Alexander Gerasimov’s The Boating Party (1925)

Alexander Gerasimov’s The Boating Party (1925)

The Boating Party is motivated by state-instigated propaganda to boost a failing economy and patriotic spirits. Here, Gerasimov extolls Soviet agricultural abundance during a period when it was failing. The robust women enjoy a picnic in a rowboat chock-a-block with...
Ernest Hemingway’s The Sun Also Rises (1926)

Ernest Hemingway’s The Sun Also Rises (1926)

When Jake Barnes and Bill Gorton stop for lunch while trout fishing on the Irrazy River, it looks like a picnic. Whether it’s a lunch or a picnic doesn’t matter because it’s when Hemingway chooses to reveal Jake Barnes’ spiritual disquietude...
King Vidor’s La Bohème (1926)

King Vidor’s La Bohème (1926)

Vidor’s picnic in La Bohème narrates the critical moment when Mimi and Rodolpho fall in love. It’s absent from the screenplay’s sources: Puccini’s opera La Bohème and Henri Muger’s Scenes de la vie bohème (Scenes of Bohemian Life). The legend tells that   Her first...
Dubose Heyward’s Porgy & Bess (1926)

Dubose Heyward’s Porgy & Bess (1926)

According to Heyward, “It was the day set for the grand parade and picnic of “The Sons and Daughters of Repent Ye Saith the Lord,” and, with the first light of morning, Catfish Row had burst into a fever of preparation.” Expectations promise...
Conrad Aiken’s “Strange Moonlight” (1925)

Conrad Aiken’s “Strange Moonlight” (1925)

Conrad Aiken’s “Strange Moonlight” (1925) is a moody picnic story. It’s an elegy on death seen through the eyes of an unnamed young boy, somewhere between nine and eleven years old, who is bewildering affected by the death of his dear friend...

Vladimir Nabokov’s “The University Poem” (1926)

Nabokov’s “The University Poem” (1926) marks the decline of a love affair at a punting picnic on the River Cam in Cambridge. In what ought to be a happy scene of lovers on the Cam, a teem rivers full of punts bordered by tawny Gothic buildings and green lawns, and...
Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse (1927)

Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse (1927)

Except for the picnic on Monte Rosa in The Voyage Out, Woolf’s other picnic is in To the lighthouse. It’s a skimpy lunch shared by Mr. Ramsay, James, and Camas as they sail to the lighthouse. Just before reaching the island, Mr. Ramsay announces that...
Marguerite Zorach’s The Picnic(1928)

Marguerite Zorach’s The Picnic(1928)

Zorach’s The Picnic looks like a happy picnic. A family has motored to the country and settled on a hillside for a relaxing afternoon. In the foreground, a woman in a red sweater is reclining. Behind her, the mother, a woman in blue, is unpacking foods, a man with a...
Roark Bradford’s Ol Man Adam (1928)

Roark Bradford’s Ol Man Adam (1928)

Bradford did not see it, but Ol’ Man Adam is imbued with his inherent racism. He means to entertain by portraying rural, uneducated happy-go-lucky African Americans retelling Old Testament stories in a dialect that’s more Bradford’s than theirs....

Mabel Dwight’s Coney Island Beach (1928)

Dwight’s beach scene is no picnic. It’s a crowded Coney Island scene with a humous twist. Compare Dwight’s beach scene with John Sloan’s South Beach Bathers (1908) and Reginald Marsh’s Beach Picnic (11939). Featured Image: Mable Dwight’s Coney Island...
Edith Wharton’s  Hudson River Bracketed Beach Picnic  (1929)

Edith Wharton’s Hudson River Bracketed Beach Picnic (1929)

Wharton’s Hudson River Bracketed has two picnics, and I’ll treat each as a separate posting. Each picnic features the protagonist Vance Weston with different women, Halo (Héloïse) Spear on Thundertop Mountain at sunrise over the Hudson River, and Laura Lou...
Laurel & Hardy’s Perfect Day (1929)

Laurel & Hardy’s Perfect Day (1929)

Laurel and Hardy’s A Perfect Day is a picnic screw-up. The day begins with smiles, but nothing goes right, and they never get far from home. The picnic is an unfulfilled dream. *Compare this with Charlie Chaplin’s slapstick A Day’s Pleasure posted...
Arthur Ransome’s Swallows and Amazons (1930)

Arthur Ransome’s Swallows and Amazons (1930)

Ransome’s Swallows and Amazons takes its name from the Swallow and the Amazon, two fourteen-foot dinghies that the childre n of the Walker and Blackett families sail in Coniston Lake in the English Lake District, where they play pirates and picnic at their...
Simka Simkhovitch’s The Picnic (1930s)

Simka Simkhovitch’s The Picnic (1930s)

Simkhovitch’s The Picnic is a day of leisure for a group that seems mirthless. They sit on bare earth, and each is unsmiling and subdued. There is no picnic joy as a small picnic cloth is spread around which they all gather. A man in a bathing suit reclines, his back...
Simka Simkhovitch’s The Picnic (1930s)

Simka Simkhovitch’s The Picnic (1930s)

Simkhovitch’s The Picnic is a day of leisure, but the group seems mirthless. They sit on bare earth, and each is unsmiling and subdued. There is an absence of picnic joy as a small picnic cloth is spread around which they all gather. A man in a bathing suit reclines,...