When A Meeting was exhibited at the 1884 Salon of Paris, it was acclaimed by both the public and the press. But this success did not satisfy Marie Bashkirtseff at all, who was outraged that she did not receive a medal.
She wrote in her Journal:
"I am exceedingly indignant [...] because, after all, works that are really rather poor have received prizes"
and also
"There is nothing more to be done. I am a worthless creature, humiliated, finished".
Confident of her own talent, she denounces what seemed to her to be an injustice, but also expresses a fear: the fear of being forgotten. Marie was then only twenty-five years old, and knew already that she was condemned to die from tuberculosis; she died on 31 October that same year.