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Loved in triangles, dressed for liberation: The queer fashion secrets of Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury Group

Loved in triangles, dressed for liberation: The queer fashion secrets of Virginia  Woolf and the Bloomsbury Group

The famous literary circle – composed of creatives such as Woolf, her artist sister Vanessa Bell and novelist EM Forster – has taken on a somewhat dowdy image in our cultural conscience, writes Patrick Sproull. But a revealing new book and exhibition unearth deeper meanings to their sartorial choices
The famous literary circle – composed of creatives such as Woolf, her artist sister Vanessa Bell and novelist EM Forster – has taken on a somewhat dowdy image in our cultural conscience, writes Patrick Sproull. But a revealing new book and exhibition unearth deeper meanings to their sartorial choices

Bring No Clothes: How the Bloomsbury Group Used Clothes to Subvert Gender Binaries - FAD Magazine

Love in triangles: the Bloomsbury Group and Heal's

The Bloomsbury Group – Art Blart _ art and cultural memory archive

This Man Is Planning To Open The World's Largest LGBT Museum

PDF) Queering Woolf (special issue Virginia Woolf Miscellany

Virginal Wolf: Her life and her works

Life in Squares and Vita & Virginia: New dramas bring the Bloomsbury group to a new generation, The Independent

Bring No Clothes,” Said Virginia Woolf—But a New Exhibition Looks at Bloomsbury's Fashion Influence

Fashion, Modernism, and Modernity (Part IV) - The Cambridge Global History of Fashion