Charleston Saved 1979-1989

Charleston Saved 1979-1989

by Anthea Arnold (Author)

Synopsis

Charleston Saved 1979-1989 tells the story of what was described at the time as 'one of the most difficult and imaginative feats of restoration current in Britain. When Duncan Grant died in 1978 the house he and Vanessa Bell had rented since 1916 was in a very dilapidated state. All the designs and decorations they had created over the years were still there: the wall surfaces, the furniture, the wood panels, the ceramics, the fabrics, the paintings and, of course, the garden. But damp, dirt and neglect had reduced them all to a wretched state. This book describes how Deborah Gage, a young woman of twenty nine, succeeded in raising the money and masterminded the whole operation. It also gives graphic descriptions of the conservation of every part of the house, its contents and the garden. When it was completed the people involved wrote accounts of what they had done and their words have been used to complete the story of how the house was saved and opened to the public in 1986.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 144
Publisher: Robert Hale Ltd
Published: 31 May 2010

ISBN 10: 0709090188
ISBN 13: 9780709090182

Author Bio
Anthea Arnold has worked at the Cambridge University Press, for the Nuffield Foundation (organising the production and publication of books) and as an infant school teacher in the London Borough of Brent. She has written two books: Briglin Pottery, published in 2002, and Eight Men in a Crate: The Ordeal of the Advance Party of the Trans-Antarctic Expedition 1955-1957, published in 2007. She became a Life Friend of Charleston in July 1986 and has worked in various capacities as a volunteer. She lives in Burwash, East Sussex.