represented a   partdraped  female  figure  whose   “dress” was considered  indecent    as  it  achieved    little
more    than    drawing attention   to  the nudity  and sexual  vulnerability   of  much    of  her body.   Pierre, then
Director    of  the Academy,    wrote   to  d’Angiviller    to  express his concerns    about   the suitability of  this    piece
for public  exhibition  and it  was subsequently    banished    from    the Salon:
Two small,  halfsize    figures by  M.Houdon    were    brought in: one,    which   is  draped  [ Summer],  is  not
wonderful,  the other   might   not pass    because of  the kind    of  nudity  it  displays.   A   completely  nude    figure
is  less    indecent    than    those   draped  with    false   modesty ... let me  observe,    however,    that    this    figure  is  the
better  of  the two and that    it  will    be  hidden  away    in  a   corner.
(cited  in  Poulet, 2003,   225–229)