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Vanessa Bellbiographical notes
Following her mother's death in 1895, Vanessa took on the role of housekeeper for the family. Her father was rather demanding, and Vanessa struggled to balance this domestic role with trying to develop her artistic interests. However, her father died in 1904, so she was released from this responsibility. The family home was sold and she moved with her sister and two brothers, Adrian and Thoby, to a start a new and emotionally more liberated life at 46 Gordon Square, Bloomsbury. The move to their new home enabled Vanessa and her sister and brothers to entertain their own friends. On Thursday nights Thoby invited his literary friends from Trinity College, Cambridge University to the house, and Vanessa started the 'Friday Club', a meeting for artists. The Bloomsbury Group grew out of these meetings of artists and writers.
When she became ill on holiday, Fry nursed her through the illness, and they started an affair. She and Clive nevertheless remained friends, and Clive continued to support her financially, but he resumed a relationship with a previous mistress. Such is Bloomsbury, and there is more to come.
During the First World War, Vanessa and Duncan Grant moved to the Sussex countryside, so he could avoid conscription. They rented Charleston Farmhouse, and moved there in October 1916 with Vanessa's children and also the writer David Garnett, who was Duncan's current lover. Duncan and Vanessa chose rooms for their studios at Charleston and immediately started to decorate the house. The walls, fireplaces, door panels, and furniture were all decorated to harmonise with their paintings, and Omega fabrics and ceramics were incorporated into the overall décor.
The thirties were a time of personal difficulty for Vanessa. Roger Fry, with whom Vanessa had remained close, died after a fall in 1934, and in 1937 her son Julian was killed while serving as an ambulance driver in the Spanish Civil War. More unhappiness followed with the suicide of her sister Virginia in 1941, and estrangement from her daughter Angelica in 1942. This was caused by a twist which illustrates the complex personal relationships amongst the Bloomsbury Group. Angelica discovered the truth about the identity of her real father only when she was nineteen, and then much against her mother's wishes, and in a manoeuvre which you do not need a brass plaque on your front door to understand, she married David Garnett, her father's former lover, who was twenty-six years older than her.
Charleston became a full-time
home again during the Second World War as it was safely out of reach of the
bombs falling on London, and Vanessa continued to live there for part of each
year until her death in 1961. Duncan kept the house on for a few years longer
but it was too large for him and he eventually moved out. The house is now
maintained by The Charleston Trust who have renovated and opened it to the public.
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