Vanessa Bell

Standard Name: Bell, Vanessa
Used Form: Vanessa Stephen

Connections

Connections Sort ascending Author name Excerpt
Travel Virginia Woolf
Virginia and Vanessa Stephen (later Woolf and Bell) and Violet Dickinson left England for Greece, where at Olympia on 13 September they met up with Thoby and Adrian Stephen .
Bishop, Edward. A Virginia Woolf Chronology. Macmillan.
10
Textual Production Virginia Woolf
It continued weekly until April 1895 (the year Virginia's mother died). Two of its stories (A Cockney's Farming Experiences and The Experiences of a Paterfamilias) were published in the late twentieth century.
Lee, Hermione. Virginia Woolf. Chatto and Windus.
781n64
Textual Production Virginia Woolf
For six years from 1923, during the lifetime of Quentin and Julian Bell 's handwritten The Charleston Bulletin (on the model of their mother and aunt's Hyde Park Gate News), VW contributed Christmas supplements...
Textual Production Virginia Woolf
She travelled with Vanessa and Angelica Bell to Cambridge, where she stayed with Pernel Strachey , Principal of Newnham.
Textual Production Dora Carrington
Selected by Roger Fry , Carrington 's Tulips was shown at the Grosvenor Galleries ' Nameless Exhibition of Modern British Painting.
At this exhibition, Henry Tonks (who had supervised both Carrington and Vanessa Bell
Textual Production Ling Shuhua
Through her relationship with Julian Bell, LS forged working friendships with Virginia and Leonard Woolf , Vanessa Bell , and Vita Sackville-West .
Textual Production Ling Shuhua
Marjorie Strachey , one of several people in LS's writing life whom she met via Vanessa Bell , provided editorial assistance.
Welland, Sasha Su-Ling. A Thousand Miles of Dreams: The Journeys of Two Chinese Sisters. Rowman & Littlefield.
306
Textual Features Pat Barker
The story begins with the ambitions and emotional entanglements of a small group of Slade School of Art students (two men, Paul Tarrant and the precocious success Kit Neville, and one strikingly talented woman, Elinor...
Textual Features Maud Sulter
Since there were few Black women artists in the Tate collections, MS decided to focus on women artists in general. The exhibition included paintings by Gwen John and Vanessa Bell .
Sulter, Maud. Echo. Tate Gallery Publications.
6, 28-9, 34-5
Textual Features Flora Macdonald Mayor
On top of this, FMM also gives a lively caricature,
Lee, Hermione. Virginia Woolf. Chatto and Windus.
266
a scathing portrait of literary society, especially the Friday Club , the embryonic Bloomsbury [Group] founded by Virginia Woolf's sister Vanessa Bell ...
Residence Virginia Woolf
Virginia Stephen (later VW ) moved to 29 Fitzroy Square to live with her surviving brother, Adrian . Vanessa and Clive Bell took over the former family home at 46 Gordon Square.
Bishop, Edward. A Virginia Woolf Chronology. Macmillan.
11
Residence Virginia Woolf
Because Virginia was recovering from her breakdown after her father's death, Vanessa took the primary responsibility for settling the family into their newly independent life. Virginia instead spent some time out of London, staying with...
Residence Virginia Woolf
Virginia was keen to regain access to the amenities of London—music, the British Museum , social life (her delight in parties, she wrote, was a piece of jewellery I inherit from my mother)
Woolf, Virginia. The Diary of Virginia Woolf. Editors Bell, Anne Olivier and Andrew McNeillie, Hogarth Press.
2: 250
Reception Virginia Woolf
Quentin Bell reports that [a]s always, [Woolf] found publication an agitating business, and that when she received her own six copies, on 20 October, she immediately dispatched one to each of Vanessa , Clive Bell
Reception Emily Brontë
Feminist literary critic Sandra M. Gilbert responded to both Emilies in one of her poetic collections: Emily's Bread (1984), and Anne Carson to EB , her favourite author and main fear, which I mean to...

Timeline

November 1905: The first exhibition of the Friday Club was...

Building item

November 1905

The first exhibition of the Friday Club was held at the Alpine Club Gallery , London.

: Artist Vanessa Bell had eight works included...

Building item

Autumn1917

Artist Vanessa Bell had eight works included in The New Movement in Art exhibition held in Birmingham and at the Mansard Gallery , London.

1924: Leonard and Virginia Woolf at the Hogarth...

Women writers item

1924

Leonard and Virginia Woolf at the Hogarth Press published The Rector's Daughter, a novel by F. M. (or Flora Macdonald) Mayor .

1930: Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant decorated the...

Building item

1930

Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant decorated the dining-room at Penns-in-the-Rocks, Withyham, Sussex, for Lady Gerald Wellesley (the poet Dorothy Wellesley).

1932: Art historian Kenneth Clark commissioned...

Building item

1932

Art historian Kenneth Clark commissioned from the Omega Workshops a set of dinner plates painted by Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant bearing portrait heads of famous women, including Elizabeth I and other queens, Greta Garbo

July 1935: Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant were painting...

Building item

July 1935

Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant were painting wall-panels for a new Cunard transatlantic liner, the Queen Mary.

Texts

Lee, Hermione et al. “Foreword”. Hyde Park Gate News. The Stephen Family Newspaper, edited by Gill Lowe and Gill Lowe, Hesperus Press, 2005, p. vii - x.
Woolf, Virginia et al. Hyde Park Gate News. The Stephen Family Newspaper. Editor Lowe, Gill, Hesperus, 2005.
Woolf, Virginia et al. “Introduction”. Hyde Park Gate News. The Stephen Family Newspaper, edited by Gill Lowe, Hesperus Press, 2005, p. xi - xviii.
Woolf, Virginia, and Vanessa Bell. Kew Gardens. Hogarth Press, 1919.
Woolf, Virginia, and Vanessa Bell. Monday or Tuesday. Hogarth Press, 1921.