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Dora Carrington by David Litchfield 2012 |
Unrequited love
and Dora Carrington unfortunately go hand in hand, and no I'm not talking about
her relationship with the homosexual writer Lytton Stratchey, but about her
relationship with Bedford and in particular me.
I love Dora
Carrington. There, I've said it. It's been like this for years. We went to the
same school you see, spent time in the same art room, walked along the same
corridors, admittedly at slightly different times, me in 1993 her in the 1903.
But whilst I remained happily in Bedford she couldn't wait to get
away.
The Carrington
family moved to Bedford, like many others, for the good but
inexpensive schools. Originally living on De Parys they moved to Rothsay Gardens and remained there until all five
of the Carrington children were educated. Art was always appreciated in their
house, Dora's mother would bring home illustrated catalogues from the Royal Academy and there were reproductions of
Millais, Velazquez and Alma Tadema hanging on the walls. At school Dora excelled
at drawing and when she was 17 her teachers
recommended that as there was no art school in Bedford for her to continue her training she should apply
to the Slade School of Art in London.
Entering the Slade in 1910 was the
beginning of Carrington's life, on outward appearance the dutiful daughter of
Victorians, inwardly was a different story. She had found living in Bedford repressive and
unbearable and within her first year at the school she started to rebel against
her upbringing. She cut her hair into a short crop and began to make her own clothes in the style of the
artist Augustus Johns muse Dorelia. She also dropped her Christian name, saying
she found it vulgar and sentimental. Forever more she would be known simply as
Carrington.
This new Carrington did not fit in
on her rare trips back to Bedford, having explained her cropped hair to her
parents as being necessary for a fancy dress party she wrote of attending a
dance 'where the village boys had quite forgotten me, and taken unto them new
lasses. They gaze askance at my shorn locks - little did they realise who it was
in their midst! No, sad it is to relate but I was not appreciated'.
Her fellow students at the Slade
were to become some of the brightest stars of the British art world; Paul Nash,
Stanley Spencer, CRW Nevinson and Mark Gertler were all amongst her friends. But
whilst they went on to have glittering careers, hers stalled after she
graduated, and for a time she was known more for her associations with the group
of artists and writers known as the Bloomsbury
group, than for her work.
This was due to a number of
reasons. The year Carrington entered the Slade was a year of great change in
British art. The first Post-Impressionist exhibition was held in London, introducing the work of Van Gogh, Cezanne and
Picasso to England for the first time. This new
art was against everything that traditional art schools like the Slade believed
in. Artists like Carrington whose
talent for drawing perfectly suited the Slade’s ideal of what an artist should
be, found themselves
torn between the new style of art and what their tutors where asking of them.
For Carrington this confusion in her talent was further entrenched when she
approached the art critic Roger Fry, who had organised the Post Impressionism
exhibition for advice about her work, and he discouraged her from a career as a
serious artist.
This and a lack of confidence in
her own work led her to being described ‘as
the most neglected serious painter of her
generation’.
These days her work is exhibited
in all the major galleries, there has been a film of her life starring Emma
Thompson, and sales of her work
increase in value yearly. Nowhere is she more appreciated than in Bedford, the paintings The
Higgins have in their collection are amongst the most requested and talks on her
are always packed with people travelling long distances to hear about her
work.
I like to think that although she
left us as soon as she could, she would be pleased the town that where she was
once not ‘appreciated’ now consider her as a Great
Bedfordian.
Victoria Partridge
Keeper of Fine and Decorative Art
Thanks to: