Identity area
Reference code
Title
Date(s)
- [1870-1947] (Creation)
Level of description
Extent and medium
10 volumes
Context area
Name of creator
Biographical history
Vanessa Bell was born in 1879, daughter of Sir Leslie Stephen and sister of Virginia Woolf. She studied art under Sir Arthur Cope and at the Royal Academy Schools under John Singer Sargent. In 1907 she married Clive Bell and worked mainly in London, Sussex and France. Vanessa Bell exhibited first at the New Gallery in 1905, and at the New English Art Club, the Allied Artists Association and at numerous London galleries. She became a member of the London Group in 1919 and her work was exhibited at the second Post-Impressionist Exhibition in 1912. A central figure in the Bloomsbury Group, she founded the Friday Club in 1905, and was influenced by Roger Fry and by Duncan Grant. As co-director of the Omega Workshops she carried out many decorative projects, particularly with Grant. The impact of Post-Impressionism caused a radical change in her work. Influenced by Matisse she established a leading role as a colourist before 1920. Between 1914-15 she produced some pure abstracts but later returned to a more traditional naturalism and greater realism in works that centred around her friends, still-life and landscapes. Vanessa Bell died in 1961.
Repository
Archival history
GB-70-tga-9020 [1870-1947] Collection (fonds) 10 volumes Bell [née Stephen] , Vanessa , 1879-1961 , painter
Vanessa Bell was born in 1879, daughter of Sir Leslie Stephen and sister of Virginia Woolf. She studied art under Sir Arthur Cope and at the Royal Academy Schools under John Singer Sargent. In 1907 she married Clive Bell and worked mainly in London, Sussex and France. Vanessa Bell exhibited first at the New Gallery in 1905, and at the New English Art Club, the Allied Artists Association and at numerous London galleries. She became a member of the London Group in 1919 and her work was exhibited at the second Post-Impressionist Exhibition in 1912. A central figure in the Bloomsbury Group, she founded the Friday Club in 1905, and was influenced by Roger Fry and by Duncan Grant. As co-director of the Omega Workshops she carried out many decorative projects, particularly with Grant. The impact of Post-Impressionism caused a radical change in her work. Influenced by Matisse she established a leading role as a colourist before 1920. Between 1914-15 she produced some pure abstracts but later returned to a more traditional naturalism and greater realism in works that centred around her friends, still-life and landscapes. Vanessa Bell died in 1961.
Presented to the Tate Archive by Angelica Garnett, the loose negatives in 1981 and the albums in 1988 and 1992.
Vanessa Bell was an avid photographer taking snapshots of her family and friends from 1900 until the late 1940s. Her albums provide a unique visual record of the Bloomsbury Group. Whilst the two earliest albums depict the Stephens's family and friends in formal pose, often in photographers' studios, Vanessa Bell's photographs focus on those carefree moments, taken mostly outdoors and usually in the garden at Charleston Farmhouse. Initially, Bell both took and developed her own photographs, but later she made use of professional assistance. Her son Quentin Bell observed in 'Vanessa Bell's Family Album', "She gives us a record of family and friends and in fact uses the camera as most people use it if they are not professional photographers. The family album becomes an expression of sentiment and, to a very large extent, an expression of family affection".
The loose negatives, mainly by Vanessa Bell, arrived in packets of 50 negatives and each packet had been allocated an alphabetical prefix with individual numbers for each negative (e.g. A1-50, M1-50, AA1-50). The packets held random groups of negatives - some clearly taken on the same day and at the same event had been separated. However, as many of the photographs have been reproduced in publications using these packet numbers as reference, the numbers have been retained. Copy prints have been made from all the negatives and are identified by the relevant negative number., The albums were numbered before they arrived at Tate with 'CH' (Charleston House), followed by a consecutive number for each album 1-9 in date order. The earliest album was donated later and bears the number 'CHa1'. These identifiers, though now replaced with TGA numbers, are noted in the descriptions of each album., The albums have been arranged in chronological order. The following loose photographs and negatives, which arrived with Album 'CHa1', have been placed with the 1981 collection of photographic material: 41 b+w negatives with prints; 7 b+w negatives and 15 photographs of male and female nudes, Asheham, 1912; Berwick Church, 1940-42; and miscellaneous subjects.
Fragile item - Please use surrogate in the reading room
Usual copywright restrictions apply.
English
Paper list and a personal name index has been compiled and is available for use.
Letters from Bell to her son Julian (TGA 9311); letters from Bell to Dr Portia Holman re the death of Julian Bell (TGA 8511) and papers of the Charleston Trust (TGA 8010).
Compiled by Suzanne Keyte from the Tate archive catalogue
General International Standard Archival Description, ISAD(G), second edition, 2000; National Council on Archives Rules for the Construction of Personal Place and Corporate Names 1997.
1985 Literature Photography Bell [née Stephen] , Vanessa , 1879-1961 , painter
Immediate source of acquisition or transfer
Presented to the Tate Archive by Angelica Garnett, the loose negatives in 1981 and the albums in 1988 and 1992.
Content and structure area
Scope and content
Vanessa Bell was an avid photographer taking snapshots of her family and friends from 1900 until the late 1940s. Her albums provide a unique visual record of the Bloomsbury Group. Whilst the two earliest albums depict the Stephens's family and friends in formal pose, often in photographers' studios, Vanessa Bell's photographs focus on those carefree moments, taken mostly outdoors and usually in the garden at Charleston Farmhouse. Initially, Bell both took and developed her own photographs, but later she made use of professional assistance. Her son Quentin Bell observed in 'Vanessa Bell's Family Album', "She gives us a record of family and friends and in fact uses the camera as most people use it if they are not professional photographers. The family album becomes an expression of sentiment and, to a very large extent, an expression of family affection".
Appraisal, destruction and scheduling
Accruals
System of arrangement
The loose negatives, mainly by Vanessa Bell, arrived in packets of 50 negatives and each packet had been allocated an alphabetical prefix with individual numbers for each negative (e.g. A1-50, M1-50, AA1-50). The packets held random groups of negatives - some clearly taken on the same day and at the same event had been separated. However, as many of the photographs have been reproduced in publications using these packet numbers as reference, the numbers have been retained. Copy prints have been made from all the negatives and are identified by the relevant negative number., The albums were numbered before they arrived at Tate with 'CH' (Charleston House), followed by a consecutive number for each album 1-9 in date order. The earliest album was donated later and bears the number 'CHa1'. These identifiers, though now replaced with TGA numbers, are noted in the descriptions of each album., The albums have been arranged in chronological order. The following loose photographs and negatives, which arrived with Album 'CHa1', have been placed with the 1981 collection of photographic material: 41 b+w negatives with prints; 7 b+w negatives and 15 photographs of male and female nudes, Asheham, 1912; Berwick Church, 1940-42; and miscellaneous subjects.
Conditions of access and use area
Conditions governing access
Fragile item - Please use surrogate in the reading room
Conditions governing reproduction
Usual copywright restrictions apply.
Language of material
- English
Script of material
- Latin
Language and script notes
English
Physical characteristics and technical requirements
Letters from Bell to her son Julian (TGA 9311); letters from Bell to Dr Portia Holman re the death of Julian Bell (TGA 8511) and papers of the Charleston Trust (TGA 8010).
Finding aids
Paper list and a personal name index has been compiled and is available for use.
Allied materials area
Existence and location of originals
Existence and location of copies
Related units of description
Notes area
Alternative identifier(s)
Access points
Subject access points
Place access points
Name access points
Genre access points
Description control area
Description identifier
Institution identifier
Rules and/or conventions used
General International Standard Archival Description, ISAD(G), second edition, 2000; National Council on Archives Rules for the Construction of Personal Place and Corporate Names 1997.
Status
Level of detail
Dates of creation revision deletion
Language(s)
- English