The Daily Telegraph - Saturday - Travel

How the Belle Epoque gave the world sex and the city

As a new Impression­ist exhibition opens at the Musée d’Orsay, Nick Trend explores the seamy underside of Paris at the time and the lives of the bohemian artists who broke all the rules

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Ayoung, naked woman lies sprawled apparently fast asleep on a bed of white linen. Just behind, her maid sweeps off – or possibly replaces – the sheet that was covering her. This bedroom mini-drama is being performed for the benefit of the voyeur in the foreground. Dressed in a frock coat, he has removed his tophat but still clutches his cane as he looks on intently.

If ever an image captured the concept of the male gaze, it is this painting, A Modern Olympia by Cézanne. And the work is interestin­g for other reasons too. It is one of some 50 pictures – including others by Degas, Monet, Morisot, Pissarro, Renoir and Sisley – which we now consider to mark the beginnings of the Impression­ist movement.

Rejected by the art establishm­ent, these radical young artists – who favoured shimmering spontaneit­y over high polish, colour over contrast, modern life over traditiona­l subjects – showed their work at a photograph­er’s studios on the Boulevard des Capucines in Paris exactly 150 years ago. A tribute to that exhibition, entitled Paris 1874, Inventing Impression­ism, has just opened at the Musée d’Orsay, and is a reminder of what was not only a seminal moment in art history, but also for the French capital.

This was the beginning of the Belle Epoque. Paris had been largely transforme­d by Haussman’s sweeping new boulevards; the Franco-Prussian war was over; and the booming economy was generating a new sense of optimism and excitement. People had more money and more free time. They headed to the revamped Bois de Boulogne on sunny afternoons, to the seaside at the weekends and they went out to café-concerts and the theatre in the evenings. A spectacula­r new opera house – the Palais Garnier – was about to rise from the ashes of the old.

Over the next 40 years, Paris became the most beautiful, dynamic and risqué city on earth. And the Impression­ists were there to capture the atmosphere and the excitement. There were tensions, of course. Cézanne’s critique of the male gaze is a reminder of the seamier side of Parisian nightlife. Brothels thrived, the Moulin Rouge and the Folies Bergères flourished. But women also began to win new freedoms, and two of the leading Impression­ist artists were Berthe Morisot – who showed nine paintings at the 1874 exhibition – and, slightly later, Mary Cassatt.

What is striking today is how much of that Belle Epoque aesthetic still dominates the city – from the Art Nouveau architectu­re to the Eiffel Tower and the pavement cafés – and how so little has been allowed to intrude upon it over the last 150 years. Only the Tour de Montparnas­se and the distant skyscraper­s of La Defense cast a few shadows over the human scale of the city.

But that is the surface charm of Paris: to be enjoyed by everyone as they wander its streets, squares and gardens. For me, however, the real fascinatio­n lies in the paintings – which not only mark the beginnings of modern art, but also tell the story of the everyday life of the Belle Epoque.

And (as long as you avoid the Olympics, which run from July 26 to August 11) there has never been a better time to explore the city’s astonishin­g artistic heritage. Here is our guide.

Impression­ist Paris Musée d’Orsay

The special anniversar­y exhibition, Paris 1874: Inventing Impression­ism, runs until July 14. But save some time too for the rest of the museum collection. Many of the Impression­ist highlights, made after 1874, as well as some earlier works, are in the permanent collection. One of my favourite paintings here is Monet’s great winter landscape, The Magpie. The venue itself – Orsay station – is also a Belle Epoque highlight, built for the great Exposition Universell­e in 1900. Be sure to book a time slot at the same time as you arrange your trip to Paris – it is going to be a popular exhibition.

Admission: €16/£13.70 (musee-orsay.fr)

Musée de l’Orangerie

The two series of water lily paintings which Monet made for the Orangerie building in the Tuileries gardens are the culminatio­n of his many studies of his gardens in Giverny. Two elliptical rooms were designed to display the works, and Monet donated them to the French state as a monument to the end of the First World War – though the museum didn’t open until 1927, the year after his death. Downstairs in the same building is the spectacula­r collection of Impression­ist and later art amassed by collector Paul Guillaume. It includes more than 20 paintings by Renoir and several Cézannes – including some from his early experiment­s with Impression­ism, plus works by Modigliani, Matisse and several early Picassos. Entry: €12.50/£10.70 (musee-orangerie.fr)

Musée Marmottan Monet

This former hunting lodge, now a grand townhouse, on the edge of the Bois de

Boulogne has an extensive selection of works by Berthe Morisot and, downstairs in a special gallery, a seminal collection of paintings by Monet, donated by his son, Michel, in 1966.

These works include Impression, Soleil Levant (1872) – which gave its name to the movement and is currently in the Musée d’Orsay exhibition – and about 20 of Monet’s late garden and water lily paintings, some examples of his Rouen Cathedral and Palace of Westminste­r series, and curiositie­s such as the landscapes from his trips to Norway in 1895, the Dutch tulip fields in 1877 and a fabulous account of steam trains at Gare St Lazare from 1877. There is also an early portrait of him by Renoir of 1873.

Admission: €14/£12 (marmottan.fr)

Le Petit Palais

The Petit Palais is one of the few museums in the city to offer free admission to all. It is an arts and crafts museum, built for the 1900 Exposition along with the Grand Palais. It includes two galleries of significan­t paintings by Impression­ists and their contempora­ries, including Cézanne’s Three Bathers, Renoir’s Portrait of Mme Bonnières and Monet’s Setting sun on the Seine at Lavacourt.

Admission: free (petitpalai­s.paris.fr)

Musée de Montmartre

Renoir’s former home has a permanent collection of paintings, posters and drawings as well as exhibits explaining the history of what used to be a village on the edge of the city, plus its connection­s to the Impression­ists and the later artistic community.

In 1912, one of Renoir’s favourite models, Suzanne Valadon – who later became a painter in her own right – and her son, the artist Maurice Utrillo, moved in and the museum has recreated her studio in the north-facing attic of the building.

Admission €15/£12.80 (museedemon­tmartre.fr/en)

 ?? ?? i In the frame: Nick Trend views Paul Cézanne’s A Modern Olympia (circa 1873-74), part of the Paris 1874: Inventing Impression­ism exhibition at the Musée d’Orsay
i In the frame: Nick Trend views Paul Cézanne’s A Modern Olympia (circa 1873-74), part of the Paris 1874: Inventing Impression­ism exhibition at the Musée d’Orsay
 ?? ?? i Claude Monet’s Impression, Soleil Levant (1872), which gave its name to the movement
i Claude Monet’s Impression, Soleil Levant (1872), which gave its name to the movement

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