In Oct 2020, an extraordinary collection of over 400 erotic sketches by British artist, Duncan Grant (1885-1978), came to light. The collection was thought to have been destroyed but had secretly been passed from lover to lover, friend to friend, for over 60yrs.
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Grant was a painter, a textile designer, theatre designer & pottery artist. He was a member of the Bloomsbury Group &, although most of his love affairs were with men, he did have well as a relationship with Vanessa Bell (Virginia Woolf’s sister), with whom he had a child
Grant was born seven months before the 1885 Criminal Law Amendment Act, also known as the Labouchère Amendment, which criminalised all male homosexual sex in England.
It was the law that was used to persecute Oscar Wilde and Alan Turing, as well as countless other gay men. Grant could never live openly as a gay man in his lifetime.
He had many lovers - his cousin, the writer Lytton Strachey, Arthur Hobhouse (a politician) and the economist John Maynard Keynes. It’s thought many of the men in the pictures were also his lovers.
Grant had a daughter with Vanessa Bell, who was married to Clive Bell, with whom she had two sons. Shortly before WW1, Vanessa, Clive, Duncan Grant & Duncan's lover David Garnett all moved in to Charleston Farmhouse together .
The writer Dorothy Parker is said to have quipped that the 'Bloomsbury paints in circles, lives in squares and loves in triangles.'
On 2 May 1959, Grant his friend Edward le Bas a folder containing 400 erotic illustrations. He marked the folder, “These drawings are very private.”
It was thought that Le Bas’ sister had destroyed them after he had died, but she hadn’t. The collection had secretly been passed to from lover to lover, friend to friend, until they wound up in the hands of theatre designer Norman Coates, who kept them under his bed for 11 years
Charleston Farmhouse where Grant lived is now a museum & gallery. After learning the Charleston was at risk of insolvency after coronavirus, Coates generously donated the collection to Charleston, where is remains. bbc.co.uk/news/av/entert…
The museum was saved & Grant’s work was finally out the closet for everyone to see. Incidentally, The Charleston are currently holding a spectacular Duncan Grant exhibition that I am definitely going to. You can get more information about here.
And I managed to missed actually tagging @CharlestonTrust in this thread completely. Please give them a follow to keep up with the amazing work they do preserving the art & history of Duncan Grant. They are wonderful.
I mean…
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Last day in Dublin City. I’ve seen the bog bodies, I’ve rubbed Molly’s malones, I’ve done Temple Bar, and I spent last night drinking… what can I do on my last afternoon?
(Id love to see the goal but it’s all booked up & Whiskey museum is closed)
I’m in Dublin’s Phoenix park, looking at the Wellington Monument, which was erected to celebrate victories of the Duke of Wellington…
… subtle, no? 😂
Haha! Loved the “Floozie in the Jacuzzi” statue. She represents the River Liffey & is called the Anna Livia Monument, named after a fictional character in James Joyce's Finnegans Wake who also embodies the eternal & universal female.
Matelotage was a same-sex civil union amongst pirates (also amongst sailors) whereby two men would form an economic partnership, share income & inherit each other’s property in the event of their death. They also pledged to fight alongside each other & to look out for one another
In his 1832 novel, Le Négrier, Édouard Corbière defines matelotage as, “this amatelotage of sailors among themselves, this hammock camaraderie, establishes a type of solidarity and commonality of interests and of goods between each man and his matelot.”
“Evidence concerning Witches and Apparitions” (1681) tells of a bewitched woman who was cured when she put her urine in a bottle “together with Pins & Needles & Nails”, corked it & “set the Bottle to the Fire”
This is one of the earliest references to a “witch bottle”
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Witch Bottles were spells / talismans to protect against witchcraft & cure those who had fallen to it. So far, over 100 of been found in Britain and less than a dozen have been found in America. This one was found buried in a civil war fort in Virginia.
They are usually found buried in the wall or the fireplace when an old house is being renovated or demolished. This one dates to the 17th century & was found near the Civil War Centre in Nottinghamshire.
This is the grave of 27 year old Betty Corrigal, who died in the 1770s. It lies between Hoy & North Walls in Orkney & has been called the loneliest grave in the world. Poor Betty could not be buried in consecrated ground.
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CW: suicide
Not much is known about poor Betty but she lived in Greengairs Cottage near Rysa on Orkney. It is said she was seduced by a young man who got her pregnant & abandoned her soon after
The social shame of being pregnant outside of wedlock was so great that Betty was shunned by her family & community. The humiliation was so great, Betty took her own life before giving birth.
The expression “call a spade a spade” comes from the work of Plutarch, who originally wrote “call a fig a fig.” Fig was crude slang for the Vulva, so “call a c**t a c**t” is closer. Nicolas Udall translated the work in 1542 & changed it to a garden spade to avoid embarrassment.
Although Udall meant a regular, everyday garden spade, the expression is rightly falling out of use today because of the racist homonym, which dates to the 20th century. Personally, I’m all for bringing back “call a c**t a c**t.”
* Plutarch actually wrote “call a fig a fig and a trough a trough”. A trough has similar connotations but not as many pretty pictures available to illustrate to point in a tweet. This article on the origin of the phrase is brilliant. colvinism.wordpress.com/2013/09/04/cal…
Bog Bodies are cadavers preserved in peat bogs. The oldest known BB is Koelbjerg Man, who dates to 8000 BCE. The most famous is probably 2400yo Tollund Man (pictured). The Nazis were fascinated with them & used them to justify their persecution of LGBTQ+ ppl.
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CW. Bodies & Nazis 🚨
The water in peat bogs is very acidic with no oxygen. These conditions mean any bodies in them are very well preserved. The acid bleaches the hair & tans the skin. Many died violent deaths & it’s unclear if this was ritualistic, punishment, or murder