Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Sep 7, 2023 · Vanessa Bell (1879 –1961) was one of the leading artists associated with the Bloomsbury Group, the avant-garde community of artists, writers and philosophers who pioneered literary and artistic modernism in Britain at the beginning of the 20th century. This focused display in the Project Space will be the first devoted to The Courtauld’s ...

  2. Dec 12, 2016 · Bell’s art critic husband, Clive, was in love with Woolf, his sister-in-law, who had an affair with the writer Vita Sackville-West; Vanessa herself took the critic Roger Fry and artist Duncan Grant as her lovers. Perhaps more for their lifestyles than their achievements, the Bloomsbury figures scandalized their contemporaries.

  3. www.moma.org › artists › 445Vanessa Bell | MoMA

    Sep 19, 2015 · Vanessa Bell (née Stephen; 30 May 1879 – 7 April 1961) was an English painter and interior designer, a member of the Bloomsbury Group and the sister of Virginia Woolf (née Stephen). Wikidata

  4. This is a district of garden squares surrounded by elegant town houses. The group was first called ‘Bloomsbury’ in 1912 when Vanessa Bell, Duncan Grant and other artist friends showed their work at an exhibition, the Second Post-Impressionist Exhibition, organised in London by their art critic friend Roger Fry.

  5. Vanessa Bell Armstrong After more than four decades on the gospel music scene, the legendary Vanessa Bell Armstrong still has the energy and contemporary R&B style that has defined her career from ...

  6. Sep 4, 2018 · BOOKS about Vanessa Bell:[1] VIRGINIA WOOLF AND VANESSA BELL: A Very Close Conspiracy by Jane Dunn --- https://bit.ly/2HsgBcL[2] VANESSA BELL : PORTRAIT ...

    • 12 min
    • 30.7K
    • LearnFromMasters
  7. Feb 22, 2018 · Vanessa Bell, The Other Room, late 1930s. Oil on Canvas, 161x174 cm. Collection of Bryan Ferry. In Bell’s painting The Other Room (late 1930’s) (fig. 2), Bell explores the evolving nature of women in the home through a depiction of upper-class women at leisure, subject matter which was frequently explored by male artists in the Victorian ...