T. J. Clark describes a painting set in this type of non-opera-house place as depicting a remaining enclave of high society and the “protocols of class” in the first chapter of The Painting of Modern Life. Monet painted nannies watching children in a place of this sort called “Monceau (“mawn-SOH”).” Two women in pale yellow dresses and blue-ribboned bonnets sit in the foreground of a crowded scene in this kind of place. A museum located within a place of this type has two oval rooms displaying Monet’s Water Lilies. An artist added a painted border of blue, orange, and red to a painting set at one of these places in which different social classes lounge and promenade along the Seine (“sen”), as opposed to the working-class bathers the same artist depicted at nearby Asnières (“ahn-YAIR”). For 10 points, Manet’s Music in the Tuileries is set in what type of outdoor place? ■END■
ANSWER: parks [or gardens; accept parcs or jardins; prompt on the Tuileries until read by asking “what kind of location is that?”; prompt on islands or the island of La Grande Jatte by asking “what kind of place on that island?”; prompt on orangeries by asking “in what kind of location?”]
<Painting & Sculpture>
= Average correct buzz position