Wonder Club world wonders pyramid logo
×

Reviews for The Omega workshops

 The Omega workshops magazine reviews

The average rating for The Omega workshops based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.has a rating of 4 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2019-02-26 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 4 stars Eric Johnson
"The Memoir Club" Vanessa Bell, 1943 On March 6th, 1922, some of the great British thinkers, artists and writers of that time came together for the first time in a meeting what would be called "Memoir Club" which would take place on a more or less regular basis for more than forty years, defying war and the death of some of the most prominent members. The modernist writer Virginia Woolf described the first meeting in her diaries as a 'highly interesting occasion'. I'm sure it was, as the whole bunch of what we know today as the "Bloomsbury Group" were present: Beside Virginia Woolf, one would see her husband Leonard Woolf, the economist Maynard Keynes, Saxon Sidney-Turner, the biographer Lytton Strachey, the great Morgan Forster, the artist Duncan Grant, the critic Roger Fry and of course the artist and author of this little book, Vanessa Bell, together with her husband Clive Bell. Vanessa Bell's daughter, Angelica Garnett, who wrote an insightful prologue for this book described the meetings as being "usually enjoyable occasions when members met for the evening meal, often in a local restaurant, afterwards moving on to the house, studio or flat belonging to one of them. There one or two members would read papers, which might, or might not, be discussed afterwards, according to the interest or the time available." (p.5) The papers were often autobiographical and honesty was mandatory. Five of the six sketches published in this book (*) are papers written by Vanessa Bell for the Memoir Club. They are what we could call memoirs, describing her family, the ups and downs of everyday life, and her friendship with Roger Fry which was determining for her as an artist. Vanessa's writing style is unpretentious, warm-hearted, and she writes with a twinkle in her eye. The book ends with an illuminating essay by the editor Lia Giachero about the artist Vanessa Bell. Included are illustrations of Vanessa Bell's woodcuts and drawings. All in all, a real treat for everybody fascinated by the Bloomsbury Group. (*) the last chapter contains notes for a lecture given by Vanessa Bell at Leighton School in 1925
Review # 2 was written on 2012-08-19 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 4 stars Jessica Duff
This was such a lovely collection of Vanessa Bell's memoirs and I enjoyed every minute I spent with it. Her memoirs make for very pleasant reading and she hits a few universal truths right on the head, and while I think many people would enjoy this collection, I think it will be particularly fascinating to those who are already familiar with Vanessa and her circle of friends. This collection contains an introduction to Vanessa the woman by her daughter Angelica and a prologue by Lia Giachero who talks about Vanessa as an artist, besides a list of the members of the Memoir Club, a lecture Vanessa gave at Leighton Park School in 1925 and of course the memoirs themselves (Memoirs Relating to Mrs Jackson, Notes on Virginia's Childhood, Life at Hyde Park Gate after 1897, My Sister-in-Law, Notes on Bloomsbury, and Memories of Roger Fry). The last memoir, Memories of Roger Fry, opens like this: "There is always a certain fascination in recalling the first time one saw anyone who later became one's friend and it is strange how frequently it is possible to do so, though probably at the time one was unaware of anything but the casual meeting with a stranger" and isn't she just right about that. Simply stated and simply true. All of her memoirs are very short and the entire collection could be read in a single day. There is a nice simplicity and honesty about her writing, and it is easy to picture to yourself the warm, caring, unpretending, sensible woman who wrote these memoirs. But I have to highlight her lecture at Leighton Park School because it is not only funny, it is fascinating and very, very interesting. The subject is artists, and how painters and writers perceive the world differently. She talks about Virginia's Mr Bennett and Mrs Brown in which an old woman sits in a train carriage. The writer in front of her - Virginia or possibly HG Wells - notices the way the woman's dress is buttoned, her shawls and bonnets, her grey hair and starts picturing to herself where the woman is from, whether her husband left her or she is widowed, where her son is, etc. The writer notices things to try and pin down the woman and find out where she lives, what is her story, her social class, etc. The painter doesn't care whether the old woman wears a hat or a bonnet because she doesn't care about the social implications of either. But she notices whether the rose on the bonnet or hat is pink or red. "The grey hair, which has spoken of old age at once to writers and doctors, means to a painter not just grey hair, but a certain grey - perhaps a grey with silver lights and warm shadows, perhaps an opaque cold grey, but a grey as different from other greys as one chord in music is different from others" Vanessa, and the painter, sees the world in shapes and colours. To her, WWI was summed up in the word: Khaki. To writers, she says, red in strawberries means ripeness and a blue sky means a fine day, but to Vanessa red is not just red and the sky isn't just blue. To her the world is made of colours, nuances, shapes, light and shadow. Children are fascinated by colours, too, she says, but most people lose their sense of colour and shape as they grow older. ("it was merely tiresome to have to learn that all is not gold that glitters and that that beautiful green paint you got all over your pinafore which made such a wonderful pattern was really dirt and probably poisonous.") The painter, or the madman as she calls herself, keeps the childish fascination with colours and shapes. I loved this lecture and could read it again and again because she opened up a new way of looking at the world to me, and she might do the same to you, too.


Click here to write your own review.


Login

  |  

Complaints

  |  

Blog

  |  

Games

  |  

Digital Media

  |  

Souls

  |  

Obituary

  |  

Contact Us

  |  

FAQ

CAN'T FIND WHAT YOU'RE LOOKING FOR? CLICK HERE!!!