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Dora CarringtonEnglish artist and feminist
Date of Birth: 29.03.1893
Country: Great Britain |
Content:
- Dora Carrington: A Pioneering Artist and Feminist
- Artistic Recognition and Bloomsbury Group Connections
- Complex Love Triangle with Lytton Strachey
- Tragedy and Suicide
Dora Carrington: A Pioneering Artist and Feminist
Born into an affluent legal family, Dora Carrington's artistic journey began with childhood drawing lessons. She later won a scholarship to the Slade School of Fine Art in London, where she crossed paths with Paul Nash, John Nash, Christopher Nevinson, and Mark Gertler.
Artistic Recognition and Bloomsbury Group Connections
Carrington's talent went largely unrecognized during her lifetime, with only two solo exhibitions held. She became a member of the Bloomsbury Group, a prominent intellectual circle. In 1917, she illustrated Virginia Woolf and Leonard Woolf's "Two Stories" with numerous woodcuts.
Complex Love Triangle with Lytton Strachey
Carrington's adventurous spirit led her to a relationship with the openly homosexual art critic and essayist Lytton Strachey. Despite Strachey's homosexuality, they briefly engaged in a physical relationship until he fell for Ralph Partridge. To maintain secrecy, Partridge married Carrington in 1921, creating a peculiar love triangle.
Tragedy and Suicide
Strachey's death from cancer in 1932 left Carrington devastated and bequeathed her a substantial inheritance. Two months later, she committed suicide by gunshot, having previously attempted unsuccessfully to inhale car exhaust fumes.

Great Britain




