A[lfred]. de Champeaux. Portefeuille des arts décoratifs 2 (1889–90), pl. 136, as French school, eighteenth century, in the collection of M. Féral.
André Pératé and Gaston Brière. "XVIIe & XVIIIe Siècles: Mobilier, Boiserie." Collections Georges Hoentschel. 2, Paris, 1908, p. 31, pl. 57 (color), ascribe it to an artist working in the tradition of Jean-Baptiste Monnoyer at the end of the seventeenth or beginning of the eighteenth century.
Margaretta Salinger. "Early Flower Paintings." Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin 8 (May 1950), p. 261, ill. p. 260, as by a follower of Monnoyer.
Fritz W. Neugass. "Magischer-Realismus in der Trompe-l'Oeil-Malerei." Das Kunstwerk 6, no. 1 (1952), ill. p. 23.
Michel Faré. Letter to Mary Sprinson de Jesús. June 10, 1984, calls it a characteristic work of Michel Bruno Bellengé.
Ulrich Leben in Salvaging the Past: Georges Hoentschel and French Decorative Arts from The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Exh. cat., Bard Graduate Center: Decorative Arts, Design History, Material Culture. New York, 2013, p. 53, fig. 3.13 (color), notes that it provided the inspiration for four overdoors in the great hall at Luton Hoo, Bedfordshire, renovated by Hoentschel in about 1905–7.
Katrina London in Salvaging the Past: Georges Hoentschel and French Decorative Arts from The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Exh. cat., Bard Graduate Center: Decorative Arts, Design History, Material Culture. New York, 2013, p. 139 n. 92.