The Denial of Saint Peter is a 1650 painting of the Denial of Peter by Georges de La Tour, possibly with some assistance from the painter's son Étienne.
In 1810 it was acquired from François Cacault by the musée d'Arts de Nantes, where it still hangs.
[4] de La Ferté-Senneterre is recorded as paying 650 francs for a work entitled The Denial of St Peter in 1650, possibly the work now in Nantes.
[1] In 17th century French society, "gaming was inseparable from luxury"[6] and was evidence of "indifference to salvation" - a similar link is made in the artist's The Card Sharp with the Ace of Diamonds, contemporary with Tristan L'Hermite's The Disgraced Page.
[6] The gaming soldiers also refer forwards in time to those casting lots for Jesus' clothing at the foot of the cross.