1862 (ca.), Edouard Manet, Children in the Tuileries Gardens -- Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York) (special exhibition)
From the museum label: This everyday scene of children in a park reflects a shifting tableau of modern Parisian life. The viewer is led into the park by three girls, old enough to go there in a group, who encounter an older girl dressed in black. In contrast to their youth, a solitary man with a long white beard represents old age. Opposite him, a white child is accompanied by a Black nanny, a sign of the city's changing demographics, which included a burgeoning free Black community. Although loosely sketched in without clear facial features, this figure is Manet's first representation of Laure, who would later model for the maid in Olympia.
Link to other Manet paintings
1862 (ca.), Edouard Manet, Children in the Tuileries Gardens -- Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York) (special exhibition)
From the museum label: This everyday scene of children in a park reflects a shifting tableau of modern Parisian life. The viewer is led into the park by three girls, old enough to go there in a group, who encounter an older girl dressed in black. In contrast to their youth, a solitary man with a long white beard represents old age. Opposite him, a white child is accompanied by a Black nanny, a sign of the city's changing demographics, which included a burgeoning free Black community. Although loosely sketched in without clear facial features, this figure is Manet's first representation of Laure, who would later model for the maid in Olympia.
Link to other Manet paintings