"The best of these Darwins is that they are cut out
of rock - three taps is enough to convince one how
immense is their solidarity." So wrote Virginia Woolf
affectionately of Gwen Raverat, the granddaughter of
Charles Darwin. In this biography, France Spalding
creates a moving portrait of Gwen's character, her life
and her art. It begins in late-Victorian Cambridge,
which Gwen herself amusingly described in her childhood
memoir "Period Piece". But Frances Spalding looks behind
and beyond the pages of this much-loved book. She
explores Gwen's Darwin inheritance, her conflicts when
she moves beyond her home environment to enter the Slade
School of Art, her encounter with Post-Impressionism,
and her friendships with Stanley Spencer, Rupert Brooke,
and members of the Bloomsbury set. Central to her life
is her husband, the Frenchman Jacques Raverat, who
emerges as a vivid, courageous personality. At each
stage, Gwen's artistic creativity is interwoven with her
relationships and circumstances. She helps revive the
medium of wood-engraving and, with Jacques, celebrates
the South of France in the art they produce while living
in Venice. In the late 1920s her abiding love of
Cambridge draws her back to a corner of England with
which she is inextricably associated. Finally, her life
comes full circle in old age when she moves into The Old
Granary that once formed part of her childhood home. In
this authorised biography Frances Spalding draws on a
huge cache of unpublished papers to bring us a life
lived with bravery, humour, realism and integrity,
surrounded by a remarkable cast of relatives, friends
and associates.
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