Viewing Georges Seurat's <em>Sunday Afternoon on the Island of Grande Jatte</em>, we can see the members of the Parisian middle-class enjoying their Sunday. But what is on the other shore of the Seine?<br><br>Recent studies have suggested that the middle-class members of the <em>Grande Jatte</em> are facing their class inferiors, the <em>Bathers at Asnières</em>. This view is also supported by the fact that both paintings were supposed to be of the exact same size, although the artist later enlarged the <em>Grande Jatte</em>.<br><br>These artworks constitute a social comment by the artist and when they are considered as a pair, it is obvious that Seurat chose a subject related to class contrast. Whereas the middle and upper-classes enjoy the sun and the spring as a Sunday habit, the working-class members of the <em>Bathers</em> were probably taking a break from work. The figures in the <em>Grande Jatte</em> seem to be stiff and even lonely, in comparison to the <em>Bathers</em>, who, freed from the long-sleeved clothes, look calm and at ease.<br><br>The leisure activities are the part of social life where the intermingling of the lower-middle class with the bourgeoisie is most obvious. Accordingly, Seurat shows the different classes of his society sharing the same activities, but at the same time opposite to each other.<br><br>This depiction has an even stronger social meaning if we consider that it is presented by an artist with well-known Marxist influences.<br>