L'Enseigne de Gersaint

L'Enseigne de Gersaint
ArtistJean-Antoine Watteau
Year1720–1721
CatalogueH 124 (126); G 95; DV 115; R 182; HA 215; EC 212; F A39; RM 248; RT 116
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions163 cm × 308 cm (64 in × 121 in)
LocationCharlottenburg Palace, Berlin

L'Enseigne de Gersaint (transl."The Shop Sign of Gersaint") is an oil on canvas painting in the Charlottenburg Palace in Berlin, by French painter Jean-Antoine Watteau. Completed during 1720–21, it is considered to be the last prominent work of Watteau, who died some time after. It was painted as a shop sign for the marchand-mercier, or art dealer, Edme François Gersaint. According to Daniel Roche the sign functioned more as an advertisement for the artist than the dealer.

The painting exaggerates the size of Gersaint's cramped boutique, hardly more than a permanent booth with a little backshop, on the medieval Pont Notre-Dame, in the heart of Paris, both creating and following fashion as he purveyed works of art and luxurious trifles to an aristocratic clientele.