The chapter examines ways of reading photography in relation to selected examples from the archives of Virginia Woolf and Vanessa Bell. It argues that the variety of the Bloomsbury photographs offered Virginia Woolf and Vanessa Bell many possibilities: a safe space from which to view past presences; imagined communities as well as – following Foucault - ‘heterotopias’, combining real and imagined spaces outside of the social. In addition, Vanessa Bell’s photographs when placed alongside her paintings, for example, the photographs and paintings of Studland Beach, offer further ways of understanding Bell’s representations of past and present, as well as prequels of her paintings
Over the past year colleagues from LCC and UAL's Experimental Pedagogies Research Group (EPRG), Dr N...
The articles presented here aim at seeing how photographic vision shaped Virginia Woolf’s literary a...
The paper begins with Woolf’s responses to photographs, her own photos and those of family and frien...
All the major modernist women, H. D., Dorothy Richardson and Virginia Woolf owned the ‘vest-pocket’ ...
In Three Guineas Woolf includes five photographs of her masculine world: the army, lawyers, professo...
Writing to Vanessa Bell in 1937, Woolf imagined ‘do you think we have the same pair of eyes, only di...
Though photography offers a claim to objectivity that writing and painting cannot ostensibly equal, ...
From 2000, criticism on Woolf and the visual has quadrupled in volume. The research work about a pho...
Virginia Woolf’s work is shaped by her knowledge of, and fascination with, visual cultures. Orlando,...
The chapter focuses on Vanessa Bell member of modernism's "first family", proposing that as a painte...
Photographs preserve relationships. Any photo album's sequencing of photographs creates meaning out ...
In this book chapter, originally presented as a plenary paper at the 14th Annual International Confe...
An in-depth study of how the famed Bloomsbury Group expressed their liberal philosophies and collect...
On pourrait dire de la biographie et de la photographie qu’elles furent les deux mamelles de Virgini...
In the last few decades, considerable critical attention has been devoted to exploring the multiple ...
Over the past year colleagues from LCC and UAL's Experimental Pedagogies Research Group (EPRG), Dr N...
The articles presented here aim at seeing how photographic vision shaped Virginia Woolf’s literary a...
The paper begins with Woolf’s responses to photographs, her own photos and those of family and frien...
All the major modernist women, H. D., Dorothy Richardson and Virginia Woolf owned the ‘vest-pocket’ ...
In Three Guineas Woolf includes five photographs of her masculine world: the army, lawyers, professo...
Writing to Vanessa Bell in 1937, Woolf imagined ‘do you think we have the same pair of eyes, only di...
Though photography offers a claim to objectivity that writing and painting cannot ostensibly equal, ...
From 2000, criticism on Woolf and the visual has quadrupled in volume. The research work about a pho...
Virginia Woolf’s work is shaped by her knowledge of, and fascination with, visual cultures. Orlando,...
The chapter focuses on Vanessa Bell member of modernism's "first family", proposing that as a painte...
Photographs preserve relationships. Any photo album's sequencing of photographs creates meaning out ...
In this book chapter, originally presented as a plenary paper at the 14th Annual International Confe...
An in-depth study of how the famed Bloomsbury Group expressed their liberal philosophies and collect...
On pourrait dire de la biographie et de la photographie qu’elles furent les deux mamelles de Virgini...
In the last few decades, considerable critical attention has been devoted to exploring the multiple ...
Over the past year colleagues from LCC and UAL's Experimental Pedagogies Research Group (EPRG), Dr N...
The articles presented here aim at seeing how photographic vision shaped Virginia Woolf’s literary a...
The paper begins with Woolf’s responses to photographs, her own photos and those of family and frien...