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The small but exquisite work, 'Women at the Races' defines Edouard Manet as a 'flâneur.' Flâneur was the term for the purposeful male stroller of Paris, a cultured sophisticate of sharp observation and ready comment about the flow of events, the city's movements, and changes in fashion—in short, all life. This painting shows Manet's cool observation of the day-to-day life of Parisian society. The women are spectators at a horse race in the fashionable Bois de Boulogne, outside Paris. Horseracing, recently imported from England, was the latest fad among wealthy Parisians. The women wear plain, though luxurious, dresses and hold parasols to protect themselves from the sun. One looks towards the track while the other gazes off into the crowd.