Arthur Hughes’s   A Birthday Picnic (1867)

Arthur Hughes’s A Birthday Picnic (1867)

Hughes used a picnic as a theme for a family portrait of the Pattinson family. The title he gave was A Birthday Picnic – Portraits of the children of William and Anne Pattinson of Felling, near Gateshead. A red table with food in the left background, but it is...
Carl Haag’s Luncheon at Cairn Lochan (1868)

Carl Haag’s Luncheon at Cairn Lochan (1868)

Haag’s Luncheon at Cairn Lochan shows the royal family picnicking in Scotland. Painted in 1868, Haag based the scene on an episode in 1861, three months before Prince Albert’s death. Yet, Haag shows the Queen dressed in her habitual black. She is accompanied by Albert...
James Jacques  Tissot La partie carrée (1870)

James Jacques Tissot La partie carrée (1870)

James Jacques Joseph Tissot’s La Partie carrée, aka The Foursome, is more sexually suggestive than the English title indicates.   The French title Partie Carrée suggests a sexual tryst and alludes to Édouard Manet’s The Luncheon on the Grass (1863)....
Pál Szinyei Merse’s  Majális   aka Mayfair(1873)

Pál Szinyei Merse’s Majális aka Mayfair(1873)

Majális is Merse’s staid Hungarian middle-class-style homage to Manet’s Dejeuner sur L’herbe. Though this is obviously a picnic, the title means “Mayfair.” Merse does not use the Hungarian loanword piknik or the expression jó s Majális zórakozás, a pleasant amusement...
Antonio Garcia Mencía’s La merienda (1874)

Antonio Garcia Mencía’s La merienda (1874)

Garcia Mencia’s middle-class picnickers have out to the country for afternoon lunch. They are well provisioned. Compare Garica Mencía’s La merienda with Pál Szinyei Merse’s Majális (1873). See Antonio Garcia Mencía. La Merienda (1874). Oil on...
William Ford’s At Hanging Rock (1875)

William Ford’s At Hanging Rock (1875)

Ford’s painting At Hanging Rock of sightseers picnicking is an inspiration to Lindsay’s novel Picnic at Hanging Rock (1967).  The picnickers are middle class and dressed in everyday clothing that is ill-suited to the country locale. They walk, converse, read, and...