24 Hour Museum - official guide to UK museums, galleries, exhibitions and heritage
Gateway to Over 3,000 UK museums, galleries and heritage attractions
Skip to navigation

News

Bloomsbury Below Stairs - Grace Higgens At The British Library

By J Capeling

27/02/2008

Image: detail of a sheet of paper with typed poetry and hand drawn Illustration

Courtesy the British Library

Exhibition Preview: Bloomsbury Below Stairs - Grace Higgens at Charleston, 1920-1970, at the British Library, until April 20 2008.

When the Bloomsbury Group, a renowned collective of talented writers, artists and thinkers - its membership most notably featuring Virginia Woolf and EM Forster - needed respite from propping up the West End’s arts and intelligentsia scene, they often retired to members’ Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant’s Sussex haven, Charleston Farmhouse, near Lewes.

It was here that Grace Higgens (1903-1983) worked below stairs as an all round factotum to the Bell family and thier circle of talented friends. For more than 50 years, she was housekeeper, nurse and cook, gaining a unique insight into the world of one of the most celebrated creative groups since Shelley, Byron, et al converged on Villa Diodoti on Lake Geneva.

Image: postcard from Virginia Woolf asking Grace for a cake recipe

Above: courtesy the British Library

The importance of the Bloomsbury Group is arguably greater, however, as they were also deep philosophical thinkers, advocates of the basic artistic virtues of truth and beauty, and notable for their combined and individual pro-feminist, anti-imperial, liberal and socialist stances.

The British Library has recently acquired an extensive collection of private photographs, personal diaries, letters, and mementoes belonging to Grace Higgens during her 50 year tenure at Charleston Farmhouse, that provide an intimate portrait of the Bloomsbury Group’s daily life from a personal perspective.

Image: black and white photo of Grace Higgens

Courtesy the British Library

The Grace Higgens archive features diaries, recipes, scrapbooks of press cuttings on the Bloomsbury Group and, most notably, a great number of letters, cards and telegrams from Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant, as well as other members of the group.

A postcard from Virginia Woolf compliments Grace’s cookery, and asks for a recipe from her: “Many thanks for the delicious cake which we both enjoy every day at tea. Could you be so good some time as to write out the recipe, as I can’t get any cakes made except yours that I like to eat?”- indicating that those who are, indeed, afraid of Virginia Woolf, might attempt to placate her with a nice, moist Victoria sponge.

This is an exhibition preview. If you've been to see the show, why not let us know what you think?

British Library, London
British Library, 96 Euston Road, London, NW1 2DB, England

T: 020 7412 7332
Open: Mon, Wed-Fri 0930-1800 Tues 0930-2000 Sat 0930-1700 Sun and English Public Holidays 1100-1700
Closed: 24 - 28 December 2007 1 January 2007 Closing at 17.00 23 and 29 - 31 December 2007

Related Articles

Summer 2008 Holiday Ideas At UK Heritage Sites And Museums
British Library To Display Its Royal Illuminated Manuscripts
British Library Acquires Major Sound Collection Of Welsh Dialects
Codex Sinaiticus Bible Reunited In British Library Online Project
The Ramayana - India's Great Epic At The British Library
News In Brief - Week Ending May 25 2008
British Library Digitises 19th Century Newspapers And Periodicals

E-news registration
E-mail story to a friend
Tell us what you think

Laser Technology Helps Visually Impaired Enjoy Thornton Abbey

News In Brief - Museums, Galleries And Heritage News

Choirs To Interpret Exhibitions With Song At National Media Museum

English Heritage 'Appalled' By Go-Ahead For Doon Tower

Ashmolean Museum Purchases Rare 18th-Century Indian Chintz

Bill Bryson Endorses New Bournemouth Heritage Web Project

RPS Digital Photography Prize Rewards Innovative Under-25s

Bodleian Library To Preserve Digital Material For The Future

Public Art Couple's First Anniversary Celebrated By The People Of Newbiggin By The Sea

Newcastle's Roman Burials Will Reveal More Than Just Bones

Enniskillen Castle Keeps Visitors Impressed During Major Refurbishment

Speedway Hero's Story Told By Museum In Manchester

£3 Million To Be Invested In New Museum Research Projects

Longlist Announced For The Second Northern Art Prize

Tullie House Museum Engages Kids With Online Story Writing Project

Mayor And Museum Make Plans For Weston-Super-Mare Pier

Stonehenge Proposals Go On Show At Wiltshire Heritage Museum

Ally Wallace Artist In Residence For Victoria Baths Manchester

Search this site

Advanced Search
Map Search

Home Page
News Page
Exhibition Page
What's On
Trails Page
Website of the Week
Letters Page
Welsh Home
Graphical Version

Skip to body

Copyright © 24 Hour Museum
Information published here was believed to be correct at the time it was prepared. Welsh language pages developed with CYMAL: Museums Archives and Libraries Wales, funded by the Welsh Assembly Government.

Skip to navigation
Go to top