The walk from the bus stop to the farm is long and dusty. Cows linger along the fence that lines the way, looking hot and tired and completely fed up with the swarms of flies that buzz and hover under the mid-day sun. Buckets of flowers sit in front of a stone wall nearby, and old garden tools lay next to an abandoned antique lawn mower. Behind the short wall is a garden, and just past the garden a vine-covered house with a red tile roof comes into view.
At first glance, one could be forgiven for thinking that this is just another ordinary - if charming - English farmhouse, nestled in the heart of the South Downs of Sussex. And yet it is far from ordinary. The Guardian newspaper recently called this particular dwelling “the most fashionable house in England”, and people come from far and wide to visit every year. Throngs of them: they come to walk in the footsteps of a select group of people, whose names conjure up images of intellectualism, artistry and free living.
This is Charleston Farmhouse - the home of the artists Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant, and for a good part of the early twentieth century the heart of the modernist circle known as the Bloomsbury Group.
In the first decade of the twentieth century, four siblings - Vanessa (Stephen) Bell, Virginia (Stephen) Woolf, Thoby Stephen and Adrian Stephen shared housing in the Bloomsbury neighborhood in London. They were intellectually curious and artistic, and hosted regular gatherings of their equally intellectual and talented friends - and the boys’ classmates from Cambridge. Among the regular visitors were writers, artists, historians and economists like Lytton Strachey, John Maynard Keynes, E.M. Forster, Leonard Woolf and Clive Bell. The last two married the Stephen sisters.
Artist & historian Roger Fry was a regular visitor, as was the artist Duncan Grant.
While the Stephen siblings were relatively financially secure, some of their artist friends were not. Sometime in 1913 Roger Fry invited Duncan Grant to visit him at his country home, but Duncan never arrived. When asked why, Duncan simply said that he had set five shillings aside to pay for his journey - but he had put it in such a safe place that he was unable to find it. Without that five shillings, he had no way to pay for his train. It was this incident that inspired Roger Fry to open the Omega Workshops, a decorative arts cooperative that employed artists with the hope that they would be able to earn a living wage. Duncan and Vanessa were co-directors along with Roger Fry, and when the Omega Workshops opened their doors, they did so in a storefront on Fitzroy Square - just a few blocks from the Stephen’s residence on Gordon Square in Bloomsbury.
It has famously been said of the Bloomsbury group that they “lived in squares and loved in triangles”. The squares, of course, refer to the squares in Bloomsbury - but to understand the triangles quip a brief discussion of the love lives of the Bloomsburies is necessary. To map out all of the love affairs, relationships and marriages of the various members of the group would require a map more complex than that of the London Underground, so we’ll stick to our main characters: Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant.
Vanessa Stephen married Clive Bell in 1907, and the marriage produced two sons relatively quickly: Julian Bell and Quentin Bell. Although they remained married for over fifty years, by the time the Omega Workshops were founded the Bells no longer considered themselves a couple. Clive Bell had a series of extra-marital relationships and lived apart from his wife and sons. Vanessa and Roger Fry were lovers before she fell in love with Duncan Grant - who, for his part, had had affairs with a good portion of the male members of the Bloomsbury group, including Maynard Keynes, Lytton Strachey and the writer David Garnett (nicknamed Bunny).
At the start of the First World War, Vanessa Bell wanted to move her family out of London, and so took a lease on Charleston farmhouse in 1916. Duncan and Bunny were conscientious objectors and could work as farm laborers nearby, and so they came to stay along with Vanessa’s children. Duncan and Vanessa formed a domestic and artistic partnership that lasted for the rest of their lives, and while Duncan continued to have a series of male lovers, he and Vanessa had a child, Angelica, together in 1918.
And here’s where the “loved in triangles” bit gets a little funny: Bunny Garnett - Duncan’s lover at the time of Angelica’s birth - married Angelica in 1942, when she was 24 and he was 50. They had four daughters together before separating. Angelica didn’t find out until after she was married that her husband had been her father’s lover.
Vanessa, Duncan and the kids kept Charleston as a summer residence after the war, and in 1919 Virginia & Leonard Woolf moved into a property nearby - Monk’s House in Rodmell. Quentin Bell would later call the years between the wars the glory days of Charleston, with members of the Bloomsbury group coming and going, and sometimes moving in for extended periods. The family would eventually make Charleston their full-time home, with Clive Bell moving in as well at the start of the Second World War. Duncan Grant continued to live at the property even after Vanessa’s death in 1961 - he kept his home and studio there until his own death in 1978.
Upon her move to Charleston, Vanessa Bell wrote: “It will be an odd life, but it ought to be a good one for painting…”
Charleston is beautiful - but to think that it’s just a beautifully decorated house is to miss the point, I think. The Bell family lived here for almost sixty years, and bit by bit, cupboard by cupboard, room by room they created more than a home - they created their own world. They treated the farmhouse and the surrounding land as their canvas. Charleston wasn’t only where they worked on their artwork, it *was* their artwork.
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