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Before yesterdayThe Eclectic Light Company

A walk in the parks of London and Paris

By: hoakley
2 May 2026 at 19:30

This weekend, as the season moves steadily towards summer, we’re on a whistle-stop tour of six famous parks in five great cities, that for many are the closest they’ll get to real countryside.

As cities grew during the nineteenth century, what had been countryside in and around them was swallowed up by housing and factories. In the first couple of decades, livestock grazed and cows were milked within a couple of miles of the centre of London.

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Benjamin West (1738–1820), Milkmaids in St. James’s Park, Westminster Abbey beyond (c 1801), oil on panel, further details not known. Wikimedia Commons.

The American history painter Benjamin West painted this view of Milkmaids in St. James’s Park, Westminster Abbey beyond in about 1801. Two cows and attendant milkmaids are providing a supply of fresh milk for the crowds in this royal park with Buckingham Palace on its edge. This remains 57 acres (23 hectares) of grass, trees and lakes in central London.

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John Linnell (1792–1882), Evening, Bayswater (1818), oil on panel, 38.3 x 58.1 cm, Yale Center for British Art, New Haven, CT. Wikimedia Commons.

John Linnell’s Evening, Bayswater from 1818, only two centuries ago, shows what was then a rural part of London, out to the west of what’s now Paddington Station, in more peaceful times before this area was assimilated into the growing city. Although it has retained some garden squares, this became a densely populated area during the nineteenth century.

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Giuseppe De Nittis (1846–1884), The Serpentine, Hyde Park, London (1878), oil on panel, 26.7 x 35.6 cm, Private collection. Athenaeum.

The lake shown in Giuseppe De Nittis’ view of The Serpentine, Hyde Park, London from 1878 is the eastern section of a single body of water marking the boundary between Hyde Park and Kensington Gardens. Once fed from a small river, that became so polluted it has long been supplied by water from three boreholes. It hosts a swimming club, rowing boats, and a solar-powered ferry.

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Alice Maud Fanner (1866-1930), Hyde Park (c 1900), further details not known. Image by Leonard Bentley, via Wikimedia Commons.

Alice Maud Fanner painted this view of the edge of Hyde Park, London, in about 1900. The London plane trees are leafless, indicating this is a fine day in the winter, although the figures look lightly dressed for that time of year. The view looks north-east towards the road encircling the park and mansions in Park Lane beyond. This park is, at 350 acres (140 hectares), the largest of a chain of Royal Parks running from Kensington Gardens in the west, past Buckingham Palace to St James’s Park to the southeast.

Kensington Gardens: Vicinity of the Pond ?1907 by Paul Maitland 1863-1909
Paul Fordyce Maitland (1863–1909), Kensington Gardens: Vicinity of the Pond (c 1907), oil on canvas, 25.4 x 45.4 cm, The Tate Gallery (Presented by Cyril Andrade 1928), London. © The Tate Gallery and Photographic Rights © Tate (2016), CC-BY-NC-ND 3.0 (Unported), https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/maitland-kensington-gardens-vicinity-of-the-pond-n04398

Kensington Gardens: Vicinity of the Pond, painted by Paul Fordyce Maitland in about 1907, shows the Oval Pond in the middle of these gardens, another of the Royal Parks in London, to the west of the Serpentine Lake in the adjacent Hyde Park.

Over the same period, central Paris was extensively rebuilt, but preserved some of its green spaces, including the gardens of the Tuileries Palace.

The Tuileries Garden in central Paris is the city’s best-known open space. It runs between the Louvre and the Place de la Concorde with its iconic Arc de Triomphe, an area of 63 acres (25.5 hectares). Shortly before painting his most famous scene in the Tuileries, Édouard Manet completed a smaller and less ambitious work set among its trees, Children in the Tuileries Garden (c 1861-2).

Édouard Manet (1832–1883), Children in the Tuileries Garden (c 1861-2), oil on canvas, 37.8 x 46 cm, RISD Museum, Rhode Island School of Design, RI. Wikimedia Commons.
Édouard Manet (1832–1883), Children in the Tuileries Garden (c 1861-2), oil on canvas, 37.8 x 46 cm, RISD Museum, Rhode Island School of Design, RI. Wikimedia Commons.

Seen now as the work which gave him the idea for his second painting, this shows a small group of children apparently being directed by an older girl in black, with a blue bonnet. There’s an eery impersonality about the figures, though, as they’re either viewed from behind, or have little or no detail in their faces.

Édouard Manet (1832–1883), Music in the Tuileries (1862), oil on canvas, 76.2 × 118.1 cm, The National Gallery, London, and the Hugh Lane, Dublin. Courtesy of National Gallery (CC), via Wikimedia Commons.
Édouard Manet (1832–1883), Music in the Tuileries (1862), oil on canvas, 76.2 × 118.1 cm, The National Gallery, London, and the Hugh Lane, Dublin. Courtesy of National Gallery (CC), via Wikimedia Commons.

Manet’s Music in the Tuileries from 1862 is one of ten paintings shared between the National Gallery in London, and the Hugh Lane in Dublin, as part of the Hugh Lane bequest. Packed into its rhythmic layout of trees are members of the fashionable Parisian crowd, who have come to listen to the music, socialise, and chat. Historians have identified many of Manet’s circle among them: the poet Baudelaire, novelist Gautier, composer Offenbach, Fantin-Latour the painter, and the artist’s brother Eugène, a painter who married Berthe Morisot, the Impressionist.

Adolph Menzel (1815–1905), Afternoon in the Tuileries Gardens (1867), oil on canvas, 49 x 70 cm, The National Gallery, London. Courtesy of National Gallery (CC), via Wikimedia Commons.
Adolph Menzel (1815–1905), Afternoon in the Tuileries Gardens (1867), oil on canvas, 49 x 70 cm, The National Gallery, London. Courtesy of National Gallery (CC), via Wikimedia Commons.

Adolph Menzel’s Afternoon in the Tuileries Gardens from 1867 is assumed to have been inspired by Manet’s Music in the Tuileries, and has compositional similarities. He includes some direct quotations of figures in homage to Manet’s work. However, Menzel remained a realist, as shown in finely detailed foliage, foreground shadows and the figures. He was known to have made several sketches in the Tuileries Gardens, but painted this work back in his Berlin studio. Conventionally this would have been based on those sketches, but when Menzel first showed the work he claimed it was executed from memory.

Maurice Brazil Prendergast (1861–1924), The Tuileries Gardens, Paris (1895). Wikimedia Commons.
Maurice Brazil Prendergast (1861–1924), The Tuileries Gardens, Paris (1895). Wikimedia Commons.

The Tuileries Gardens, Paris (1895) may have been painted shortly before Maurice Brazil Prendergast left the city to return to Boston, MA. While he was in Paris he met Édouard Vuillard, whose influence appears to have extended to his use of colour here, and Pierre Bonnard, an addicted sketcher of street scenes in Paris.

Camille Pissarro (1830–1903), The Garden of the Tuileries on a Spring Morning (1899), oil on canvas, 73.3 × 92.1 cm, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY. Wikimedia Commons.
Camille Pissarro (1830–1903), The Garden of the Tuileries on a Spring Morning (1899), oil on canvas, 73.3 × 92.1 cm, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY. Wikimedia Commons.

Pissarro’s Garden of the Tuileries on a Spring Morning from the same year is an aerial view of the gardens when they’re well into Spring, with the trees in full leaf, in their brilliant fresh green foliage.

Tomorrow we’ll resume in the city of Rome.

Naturalists: The modern meal

By: hoakley
10 April 2026 at 19:30

Eating together with family and friends is one of the great social events, and became a popular theme in nineteenth century painting. It was enthusiastically adopted by several of the leading Naturalist painters, as shown below.

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Édouard Manet (1832-1883), Le Déjeuner sur l’herbe (Luncheon on the Grass) (1863), oil on canvas, 208 × 264.5 cm, Musée d’Orsay, Paris. Wikimedia Commons.

Édouard Manet’s Le Déjeuner sur l’herbe from 1863 is one of the best-known if not infamous paintings of a social meal. Two couples are apparently disinterested in the token picnic of fruit and bread that has spilled out from its basket in the left foreground. As the two men talk, fully dressed, a conspicuously naked woman stares unnervingly at the viewer, and the other woman is washing herself in the river behind. This was rejected by the Salon of that year, ensuring its lasting fame and influence.

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Eugène Lepoittevin (1806-1870), A Picnic (1866), oil on canvas, 43 x 62.5 cm, location not known. Wikimedia Commons.

A far cry from Manet’s meal, Eugène Lepoittevin’s Picnic from 1866 captures a picnic’s distinctive combination of the planned and impromptu. This group has lugged crockery, soup and a folding stool for their simple meal sitting on the grass under some trees.

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Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841–1919), Luncheon of the Boating Party (1880-81), oil on canvas, 130.2 x 175.6 cm, The Phillips Collection, Washington, DC. Wikimedia Commons.

Renoir’s masterpiece Luncheon of the Boating Party (1880-81) is set on the Île de Chatou under the awning of the Restaurant Fournaise. Among his models are his partner and later wife Aline Charigot (left foreground, with affenpinscher dog), the actress Jeanne Samary (upper right), and fellow artist Gustave Caillebotte (seated, lower right). This meal seems all but over, the wineglasses near-empty as the party turns from eating to conversation.

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Giuseppe De Nittis (1846–1884), Breakfast in the Garden (c 1883), oil on canvas, 81 x 117 cm, Pinacoteca De Nittis, Barletta, Italy. By LPLT, via Wikimedia Commons.

In summer, breakfast became a favourite meal in your own garden. Just a year before his untimely death in 1884, the Italian peri-Impressionist Giuseppe De Nittis painted this startling Breakfast in the Garden, with its contrast between the detail of the glass soda syphon, covered bowl, glasses, and other reflective materials on the table, and its wonderfully sketchy garden background.

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Laurits Andersen Ring (1854–1933), A Boy and a Girl Eating Lunch (1884), oil on canvas, 44 x 56 cm, location not known. Wikimedia Commons.

Laurits Andersen Ring was more pointed in his social message in A Boy and a Girl Eating Lunch, from 1884. Paupers’ children, they have a single bowl of broth between them, and there’s not even a hint of wine and fruit. The girl looks up in tears, hoping for a miracle to change their lives, and take them away from this bare wooden table and blackened walls.

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Léon Frédéric (1856–1940), The Funeral Meal (1886), oil on canvas, 125.5 x 177.5 cm, Museum voor Schone Kunsten, Ghent, Belgium. Image by Ophelia2, via Wikimedia Commons.

Léon Frédéric’s Funeral Meal from 1886 shows a large group of mourners sitting outside in the summer sunshine to remember the deceased following their funeral. Their meal is simple if not frugal, and there are neither glasses of wine nor mugs of beer. This is the moment that grace, or perhaps a eulogy for the deceased, is being read.

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Émile Friant (1863–1932), The Meurthe Boating Party (Reunion of the Meurthe Boating Party) (1887), oil on canvas, 110 x 166 cm, Musée de l’École de Nancy, Nancy, France. Wikimedia Commons.

Now almost forgotten is Émile Friant’s masterpiece The Meurthe Boating Party, also known as Reunion of the Meurthe Boating Party or The Oarsmen of the Meurthe, from 1887. This shows the artist’s watersporting friends eating lunch together on the river Meurthe in Nancy. This can be read as a broad message of well-being and conviviality: healthy, fit young men engaged in team sports; fraternity; and harmony across different classes within society. It was exhibited at the Salon in 1888, and as a result of its success was featured as a full page in the popular magazine Le Monde Illustré, bringing Friant instant fame.

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Hanna Pauli (1864-1940), Breakfast-Time (1887), oil on canvas, 87 x 91 cm, Nationalmuseum, Stockholm, Sweden. Wikimedia Commons.

That same year the 23-year-old Swedish painter Hanna Pauli made the meal table the centrepiece of her virtuoso painting of Breakfast-Time (1887). She uses it as a demonstration of her skills in depicting the reflective surfaces of silverware, porcelain and abundant glassware, but its table is now deserted.

Émile Claus, Pique-nique, paysage la Lys (The Picnic) (1887), oil on canvas, 129 x 198 cm, Institut Royal du Patrimoine artistique, Brussels. WikiArt.
Émile Claus (1849-1924), Pique-nique, paysage la Lys (The Picnic) (1887), oil on canvas, 129 x 198 cm, Institut Royal du Patrimoine artistique, Brussels. WikiArt.

The Belgian artist Émile Claus also painted The Picnic in 1887. It’s set in the French/Belgian countryside around the River Lys, in the area of Ypres, which was devastated during the First World War. The plain clothing worn indicates these are poor farmworkers rather than landowners.

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