering at those who dare to regard her. Lately, her gaze — chin down and eyebrows low, framing a direct, piercing stare — has landed on a new generation of viewers.

The painting, “The Hesitant Fiancée” (1866), has become a surprise hit on TikTok, where contemporary viewers, many of them women, are using it to express their own moments of outrage or vindication.

Jenn Ficarra, 32, a screenwriter in Los Angeles, said the painting started popping up on her For You page last week. She was not familiar with Toulmouche, but instantly related to the look of a woman who was fed up. So she made her own video. “Don’t be mean,” she writes over an image of the painting, imagining a sexist scolding. Then she zooms in on the bride’s face for her retort: “Mean wasn’t even in the room with us but I can go get him and bring him in.”

Many other TikTok users became acquainted with the painting last week, when a similar video with the text “literally me when I’m right” was posted, set to a dramatic section of Giuseppe Verdi’s Requiem. It has since been viewed more than six million times. Others on the app have used the painting as a punchline in response to phrases like “You’re overreacting” and “You really should smile more.”

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