Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Elizabeth Hardwick"


2 mentions found


Life Lessons From the Bloomsbury Group’s Wardrobe
  + stars: | 2023-09-15 | by ( Emily Labarge | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Every few years, a new cultural product — book, film, TV show, opera, ballet — emerges about the Bloomsbury Group, the early-20th century affiliation of artists, writers and thinkers that got its name from the central London neighborhood known for its garden squares. In a 1973 essay in The New York Review of Books, Elizabeth Hardwick lamented the overexposure of its most prominent members — the “exhaustion” of Virginia Woolf and “the draining” of the writer Lytton Strachey. “The period, the letters, the houses, the love affairs, the bloodlines,” she writes, “are private anecdotes one is happy to meet once or twice, but not again and again.”Decades later, the Bloomsbury industrial complex is still churning away. For every invigorating new angle, as in Francesca Wade’s 2020 psychogeographic group biography, “Square Haunting,” it seems like there is an anodyne TV show with a fashionable cast tumbling in and out of each other’s beds, like the 2015 BBC series, “Life in Squares.” Where the choreographer Wayne McGregor’s 2015 ballet trilogy “Woolf Works” entrancingly adapted the writer’s narratives (“Mrs. Dalloway,” “Orlando,” “The Waves”) to an epic score by Max Richter, “Vita & Virginia” a 2019 biopic about Woolf and her lover, Vita Sackville-West, was a stilted and bloodless account of a famously passionate affair.
Persons: , Elizabeth Hardwick, Virginia Woolf, Lytton Strachey, , , Francesca Wade’s, Wayne McGregor’s, “ Woolf, ” entrancingly, Dalloway, ” “, Max Richter, “ Vita, Virginia ”, Woolf, Vita Organizations: Bloomsbury Group, New York Locations: London, Bloomsbury, ” “ Orlando, Vita Sackville, West
To Truly Understand the Past, Pick Up an Old Magazine
  + stars: | 2023-06-13 | by ( Brian Dillon | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +3 min
And not a single mention yet of AIDS; in a Wrangler ad, a model’s speech bubble announces, oblivious: “I’m Positive.” In these magazine pages, it both is and is not the 1984 of my memory. “Priceless flotsam they seemed to us then,” Elizabeth Hardwick once wrote, recalling her youthful fascination with old jazz records. I’ve long felt the same way about magazines, old and new. Old magazines are cheap time machines, archaeologies of collective desire. Find a print issue, specialist or popular, preferably more than 20 years old (though 10 may do the trick), and read it from cover to cover.
Persons: Kate Bush, won’t, ” It’s, Roland, ” Elizabeth Hardwick, Joan Didion, , Hardwick, Alberto Giacometti, Gordon Parks, William Klein Organizations: Vogue Locations: London, New York, Dublin, ., Mexico City
Total: 2