Edith Wharton’s Summer (1917)

Edith Wharton’s Summer (1917)

Wharton’s Summer is the story of a summer romance doomed to failure that begins with seduction at a picnic. When Charity Royall, a small-town girl of seventeen, falls for Lucius Harney, a socially upscale architect, she loses her innocence at a picnic. The...
Edna Ferber’s Fanny Herself (1917)

Edna Ferber’s Fanny Herself (1917)

Fanny Brandeis is a new woman, whose career comes first, and when Clarence Heyl, an unacknowledged suitor, asks her to picnic, she says that she’s so busy working that she has forgotten how. But the next morning, Fanny is sitting in a train heading out from...
Florine Stettheimer’s Picnic in Bedford Hills (1918)

Florine Stettheimer’s Picnic in Bedford Hills (1918)

Stettheimer liked whimsy and humor in her paintings but included jokes only her friends would recognize. Her outlook is surreal. She preferred the outdoors, like Picnic in Bedford Hills, because interiors are less joyful than an outdoor scene. Like Matisse’s The Red...
Beatrix Potter’s The Tale of Johnny Town-Mouse (1918)

Beatrix Potter’s The Tale of Johnny Town-Mouse (1918)

Potter borrowed freely from Aesop, Horace, and many other tellers of the “The Country Mouse and the City Mouse,” including  Mary Belson Elliott’s The Mice and Their Pic Nic.  “The dinner was of eight courses; not much of anything, but truly...
Katherine Mansfield’s “A Pic-Nic” (1919)

Katherine Mansfield’s “A Pic-Nic” (1919)

Mansfield was in Bandol, a sea resort in the south of France, where she hoped to regain health and stability. However, her time there was unhappy, exemplified by “Pic-Nic,” a  poem hinting that her state of mind was no picnic. Perhaps because it was too dark, she...
Charlie Chaplin’s A Day’s Pleasure (1919)

Charlie Chaplin’s A Day’s Pleasure (1919)

Chaplin’s A Day’s Pleasure called Charlie’s Picnic is an excursion in San Pedro harbor. It’s not a picnic, and Chaplin preferred A Day’s Pleasure as an ironic title because the story is a series of ironic misfortunes: seasickness, fistfights, and a return home that...
A.T. Smith’s  Picnic Fiasco “Slicing the Wasps” (1919)

A.T. Smith’s Picnic Fiasco “Slicing the Wasps” (1919)

The humor of Smith’s picnic fiasco “Slicing the Wasps” is obvious. The legend reads: “Suitable for both sexes, young and old. Fascinating, amusing, skillful exciting, and with that element of danger.” It’s also an allusion to John...
Illustrated London News’s  Picnics on the Old Front” (1919)

Illustrated London News’s Picnics on the Old Front” (1919)

When the war began in 1914, picnic baskets were shelved. But when the peace was negotiated at Versailles in June 1919, wickers were dusted off and repacked. Signaling the change, The Illustrated London News editors suggested that it was time for picnicking—in the...
Logan Pearsall Smith “Ideal” Picnic (1920)

Logan Pearsall Smith “Ideal” Picnic (1920)

“The Ideal” is Logan Pearsall Smith’s satiric dream of the impossibility of an ideal English picnic. Smith conjectures that though he might be promised a perfect day for a picnic and feasting in the shade of splendid trees, “when, in the rainy...
Clifford Beal’s The Garden Party   (1920)

Clifford Beal’s The Garden Party (1920)

Beal was an important American artist in the first half of the 20th century. He’s now almost forgotten.  See Gifford Beal. The Garden Party (1920), oil on canvas. The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.
Jowett Cars Ltd. (1920)

Jowett Cars Ltd. (1920)

Exuberantly ushering in the 1920s, Jowett Motor Cars, then a popular English firm, suggested that motoring provided the means to escape from work and the city: “Have you glimpsed a bit of heaven whilst “picnicing” [sic] by the scented pinewood?” Their ad shows a...
Joseph Raphael’s Summer Picnic (1920)

Joseph Raphael’s Summer Picnic (1920)

The landscape is Kriekenput is a natural preserve in Brussels’s “blue and green network.” Featured Image: Joseph Raphael. Summer Picnic 1920. Oil on canvas.
Willa Cather’s My Ántonia (1918)

Willa Cather’s My Ántonia (1918)

A July picnic with Ántonia Shimerda is among Jim Burden’s indelible youthful memories. It’s a pleasant platonic outing among friends shortly before Jim leaves for college in Lincoln. Significantly, it marks a turning point in Jim’s maturity, the end...
Gertrude Stein and Alice Toklas’s Picnic Jaunts (1917-1918)

Gertrude Stein and Alice Toklas’s Picnic Jaunts (1917-1918)

Memories are finicky; sometimes accurate, sometimes fuzzy, and sometimes fiction. Among some amusing memories of Stein and Toklas, there is some general mix-up regarding their picnic jaunts during 1917-1918 when they were living in Nimes and working for the American...

Katherine Mansfield’s Picnic in Mentone (1920)

Mansfield wrote to a friend that motor picnicking was a pleasure that momentarily took her mind from her rampaging tuberculosis. The episode has the dreamy quality of an advertisement, such as one used by Jowett Motors (discussed elsewhere). “The weather here...
D.H. Lawrence’s Women in Love (1920)

D.H. Lawrence’s Women in Love (1920)

“How lovely it is to be free,” said Ursula, running swiftly here and there between the tree trunks, quite naked, her hair blowing loose. The grove was of beech trees, big and splendid, a steel-grey scaffolding of trunks and boughs, with level sprays of...
Sara & Gerald Murphy’s Villa America in Antibes (1920s)

Sara & Gerald Murphy’s Villa America in Antibes (1920s)

Villa America, Sara, and Gerald Murphy’s home in Antibes looked down on La Garoupe, where they spread oriental carpets on the sand and drank wine and cold Veuve Cliquot. They were prodigious drinkers, but what they ate was a mystery. During the 1920s, their home was a...
Josef Stalin’s Picnic (1920s)

Josef Stalin’s Picnic (1920s)

Josef Stalin and his wife, , on a picnic. the picnic is undated but Nadezhda Alliluyeva, his wife foreground left, died a suicide in 1932. The other picnickers are not identified. http://www.all-art.org/Visual_History/483-1.htm
Charles Ranhofer’s The Epicurean (1920)

Charles Ranhofer’s The Epicurean (1920)

This recipe is Ranhoffer’s response to Dickens’s Pickwick Papers and Sam Weller’s description of “weal pies.” Dickens dined at Delmonico’s in New York City while Ranhofer was chef de cuisine, but this item was not on the menu. Veal...