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Wikipedia

Wyndham Lewis

Percy Wyndham Lewis (18 November 1882 – 7 March 1957) was a British writer, painter and critic. He was a co-founder of the Vorticist movement in art and edited BLAST, the literary magazine of the Vorticists.[1]

Wyndham Lewis
Lewis in 1913
Born
Percy Wyndham Lewis

(1882-11-18)18 November 1882
Died7 March 1957(1957-03-07) (aged 74)
London, England, United Kingdom
NationalityBritish
EducationSlade School of Fine Art, University College London
Known forPainting, poetry, literature, criticism
MovementVorticism
Spouse
Gladys Anne Hoskins
(m. 1930)
PartnerIris Barry

His novels include Tarr (1918) and The Human Age trilogy, composed of The Childermass (1928), Monstre Gai (1955) and Malign Fiesta (1955). A fourth volume, titled The Trial of Man, was unfinished at the time of his death. He also wrote two autobiographical volumes: Blasting and Bombardiering (1937) and Rude Assignment: A Narrative of my Career Up-to-Date (1950).

Life and career edit

Early life edit

Lewis was born on 18 November 1882, reputedly on his father's yacht off the Canadian province of Nova Scotia.[2] His English mother, Anne Stuart Lewis (née Prickett), and American father, Charles Edward Lewis, separated about 1893.[2] His mother subsequently returned to England. Lewis was educated in England at Rugby School[citation needed] and then, from 16, the Slade School of Fine Art, University College London, but left for Paris without finishing his course.[3] He spent most of the 1900s travelling around Europe and studying art in Paris. While in Paris, he attended lectures by Henri Bergson on process philosophy.[citation needed]

Early work and development of Vorticism (1908–1915) edit

 
Wyndham Lewis, 1912, The Dancers
 
Wyndham Lewis, c.1914–15, Workshop (Tate, London)

In 1908, Lewis moved to London, where he would reside for much of his life. In 1909, he published his first work, accounts of his travels in Brittany, in Ford Madox Ford's The English Review. He was a founding member of the Camden Town Group, which brought him into close contact with the Bloomsbury Group, particularly Roger Fry and Clive Bell, with whom he soon fell out.

In 1912, Lewis exhibited his work at the second Postimpressionist exhibition: Cubo-Futurist illustrations to Timon of Athens and three major oil paintings. In 1912, he was commissioned to produce a decorative mural, a drop curtain, and more designs for The Cave of the Golden Calf, an avant-garde cabaret and nightclub on Heddon Street.[2][4]

From 1913 to 1915, Lewis developed the style of geometric abstraction for which he is best known today, which his friend Ezra Pound dubbed "Vorticism". Lewis sought to combine the strong structure of Cubism, which he found was not "alive", with the liveliness of Futurist art, which lacked structure. The combination was a strikingly dramatic critique of modernity. In his early visual works, Lewis may have been influenced by Bergson's process philosophy. Though he was later savagely critical of Bergson, he admitted in a letter to Theodore Weiss (19 April 1949) that he "began by embracing his evolutionary system." Nietzsche was an equally important influence.

Lewis had a brief tenure at Roger Fry's Omega Workshops, but left after a quarrel with Fry over a commission to provide wall decorations for the Daily Mail Ideal Home Exhibition, which Lewis believed Fry had misappropriated. He and several other Omega artists started a competing workshop called the Rebel Art Centre. The Centre operated for only four months, but it gave birth to the Vorticist group and its publication, BLAST.[5] In BLAST, Lewis formally expounded the Vorticist aesthetic in a manifesto, distinguishing it from other avant-garde practices. He also wrote and published a play, Enemy of the Stars. It is a proto-absurdist, Expressionist drama. Lewis scholar Melania Terrazas identifies it as a precursor to the plays of Samuel Beckett.[6]

World War I (1915–1918) edit

 
Wyndham Lewis, photograph by George Charles Beresford, 1917

In 1915, the Vorticists held their only U.K. exhibition before the movement broke up, largely as a result of World War I. Lewis himself was posted to the western front and served as a second lieutenant in the Royal Artillery. Much of his time was spent in Forward Observation Posts looking down at apparently deserted German lines, registering targets and calling down fire from batteries massed around the rim of the Ypres Salient. He made vivid accounts of narrow misses and deadly artillery duels.[7]

After the Third Battle of Ypres, Lewis was appointed an official war artist for both the Canadian and British governments. For the Canadians, he painted A Canadian Gun-pit (1918) from sketches made on Vimy Ridge. For the British, he painted one of his best-known works, A Battery Shelled (1919), drawing on his own experience at Ypres.[8] Lewis exhibited his war drawings and some other paintings of the war in an exhibition, "Guns", in 1918.

Although the Vorticist group broke up after the war, Lewis's patron, John Quinn, organized a Vorticist exhibition at the Penguin Club in New York in 1917. His first novel, Tarr, was serialized in The Egoist during 1916–17 and published in book form in 1918. It is widely regarded as one of the key modernist texts.[9]

Lewis later documented his experiences and opinions of this period of his life in the autobiographical Blasting and Bombardiering (1937), which covered his life up to 1926.

Tyros and writing (1918–1929) edit

 
Mr Wyndham Lewis as a Tyro, self-portrait, 1921

After the war, Lewis resumed his career as a painter with a major exhibition, Tyros and Portraits, at the Leicester Galleries in 1921. "Tyros" were satirical caricatures intended to comment on the culture of the "new epoch" that succeeded the First World War. A Reading of Ovid and Mr Wyndham Lewis as a Tyro are the only surviving oil paintings from this series. Lewis also launched his second magazine, The Tyro, of which there were only two issues. The second (1922) contained an important statement of Lewis's visual aesthetic: "Essay on the Objective of Plastic Art in our Time".[10] It was during the early 1920s that he perfected his incisive draughtsmanship.

By the late 1920s, he concentrated on writing. He launched yet another magazine, The Enemy (1927–1929), largely written by himself and declaring its belligerent critical stance in its title. The magazine and other theoretical and critical works he published from 1926 to 1929 mark a deliberate separation from the avant-garde and his previous associates. He believed that their work failed to show sufficient critical awareness of those ideologies that worked against truly revolutionary change in the West, and therefore became a vehicle for these pernicious ideologies.[citation needed] His major theoretical and cultural statement from this period is The Art of Being Ruled (1926).

Time and Western Man (1927) is a cultural and philosophical discussion that includes penetrating critiques of James Joyce, Gertrude Stein and Ezra Pound that are still read. Lewis also attacked the process philosophy of Bergson, Samuel Alexander, Alfred North Whitehead, and others. By 1931 he was advocating the art of ancient Egypt as impossible to surpass.[11]

Fiction and political writing (1930–1936) edit

 
Lewis in 1929, photographed by George Charles Beresford

Between the years 1907–11 Lewis wrote a modernist novel entitled Tarr which was revised and expanded in 1914–15[12] and first serialized in the magazine The Egoist from April 1916 until November 1917. The American version was published in 1918.

In 1930 Lewis published The Apes of God, a biting satirical attack on the London literary scene, including a long chapter caricaturing the Sitwell family. Richard Aldington, however, found it "the greatest piece of writing since Ulysses", by James Joyce.[13] In 1937 Lewis published The Revenge for Love, set in the period leading up to the Spanish Civil War and regarded by many as his best novel.[14] It is strongly critical of communist activity in Spain and presents English intellectual fellow travellers as deluded.

Despite serious illness necessitating several operations, he was very productive as a critic and painter. He produced a book of poems, One-Way Song, in 1933, and a revised version of Enemy of the Stars. An important book of critical essays also belongs to this period: Men without Art (1934). It grew out of a defence of Lewis's satirical practice in The Apes of God and puts forward a theory of "non-moral", or metaphysical, satire. The book is probably best remembered for one of the first commentaries on Faulkner and a famous essay on Hemingway.

Return to painting (1936–1941) edit

 
Lewis's Ezra Pound, 1919. The portrait is lost.

After becoming better known for his writing than his painting in the 1920s and early 1930s, he returned to more concentrated work on visual art, and paintings from the 1930s and 1940s constitute some of his best-known work. The Surrender of Barcelona (1936–37) makes a significant statement about the Spanish Civil War[how?]. It was included in an exhibition at the Leicester Galleries in 1937 that Lewis hoped would re-establish his reputation as a painter. After the publication in The Times of a letter of support for the exhibition, asking that something from the show be purchased for the national collection (signed by, among others, Stephen Spender, W. H. Auden, Geoffrey Grigson, Rebecca West, Naomi Mitchison, Henry Moore and Eric Gill) the Tate Gallery bought the painting, Red Scene. Like others from the exhibition, it shows an influence from Surrealism and de Chirico's Metaphysical Painting. Lewis was highly critical of the ideology of Surrealism, but admired the visual qualities of some Surrealist art.

During this period, Lewis also produced many of his most well-known portraits, including pictures of Edith Sitwell (1923–1936), T. S. Eliot (1938 and 1949), and Ezra Pound (1939). His 1938 portrait of Eliot was rejected by the selection committee of the Royal Academy for their annual exhibition and caused a furore. Augustus John resigned in protest.

World War II and North America (1941–1945) edit

Lewis spent World War II in the United States and Canada. In 1941, in Toronto, he produced a series of watercolour fantasies centred on themes of creation, crucifixion and bathing.

He grew to appreciate the cosmopolitan and "rootless" nature of the American melting pot, declaring that the greatest advantage of being American was to have "turned one's back on race, caste, and all that pertains to the rooted state."[15] He praised the contributions of African-Americans to American culture, and regarded Diego Rivera, David Alfaro Siqueiros, and José Clemente Orozco as the "best North American artists," predicting that when "the Indian culture of Mexico melts into the great American mass to the North, the Indian will probably give it its art."[15] He returned to England in 1945.

Later life and blindness (1945–1951) edit

By 1951, he was completely blinded by a pituitary tumor that placed pressure on his optic nerve. It ended his artistic career, but he continued writing until his death. He published several autobiographical and critical works: Rude Assignment (1950), Rotting Hill (1951), a collection of allegorical short stories about his life in "the capital of a dying empire";[16][17] The Writer and the Absolute (1952), a book of essays on writers including George Orwell, Jean-Paul Sartre and André Malraux; and the semi-autobiographical novel Self Condemned (1954).

The BBC commissioned Lewis to complete his 1928 work The Childermass, which was published as The Human Age and dramatized for the BBC Third Programme in 1955.[18] In 1956, the Tate Gallery held a major exhibition of his work, "Wyndham Lewis and Vorticism", in the catalogue to which he declared that "Vorticism, in fact, was what I, personally, did and said at a certain period"—a statement which brought forth a series of "Vortex Pamphlets" from his fellow BLAST signatory William Roberts.

Personal life edit

From 1918 to 1921, Lewis lived with Iris Barry, with whom he had two children[who?]. He is said to have shown little affection for them.[19][20]

In 1930, Lewis married Gladys Anne Hoskins (1900–1979), who was affectionately known as Froanna. They lived together for 10 years before marrying and never had children.[21]

Lewis kept Froanna in the background, and many of his friends were unaware of her existence. It seems that Lewis was extraordinarily jealous and protective of his wife, owing to her youth and beauty. Froanna was patient and caring toward her husband through financial troubles and his frequent illnesses. She was the model for some of Lewis's more tender and intimate portraits as well as a number of characters in his fiction. In contrast to his earlier, impersonal portraits, which are purely concerned with external appearance, the portraits of Froanna show a preoccupation with her inner life.[21]

 
Plaque dedicated to Lewis at Golders Green Crematorium

Always interested in Roman Catholicism, he never converted.[citation needed] He died in 1957 and was cremated at Golders Green Crematorium. By the time of his death, Lewis had written 40 books in all.

Political views edit

In 1931, after a visit to Berlin, Lewis published Hitler (1931), a book presenting Adolf Hitler as a "man of peace", with members of his party being threatened by communist street violence. His unpopularity among liberals and anti-fascists grew, especially after Hitler came to power in 1933.[citation needed] Following a second visit to Germany in 1937, Lewis changed his views and began to retract his previous political comments. He recognized the reality of Nazi treatment of Jews after a visit to Berlin in 1937. In 1939, he published an attack on anti-semitism titled The Jews, Are They Human?,[a] which was favourably reviewed in The Jewish Chronicle. He also published The Hitler Cult (1939), which firmly revoked his earlier support for Hitler.[citation needed]

Politically, Lewis remained an isolated figure through the 1930s. In Letter to Lord Byron, W. H. Auden called Lewis "that lonely old volcano of the Right." Lewis thought there was what he called a "left-wing orthodoxy" in Britain in the 1930s. He believed it was against Britain's self-interest to ally with the Soviet Union, "which the newspapers most of us read tell us has slaughtered out-of-hand, only a few years ago, millions of its better fed citizens, as well as its whole imperial family."[22]

In Anglosaxony: A League that Works (1941), Lewis reflected on his earlier support for fascism:

Fascism – once I understood it – left me colder than communism. The latter at least pretended, at the start, to have something to do with helping the helpless and making the world a more decent and sensible place. It does start from the human being and his suffering. Whereas fascism glorifies bloodshed and preaches that man should model himself upon the wolf.[15]

His sense that America and Canada lacked a British-type class structure had increased his opinion of liberal democracy, and in the same pamphlet, Lewis defends liberal democracy's respect for individual freedom against its critics on both the left and right.[15] In America and Cosmic Man (1949), Lewis argued that Franklin Delano Roosevelt had successfully managed to reconcile individual rights with the demands of the state.[15]

Legacy edit

In recent years, there has been renewed critical and biographical interest in Lewis and his work, and he is now regarded as a major British artist and writer of the twentieth century.[23] Rugby School hosted an exhibition of his works in November 2007 to commemorate the 50th anniversary of his death. The National Portrait Gallery in London held a major retrospective of his portraits in 2008. Two years later, held at the Fundación Juan March (Madrid, Spain), a large exhibition (Wyndham Lewis 1882–1957) featured a comprehensive collection of Lewis's paintings and drawings. As Tom Lubbock pointed out, it was "the retrospective that Britain has never managed to get together.".[24]

In 2010, Oxford World Classics published a critical edition of the 1928 text of Tarr, edited by Scott W. Klein of Wake Forest University. The Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University held an exhibition entitled "The Vorticists: Rebel Artists in London and New York, 1914–18" from 30 September 2010 through 2 January 2011.[25] The exhibition then travelled to the Peggy Guggenheim Collection, Venice (29 January – 15 May 2011: "I Vorticisti: Artisti ribellia a Londra e New York, 1914–1918") and then to Tate Britain under the title "The Vorticists: Manifesto for a Modern World" between 14 June and 4 September 2011.

Several readings by Lewis are collected on The Enemy Speaks, an audiobook CD published in 2007 and featuring extracts from "One Way Song" and The Apes of God, as well as radio talks titled "When John Bull Laughs" (1938), "A Crisis of Thought" (1947) and "The Essential Purposes of Art" (1951).[26]

A blue plaque now stands on the house in Kensington, London, where Lewis lived, No. 61 Palace Gardens Terrace.[27]

 
Blue plaque: Wyndham Lewis, 61 Palace Gardens Terrace, London W8

Critical reception edit

In his essay "Good Bad Books", George Orwell presents Lewis as the exemplary writer who is cerebral without being artistic. Orwell wrote, "Enough talent to set up dozens of ordinary writers has been poured into Wyndham Lewis's so-called novels… Yet it would be a very heavy labour to read one of these books right through. Some indefinable quality, a sort of literary vitamin, which exists even in a book like [1921 melodrama] If Winter Comes, is absent from them."[28]

In 1932, Walter Sickert sent Lewis a telegram in which he said that Lewis's pencil portrait of Rebecca West proved him to be "the greatest portraitist of this or any other time."[29]

Anti-semitism edit

For many years, Lewis's novels have been criticised for their satirical and hostile portrayals of Jews.[citation needed] Tarr was revised and republished in 1928, giving a new Jewish character a key role in making sure a duel is fought. This has been interpreted as an allegorical representation of a supposed Zionist conspiracy against the West.[30] His literary satire The Apes of God has been interpreted similarly, because many of the characters are Jewish, including the modernist author and editor Julius Ratner, a portrait which blends anti-semitic stereotype with historical literary figures John Rodker and James Joyce.

A key feature of these interpretations is that Lewis is held to have kept his conspiracy theories hidden and marginalized[citation needed]. Since the publication of Anthony Julius's T. S. Eliot, Anti-Semitism, and Literary Form (1995), where Lewis's anti-semitism is described as "essentially trivial", this view is no longer taken seriously.[according to whom?]

Books edit

  • Tarr (1918) (novel)
  • The Caliph's Design : Architects! Where is Your Vortex? (1919) (essay)
  • The Art of Being Ruled (1926) (essays)
  • The Wild Body: A Soldier of Humour And Other Stories (1927) (short stories)
  • The Lion and the Fox: The Role of the Hero in the Plays of Shakespeare (1927) (essays)
  • Time and Western Man (1927) (essays)
  • The Childermass (1928) (novel)
  • Paleface: The Philosophy of the Melting Pot (1929) (essays)
  • Satire and Fiction (1930) (criticism)
  • The Apes of God (1930) (novel)
  • Hitler (1931) (essay)
  • The Diabolical Principle and the Dithyrambic Spectator (1931) (essays)
  • Doom of Youth (1932) (essays)
  • Filibusters in Barbary (1932) (travel; later republished as Journey into Barbary)
  • Enemy of the Stars (1932) (play)
  • Snooty Baronet (1932) (novel)
  • One-Way Song (1933) (poetry)
  • Men Without Art (1934) (criticism)
  • Left Wings over Europe; or, How to Make a War about Nothing (1936) (essays)
  • Blasting and Bombardiering (1937) (autobiography)
  • The Revenge for Love (1937) (novel)
  • Count Your Dead: They are Alive!: Or, A New War in the Making (1937) (essays)
  • The Mysterious Mr. Bull (1938)
  • The Jews, Are They Human? (1939) (essay)
  • The Hitler Cult and How it Will End (1939) (essay)
  • America, I Presume (1940) (travel)
  • The Vulgar Streak (1941) (novel)
  • Anglosaxony: A League that Works (1941) (essay)
  • America and Cosmic Man (1949) (essay)
  • Rude Assignment (1950) (autobiography)
  • Rotting Hill (1951) (short stories)
  • The Writer and the Absolute (1952) (essay)
  • Self Condemned (1954) (novel)
  • The Demon of Progress in the Arts (1955) (essay)
  • Monstre Gai (1955) (novel)
  • Malign Fiesta (1955) (novel)
  • The Red Priest (1956) (novel)
  • The Letters of Wyndham Lewis (1963) (letters)
  • The Roaring Queen (1973; written 1936 but unpublished) (novel)
  • Unlucky for Pringle (1973) (short stories)
  • Mrs Duke's Million (1977; written 1908–10 but unpublished) (novel)
  • Creatures of Habit and Creatures of Change (1989) (essays)

Paintings edit

 
A Canadian Gun-pit, (1919) - National Gallery of Canada
 
A Battery Shelled (1919) - Imperial War Museum
  • The Theatre Manager (1909), watercolour
  • The Courtesan (1912), pen and ink, watercolour
  • Indian Dance (1912), chalk and watercolour
  • Russian Madonna (also known as Russian Scene) (1912), pen and ink, watercolour
  • Lovers (1912), pen and ink, watercolour
  • Mother and Child (1912), oil on canvas, now lost
  • The Dancers (study for Kermesse) (1912), black ink and watercolour, (image)
  • Composition (1913), pen and ink, watercolour, (image)
  • Plan of War (1913–14), oil on canvas
  • Slow Attack (1913–14), oil on canvas
  • New York (1914), pen and ink, watercolour
  • Argol (1914), pen and ink, watercolour
  • The Crowd (1914–15), oil paint and graphite on canvas, (image)
  • Workshop (1914–15), oil on canvas, (image)
  • Vorticist Composition (1915), gouache and chalk, (image)
  • A Canadian Gun-pit (1919), oil on canvas, (image)
  • A Battery Shelled (1919), oil on canvas, (image)
  • Mr Wyndham Lewis as a Tyro (1920–21), oil on canvas, (image)
  • A Reading of Ovid (Tyros) (1920–21), oil on canvas, (image)
  • Seated Figure (c.1921) (image)
  • Mrs Schiff (1923–24), oil on canvas, (image)
  • Edith Sitwell (1923–1935), oil on canvas, (image)
  • Bagdad (1927–28), oil on wood, (image}
  • Three Veiled Figures (1933), oil on canvas, (image)
  • Creation Myth (1933–1936, oil on canvas, (image)
  • Red Scene (1933–1936), oil on canvas, (image)
  • One of the Stations of the Dead (1933–1837), oil on canvas, (image}
  • The Surrender of Barcelona (1934–1937), oil on canvas, (image)
  • Panel for the Safe of a Great Millionaire (1936–37), oil on canvas, (image)
  • Newfoundland (1936–37), oil on canvas, (image)
  • Pensive Head (1937), oil on canvas, (image)
  • Portrait of T. S. Eliot (1938), oil on canvas
  • La Suerte (1938), oil on canvas, (image)
  • John Macleod (1938), oil on canvas (image)
  • Ezra Pound (1939), oil on canvas, (image)
  • Mrs R.J. Sainsbury (1940–41), oil on canvas, (image)
  • A Canadian War Factory (1943), oil on canvas, (image)
  • Nigel Tangye (1946), oil on canvas, (image)

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ The title is based on a contemporary best-seller, "The English, Are They Human?".
  1. ^ Grace Glueck (22 September 1985). "Wyndham Lewis:Painter, Polemicist, Iconoclast". The New York Times. Retrieved 11 June 2015.
  2. ^ a b c Richard Cork, "Lewis, (Percy) Wyndham (1882–1957)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004.
  3. ^ "Wyndham Lewis". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 16 January 2023.
  4. ^ "The programme and menu from the Cave of the Golden Calf, Cabaret and Theatre Club | Explore 20th Century London". www.20thcenturylondon.org.uk.
  5. ^ "The Art and Ideas of Wyndham Lewis" 5 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine, FluxEuropa.
  6. ^ Terrazas, Melania (2001). "Tragic Clowns/Male Comedians: Wyndham Lewis's "Enemy of the Stars" and Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot". Wyndham Lewis Annual. 8: 51 – via The Wyndham Lewis Society.
  7. ^ Paul Gough (2010) 'A Terrible Beauty': British Artists in the First World War (Sansom and Company) 203–239, ISBN 9781906593001.
  8. ^ Stephen Farthing, ed. (2006). 1001 Paintings You Must See Before You Die. Cassell Illustrated/Quintessence. ISBN 978-1-84403-563-2.
  9. ^ Trotter, David (2011) [1999]. "Chapter 3: The Modernist Novel". In Levenson, Michael (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to Modernism (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 69. ISBN 9781107495708.
  10. ^ Tyro, scans of the publication at The Modernist Journals Project website.
  11. ^ Time and Western Man, Morató, Yolanda. "Time and Western Man". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 2 March 2005; cf. Edward Chaney, '"Mummy First: Statue After": Wyndham Lewis, Diffusionism, Mosaic Distinctions and the Egyptian Origins of Art,' Ancient Egypt in the Modern Imagination, eds. E. Dobson and N. Tonks (Bloomsbury Academic, 2020).
  12. ^ [1] On TARR by Len Gutkin, Yale University
  13. ^ Kershaw, Alister, ed., Richard Aldington: Selected Critical Writings, 1928-1960, Carbondale and Edwardsville: Southern Illinois University Press, 1970, p. 27.
  14. ^ Neilson, Brett (1999). "History's Stamp: Wyndham Lewis's The Revenge for Love and the Heidegger Controversy". Comparative Literature. 51 (1): 24–41. doi:10.2307/1771454. JSTOR 1771454 – via JSTOR.
  15. ^ a b c d e Bridson, D. G. (2014). The Filibuster: A Study of the Political Ideas of Wyndham Lewis. A&C Black. pp. 232–248.
  16. ^ . Archived from the original on 12 June 2011. Retrieved 13 June 2011.
  17. ^ (PDF), Kensington & Chelsea Community History Group, archived from the original (PDF) on 31 January 2012, retrieved 10 February 2012
  18. ^ The Human Age. Wyndham Lewis. The Listener (London, England), Thursday, 2 June 1955; p. 976; Issue 1370.
  19. ^ National Portrait Gallery. "Portrait of Froanna". National Portrait Gallery. Retrieved 10 June 2015.
  20. ^ National Portrait Gallery. "Froanna – Portrait of the Artist's Wife". National Portrait Gallery. Retrieved 10 June 2015.
  21. ^ a b David Trotter (23 January 2001). "A most modern misanthrope: Wyndham Lewis and the pursuit of anti-pathos". The Guardian / London Review of Books. Retrieved 10 June 2015.
  22. ^ Time and Tide, 2 March 1935, p. 306.)
  23. ^ Morató, Yolanda (2010). "Bête Noire or Scapegoat?". European Journal of English Studies. 14 (3): 221–234. doi:10.1080/13825577.2010.517291. S2CID 142626791.
  24. ^ "Wyndham Lewis – 1882–1957: Fundación Juan March, Madrid" (PDF).
  25. ^ Nasher Museum 8 March 2013 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 17 September 2010
  26. ^ "LTM Recordings | Independent Record Label | Official Website".
  27. ^ "Wyndham Lewis blue plaque". openplaques.org. Retrieved 11 May 2013.
  28. ^ Fifty Orwell Essays, A Project Gutenberg of Australia eBook
  29. ^ Campbell, Peter (11 September 2008). "At the National Portrait Gallery". London Review of Books, p. 12.
  30. ^ Ayers, David. (1992) Wyndham Lewis and Western Man. Basingstoke and London: Macmillan.

Further reading edit

  • Ayers, David. (1992) Wyndham Lewis and Western Man. Basingstoke and London: Macmillan.
  • Chaney, Edward (1990) "Wyndham Lewis: The Modernist as Pioneering Anti-Modernist", Modern Painters (Autumn, 1990), III, no. 3, pp. 106–09.
  • Edwards, Paul. (2000) Wyndham Lewis, Painter and Writer. New Haven and London: Yale U P.
  • Edwards, Paul and Humphreys, Richard. (2010) "Wyndham Lewis (1882–1957)". Madrid: Fundación Juan March
  • Gasiorek, Andrzej. (2004) Wyndham Lewis and ModernismWyndham Lewis and Modernism. Tavistock: Northcote House.
  • Gasiorek, Andrzej, Reeve-Tucker, Alice, and Waddell, Nathan. (2011) Wyndham Lewis and the Cultures of Modernity. Aldershot: Ashgate.
  • Grigson, Geoffrey (1951) 'A Master of Our Time', London: Methuen.
  • Hammer, Martin (1981) Out of the Vortex: Wyndham Lewis as Painter, in Cencrastus No. 5, Summer 1981, pp. 31–33, ISSN 0264-0856.
  • Jaillant, Lise. "Rewriting Tarr Ten Years Later: Wyndham Lewis, the Phoenix Library and the Domestication of Modernism." Journal of Wyndham Lewis Studies 5 (2014): 1–30.
  • Jameson, Fredric. (1979) Fables of Aggression: Wyndham Lewis, the Modernist as Fascist. Berkeley, Los Angeles and London: University of California Press.
  • Kenner, Hugh. (1954) Wyndham Lewis. New York: New Directions.
  • Klein, Scott W. (1994) The Fictions of James Joyce and Wyndham Lewis: Monsters of Nature and Design. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Leavis, F.R. (1964). "Mr. Eliot, Mr. Wyndham Lewis and Lawrence." In The Common Pursuit, New York University Press.
  • Michel, Walter. (1971) Wyndham Lewis: Paintings and Drawings. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Meyers, Jeffrey. (1980) The Enemy: A Biography of Wyndham Lewis. London and Henley: Routledge & Keegan Paul.
  • Morrow, Bradford and Bernard Lafourcade. (1978) A Bibliography of the Writings of Wyndham Lewis. Santa Barbara: Black Sparrow Press.
  • Normand, Tom. (1993) Wyndham Lewis the Artist: Holding the Mirror up to Politics. Cambridge. Cambridge University Press.
  • O'Keeffe, Paul. (2000) Some Sort of Genius: A Biography of Wyndham Lewis. London: Cape.
  • Orage, A. R. (1922). "Mr. Pound and Mr. Lewis in Public." In Readers and Writers (1917–1921), London: George Allen & Unwin, Ltd.
  • Rothenstein, John (1956). "Wyndham Lewis." In Modern English Painters. Lewis To Moore, London: Eyre & Spottiswoode.
  • Rutter, Frank (1922). "Wyndham Lewis." In Some Contemporary Artists, London: Leonard Parsons.
  • Rutter, Frank (1926). Evolution in Modern Art: A Study of Modern Painting, 1870–1925, London: George G. Harrap.
  • Schenker, Daniel. (1992) Wyndham Lewis: Religion and Modernism. Tuscaloosa: U of Alabama Press.
  • Spender, Stephen (1978). The Thirties and After: Poetry, Politics, People (1933–1975), Macmillan.
  • Stevenson, Randall (1982), The Other Centenary: Wyndham Lewis, 1882–1982, in Hearn, Sheila G. (ed.), Cencrastus No. 10, Autumn 1982, pp. 18–21, ISSN 0264-0856
  • Waddell, Nathan. (2012) Modernist Nowheres: Politics and Utopia in Early Modernist Writing, 1900–1920. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Wagner, Geoffrey (1957). Wyndham Lewis: A Portrait of the Artist as the Enemy, New Haven: Yale University Press.
  • Woodcock, George, ed. Wyndham Lewis in Canada. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Publications, 1972.

External links edit

wyndham, lewis, this, article, about, vorticist, painter, author, others, that, name, disambiguation, percy, november, 1882, march, 1957, british, writer, painter, critic, founder, vorticist, movement, edited, blast, literary, magazine, vorticists, lewis, 1913. This article is about the Vorticist painter and author For others of that name see Wyndham Lewis disambiguation Percy Wyndham Lewis 18 November 1882 7 March 1957 was a British writer painter and critic He was a co founder of the Vorticist movement in art and edited BLAST the literary magazine of the Vorticists 1 Wyndham LewisLewis in 1913BornPercy Wyndham Lewis 1882 11 18 18 November 1882Amherst Nova Scotia CanadaDied7 March 1957 1957 03 07 aged 74 London England United KingdomNationalityBritishEducationSlade School of Fine Art University College LondonKnown forPainting poetry literature criticismMovementVorticismSpouseGladys Anne Hoskins m 1930 wbr PartnerIris Barry His novels include Tarr 1918 and The Human Age trilogy composed of The Childermass 1928 Monstre Gai 1955 and Malign Fiesta 1955 A fourth volume titled The Trial of Man was unfinished at the time of his death He also wrote two autobiographical volumes Blasting and Bombardiering 1937 and Rude Assignment A Narrative of my Career Up to Date 1950 Contents 1 Life and career 1 1 Early life 1 2 Early work and development of Vorticism 1908 1915 1 3 World War I 1915 1918 1 4 Tyros and writing 1918 1929 1 5 Fiction and political writing 1930 1936 1 6 Return to painting 1936 1941 1 7 World War II and North America 1941 1945 1 8 Later life and blindness 1945 1951 2 Personal life 2 1 Political views 3 Legacy 3 1 Critical reception 3 1 1 Anti semitism 4 Books 5 Paintings 6 Notes and references 7 Further reading 8 External linksLife and career editEarly life edit Lewis was born on 18 November 1882 reputedly on his father s yacht off the Canadian province of Nova Scotia 2 His English mother Anne Stuart Lewis nee Prickett and American father Charles Edward Lewis separated about 1893 2 His mother subsequently returned to England Lewis was educated in England at Rugby School citation needed and then from 16 the Slade School of Fine Art University College London but left for Paris without finishing his course 3 He spent most of the 1900s travelling around Europe and studying art in Paris While in Paris he attended lectures by Henri Bergson on process philosophy citation needed Early work and development of Vorticism 1908 1915 edit nbsp Wyndham Lewis 1912 The Dancers nbsp Wyndham Lewis c 1914 15 Workshop Tate London In 1908 Lewis moved to London where he would reside for much of his life In 1909 he published his first work accounts of his travels in Brittany in Ford Madox Ford s The English Review He was a founding member of the Camden Town Group which brought him into close contact with the Bloomsbury Group particularly Roger Fry and Clive Bell with whom he soon fell out In 1912 Lewis exhibited his work at the second Postimpressionist exhibition Cubo Futurist illustrations to Timon of Athens and three major oil paintings In 1912 he was commissioned to produce a decorative mural a drop curtain and more designs for The Cave of the Golden Calf an avant garde cabaret and nightclub on Heddon Street 2 4 From 1913 to 1915 Lewis developed the style of geometric abstraction for which he is best known today which his friend Ezra Pound dubbed Vorticism Lewis sought to combine the strong structure of Cubism which he found was not alive with the liveliness of Futurist art which lacked structure The combination was a strikingly dramatic critique of modernity In his early visual works Lewis may have been influenced by Bergson s process philosophy Though he was later savagely critical of Bergson he admitted in a letter to Theodore Weiss 19 April 1949 that he began by embracing his evolutionary system Nietzsche was an equally important influence Lewis had a brief tenure at Roger Fry s Omega Workshops but left after a quarrel with Fry over a commission to provide wall decorations for the Daily Mail Ideal Home Exhibition which Lewis believed Fry had misappropriated He and several other Omega artists started a competing workshop called the Rebel Art Centre The Centre operated for only four months but it gave birth to the Vorticist group and its publication BLAST 5 In BLAST Lewis formally expounded the Vorticist aesthetic in a manifesto distinguishing it from other avant garde practices He also wrote and published a play Enemy of the Stars It is a proto absurdist Expressionist drama Lewis scholar Melania Terrazas identifies it as a precursor to the plays of Samuel Beckett 6 World War I 1915 1918 edit nbsp Wyndham Lewis photograph by George Charles Beresford 1917 In 1915 the Vorticists held their only U K exhibition before the movement broke up largely as a result of World War I Lewis himself was posted to the western front and served as a second lieutenant in the Royal Artillery Much of his time was spent in Forward Observation Posts looking down at apparently deserted German lines registering targets and calling down fire from batteries massed around the rim of the Ypres Salient He made vivid accounts of narrow misses and deadly artillery duels 7 After the Third Battle of Ypres Lewis was appointed an official war artist for both the Canadian and British governments For the Canadians he painted A Canadian Gun pit 1918 from sketches made on Vimy Ridge For the British he painted one of his best known works A Battery Shelled 1919 drawing on his own experience at Ypres 8 Lewis exhibited his war drawings and some other paintings of the war in an exhibition Guns in 1918 Although the Vorticist group broke up after the war Lewis s patron John Quinn organized a Vorticist exhibition at the Penguin Club in New York in 1917 His first novel Tarr was serialized in The Egoist during 1916 17 and published in book form in 1918 It is widely regarded as one of the key modernist texts 9 Lewis later documented his experiences and opinions of this period of his life in the autobiographical Blasting and Bombardiering 1937 which covered his life up to 1926 Tyros and writing 1918 1929 edit nbsp Mr Wyndham Lewis as a Tyro self portrait 1921 After the war Lewis resumed his career as a painter with a major exhibition Tyros and Portraits at the Leicester Galleries in 1921 Tyros were satirical caricatures intended to comment on the culture of the new epoch that succeeded the First World War A Reading of Ovid and Mr Wyndham Lewis as a Tyro are the only surviving oil paintings from this series Lewis also launched his second magazine The Tyro of which there were only two issues The second 1922 contained an important statement of Lewis s visual aesthetic Essay on the Objective of Plastic Art in our Time 10 It was during the early 1920s that he perfected his incisive draughtsmanship By the late 1920s he concentrated on writing He launched yet another magazine The Enemy 1927 1929 largely written by himself and declaring its belligerent critical stance in its title The magazine and other theoretical and critical works he published from 1926 to 1929 mark a deliberate separation from the avant garde and his previous associates He believed that their work failed to show sufficient critical awareness of those ideologies that worked against truly revolutionary change in the West and therefore became a vehicle for these pernicious ideologies citation needed His major theoretical and cultural statement from this period is The Art of Being Ruled 1926 Time and Western Man 1927 is a cultural and philosophical discussion that includes penetrating critiques of James Joyce Gertrude Stein and Ezra Pound that are still read Lewis also attacked the process philosophy of Bergson Samuel Alexander Alfred North Whitehead and others By 1931 he was advocating the art of ancient Egypt as impossible to surpass 11 Fiction and political writing 1930 1936 edit nbsp Lewis in 1929 photographed by George Charles Beresford Between the years 1907 11 Lewis wrote a modernist novel entitled Tarr which was revised and expanded in 1914 15 12 and first serialized in the magazine The Egoist from April 1916 until November 1917 The American version was published in 1918 In 1930 Lewis published The Apes of God a biting satirical attack on the London literary scene including a long chapter caricaturing the Sitwell family Richard Aldington however found it the greatest piece of writing since Ulysses by James Joyce 13 In 1937 Lewis published The Revenge for Love set in the period leading up to the Spanish Civil War and regarded by many as his best novel 14 It is strongly critical of communist activity in Spain and presents English intellectual fellow travellers as deluded Despite serious illness necessitating several operations he was very productive as a critic and painter He produced a book of poems One Way Song in 1933 and a revised version of Enemy of the Stars An important book of critical essays also belongs to this period Men without Art 1934 It grew out of a defence of Lewis s satirical practice in The Apes of God and puts forward a theory of non moral or metaphysical satire The book is probably best remembered for one of the first commentaries on Faulkner and a famous essay on Hemingway Return to painting 1936 1941 edit nbsp Lewis s Ezra Pound 1919 The portrait is lost After becoming better known for his writing than his painting in the 1920s and early 1930s he returned to more concentrated work on visual art and paintings from the 1930s and 1940s constitute some of his best known work The Surrender of Barcelona 1936 37 makes a significant statement about the Spanish Civil War how It was included in an exhibition at the Leicester Galleries in 1937 that Lewis hoped would re establish his reputation as a painter After the publication in The Times of a letter of support for the exhibition asking that something from the show be purchased for the national collection signed by among others Stephen Spender W H Auden Geoffrey Grigson Rebecca West Naomi Mitchison Henry Moore and Eric Gill the Tate Gallery bought the painting Red Scene Like others from the exhibition it shows an influence from Surrealism and de Chirico s Metaphysical Painting Lewis was highly critical of the ideology of Surrealism but admired the visual qualities of some Surrealist art During this period Lewis also produced many of his most well known portraits including pictures of Edith Sitwell 1923 1936 T S Eliot 1938 and 1949 and Ezra Pound 1939 His 1938 portrait of Eliot was rejected by the selection committee of the Royal Academy for their annual exhibition and caused a furore Augustus John resigned in protest World War II and North America 1941 1945 edit Lewis spent World War II in the United States and Canada In 1941 in Toronto he produced a series of watercolour fantasies centred on themes of creation crucifixion and bathing He grew to appreciate the cosmopolitan and rootless nature of the American melting pot declaring that the greatest advantage of being American was to have turned one s back on race caste and all that pertains to the rooted state 15 He praised the contributions of African Americans to American culture and regarded Diego Rivera David Alfaro Siqueiros and Jose Clemente Orozco as the best North American artists predicting that when the Indian culture of Mexico melts into the great American mass to the North the Indian will probably give it its art 15 He returned to England in 1945 Later life and blindness 1945 1951 edit By 1951 he was completely blinded by a pituitary tumor that placed pressure on his optic nerve It ended his artistic career but he continued writing until his death He published several autobiographical and critical works Rude Assignment 1950 Rotting Hill 1951 a collection of allegorical short stories about his life in the capital of a dying empire 16 17 The Writer and the Absolute 1952 a book of essays on writers including George Orwell Jean Paul Sartre and Andre Malraux and the semi autobiographical novel Self Condemned 1954 The BBC commissioned Lewis to complete his 1928 work The Childermass which was published as The Human Age and dramatized for the BBC Third Programme in 1955 18 In 1956 the Tate Gallery held a major exhibition of his work Wyndham Lewis and Vorticism in the catalogue to which he declared that Vorticism in fact was what I personally did and said at a certain period a statement which brought forth a series of Vortex Pamphlets from his fellow BLAST signatory William Roberts Personal life editFrom 1918 to 1921 Lewis lived with Iris Barry with whom he had two children who He is said to have shown little affection for them 19 20 In 1930 Lewis married Gladys Anne Hoskins 1900 1979 who was affectionately known as Froanna They lived together for 10 years before marrying and never had children 21 Lewis kept Froanna in the background and many of his friends were unaware of her existence It seems that Lewis was extraordinarily jealous and protective of his wife owing to her youth and beauty Froanna was patient and caring toward her husband through financial troubles and his frequent illnesses She was the model for some of Lewis s more tender and intimate portraits as well as a number of characters in his fiction In contrast to his earlier impersonal portraits which are purely concerned with external appearance the portraits of Froanna show a preoccupation with her inner life 21 nbsp Plaque dedicated to Lewis at Golders Green Crematorium Always interested in Roman Catholicism he never converted citation needed He died in 1957 and was cremated at Golders Green Crematorium By the time of his death Lewis had written 40 books in all Political views edit In 1931 after a visit to Berlin Lewis published Hitler 1931 a book presenting Adolf Hitler as a man of peace with members of his party being threatened by communist street violence His unpopularity among liberals and anti fascists grew especially after Hitler came to power in 1933 citation needed Following a second visit to Germany in 1937 Lewis changed his views and began to retract his previous political comments He recognized the reality of Nazi treatment of Jews after a visit to Berlin in 1937 In 1939 he published an attack on anti semitism titled The Jews Are They Human a which was favourably reviewed in The Jewish Chronicle He also published The Hitler Cult 1939 which firmly revoked his earlier support for Hitler citation needed Politically Lewis remained an isolated figure through the 1930s In Letter to Lord Byron W H Auden called Lewis that lonely old volcano of the Right Lewis thought there was what he called a left wing orthodoxy in Britain in the 1930s He believed it was against Britain s self interest to ally with the Soviet Union which the newspapers most of us read tell us has slaughtered out of hand only a few years ago millions of its better fed citizens as well as its whole imperial family 22 In Anglosaxony A League that Works 1941 Lewis reflected on his earlier support for fascism Fascism once I understood it left me colder than communism The latter at least pretended at the start to have something to do with helping the helpless and making the world a more decent and sensible place It does start from the human being and his suffering Whereas fascism glorifies bloodshed and preaches that man should model himself upon the wolf 15 His sense that America and Canada lacked a British type class structure had increased his opinion of liberal democracy and in the same pamphlet Lewis defends liberal democracy s respect for individual freedom against its critics on both the left and right 15 In America and Cosmic Man 1949 Lewis argued that Franklin Delano Roosevelt had successfully managed to reconcile individual rights with the demands of the state 15 Legacy editIn recent years there has been renewed critical and biographical interest in Lewis and his work and he is now regarded as a major British artist and writer of the twentieth century 23 Rugby School hosted an exhibition of his works in November 2007 to commemorate the 50th anniversary of his death The National Portrait Gallery in London held a major retrospective of his portraits in 2008 Two years later held at the Fundacion Juan March Madrid Spain a large exhibition Wyndham Lewis 1882 1957 featured a comprehensive collection of Lewis s paintings and drawings As Tom Lubbock pointed out it was the retrospective that Britain has never managed to get together 24 In 2010 Oxford World Classics published a critical edition of the 1928 text of Tarr edited by Scott W Klein of Wake Forest University The Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University held an exhibition entitled The Vorticists Rebel Artists in London and New York 1914 18 from 30 September 2010 through 2 January 2011 25 The exhibition then travelled to the Peggy Guggenheim Collection Venice 29 January 15 May 2011 I Vorticisti Artisti ribellia a Londra e New York 1914 1918 and then to Tate Britain under the title The Vorticists Manifesto for a Modern World between 14 June and 4 September 2011 Several readings by Lewis are collected on The Enemy Speaks an audiobook CD published in 2007 and featuring extracts from One Way Song and The Apes of God as well as radio talks titled When John Bull Laughs 1938 A Crisis of Thought 1947 and The Essential Purposes of Art 1951 26 A blue plaque now stands on the house in Kensington London where Lewis lived No 61 Palace Gardens Terrace 27 nbsp Blue plaque Wyndham Lewis 61 Palace Gardens Terrace London W8 Critical reception edit In his essay Good Bad Books George Orwell presents Lewis as the exemplary writer who is cerebral without being artistic Orwell wrote Enough talent to set up dozens of ordinary writers has been poured into Wyndham Lewis s so called novels Yet it would be a very heavy labour to read one of these books right through Some indefinable quality a sort of literary vitamin which exists even in a book like 1921 melodrama If Winter Comes is absent from them 28 In 1932 Walter Sickert sent Lewis a telegram in which he said that Lewis s pencil portrait of Rebecca West proved him to be the greatest portraitist of this or any other time 29 Anti semitism edit For many years Lewis s novels have been criticised for their satirical and hostile portrayals of Jews citation needed Tarr was revised and republished in 1928 giving a new Jewish character a key role in making sure a duel is fought This has been interpreted as an allegorical representation of a supposed Zionist conspiracy against the West 30 His literary satire The Apes of God has been interpreted similarly because many of the characters are Jewish including the modernist author and editor Julius Ratner a portrait which blends anti semitic stereotype with historical literary figures John Rodker and James Joyce A key feature of these interpretations is that Lewis is held to have kept his conspiracy theories hidden and marginalized citation needed Since the publication of Anthony Julius s T S Eliot Anti Semitism and Literary Form 1995 where Lewis s anti semitism is described as essentially trivial this view is no longer taken seriously according to whom Books editTarr 1918 novel The Caliph s Design Architects Where is Your Vortex 1919 essay The Art of Being Ruled 1926 essays The Wild Body A Soldier of Humour And Other Stories 1927 short stories The Lion and the Fox The Role of the Hero in the Plays of Shakespeare 1927 essays Time and Western Man 1927 essays The Childermass 1928 novel Paleface The Philosophy of the Melting Pot 1929 essays Satire and Fiction 1930 criticism The Apes of God 1930 novel Hitler 1931 essay The Diabolical Principle and the Dithyrambic Spectator 1931 essays Doom of Youth 1932 essays Filibusters in Barbary 1932 travel later republished as Journey into Barbary Enemy of the Stars 1932 play Snooty Baronet 1932 novel One Way Song 1933 poetry Men Without Art 1934 criticism Left Wings over Europe or How to Make a War about Nothing 1936 essays Blasting and Bombardiering 1937 autobiography The Revenge for Love 1937 novel Count Your Dead They are Alive Or A New War in the Making 1937 essays The Mysterious Mr Bull 1938 The Jews Are They Human 1939 essay The Hitler Cult and How it Will End 1939 essay America I Presume 1940 travel The Vulgar Streak 1941 novel Anglosaxony A League that Works 1941 essay America and Cosmic Man 1949 essay Rude Assignment 1950 autobiography Rotting Hill 1951 short stories The Writer and the Absolute 1952 essay Self Condemned 1954 novel The Demon of Progress in the Arts 1955 essay Monstre Gai 1955 novel Malign Fiesta 1955 novel The Red Priest 1956 novel The Letters of Wyndham Lewis 1963 letters The Roaring Queen 1973 written 1936 but unpublished novel Unlucky for Pringle 1973 short stories Mrs Duke s Million 1977 written 1908 10 but unpublished novel Creatures of Habit and Creatures of Change 1989 essays Paintings edit nbsp A Canadian Gun pit 1919 National Gallery of Canada nbsp A Battery Shelled 1919 Imperial War Museum The Theatre Manager 1909 watercolour The Courtesan 1912 pen and ink watercolour Indian Dance 1912 chalk and watercolour Russian Madonna also known as Russian Scene 1912 pen and ink watercolour Lovers 1912 pen and ink watercolour Mother and Child 1912 oil on canvas now lost The Dancers study for Kermesse 1912 black ink and watercolour image Composition 1913 pen and ink watercolour image Plan of War 1913 14 oil on canvas Slow Attack 1913 14 oil on canvas New York 1914 pen and ink watercolour Argol 1914 pen and ink watercolour The Crowd 1914 15 oil paint and graphite on canvas image Workshop 1914 15 oil on canvas image Vorticist Composition 1915 gouache and chalk image A Canadian Gun pit 1919 oil on canvas image A Battery Shelled 1919 oil on canvas image Mr Wyndham Lewis as a Tyro 1920 21 oil on canvas image A Reading of Ovid Tyros 1920 21 oil on canvas image Seated Figure c 1921 image Mrs Schiff 1923 24 oil on canvas image Edith Sitwell 1923 1935 oil on canvas image Bagdad 1927 28 oil on wood image Three Veiled Figures 1933 oil on canvas image Creation Myth 1933 1936 oil on canvas image Red Scene 1933 1936 oil on canvas image One of the Stations of the Dead 1933 1837 oil on canvas image The Surrender of Barcelona 1934 1937 oil on canvas image Panel for the Safe of a Great Millionaire 1936 37 oil on canvas image Newfoundland 1936 37 oil on canvas image Pensive Head 1937 oil on canvas image Portrait of T S Eliot 1938 oil on canvas La Suerte 1938 oil on canvas image John Macleod 1938 oil on canvas image Ezra Pound 1939 oil on canvas image Mrs R J Sainsbury 1940 41 oil on canvas image A Canadian War Factory 1943 oil on canvas image Nigel Tangye 1946 oil on canvas image Notes and references edit The title is based on a contemporary best seller The English Are They Human Grace Glueck 22 September 1985 Wyndham Lewis Painter Polemicist Iconoclast The New York Times Retrieved 11 June 2015 a b c Richard Cork Lewis Percy Wyndham 1882 1957 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 Wyndham Lewis Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 16 January 2023 The programme and menu from the Cave of the Golden Calf Cabaret and Theatre Club Explore 20th Century London www 20thcenturylondon org uk The Art and Ideas of Wyndham Lewis Archived 5 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine FluxEuropa Terrazas Melania 2001 Tragic Clowns Male Comedians Wyndham Lewis s Enemy of the Stars and Samuel Beckett s Waiting for Godot Wyndham Lewis Annual 8 51 via The Wyndham Lewis Society Paul Gough 2010 A Terrible Beauty British Artists in the First World War Sansom and Company 203 239 ISBN 9781906593001 Stephen Farthing ed 2006 1001 Paintings You Must See Before You Die Cassell Illustrated Quintessence ISBN 978 1 84403 563 2 Trotter David 2011 1999 Chapter 3 The Modernist Novel In Levenson Michael ed The Cambridge Companion to Modernism 2nd ed Cambridge University Press p 69 ISBN 9781107495708 Tyro scans of the publication at The Modernist Journals Project website Time and Western Man Morato Yolanda Time and Western Man The Literary Encyclopedia First published 2 March 2005 cf Edward Chaney Mummy First Statue After Wyndham Lewis Diffusionism Mosaic Distinctions and the Egyptian Origins of Art Ancient Egypt in the Modern Imagination eds E Dobson and N Tonks Bloomsbury Academic 2020 1 On TARR by Len Gutkin Yale University Kershaw Alister ed Richard Aldington Selected Critical Writings 1928 1960 Carbondale and Edwardsville Southern Illinois University Press 1970 p 27 Neilson Brett 1999 History s Stamp Wyndham Lewis s The Revenge for Love and the Heidegger Controversy Comparative Literature 51 1 24 41 doi 10 2307 1771454 JSTOR 1771454 via JSTOR a b c d e Bridson D G 2014 The Filibuster A Study of the Political Ideas of Wyndham Lewis A amp C Black pp 232 248 Wyndham Lewis Rotting Hill Archived from the original on 12 June 2011 Retrieved 13 June 2011 Notting Hill history 5 Rotting Hill 1940s PDF Kensington amp Chelsea Community History Group archived from the original PDF on 31 January 2012 retrieved 10 February 2012 The Human Age Wyndham Lewis The Listener London England Thursday 2 June 1955 p 976 Issue 1370 National Portrait Gallery Portrait of Froanna National Portrait Gallery Retrieved 10 June 2015 National Portrait Gallery Froanna Portrait of the Artist s Wife National Portrait Gallery Retrieved 10 June 2015 a b David Trotter 23 January 2001 A most modern misanthrope Wyndham Lewis and the pursuit of anti pathos The Guardian London Review of Books Retrieved 10 June 2015 Time and Tide 2 March 1935 p 306 Morato Yolanda 2010 Bete Noire or Scapegoat European Journal of English Studies 14 3 221 234 doi 10 1080 13825577 2010 517291 S2CID 142626791 Wyndham Lewis 1882 1957 Fundacion Juan March Madrid PDF Nasher Museum Archived 8 March 2013 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 17 September 2010 LTM Recordings Independent Record Label Official Website Wyndham Lewis blue plaque openplaques org Retrieved 11 May 2013 Fifty Orwell Essays A Project Gutenberg of Australia eBook Campbell Peter 11 September 2008 At the National Portrait Gallery London Review of Books p 12 Ayers David 1992 Wyndham Lewis and Western Man Basingstoke and London Macmillan Further reading editAyers David 1992 Wyndham Lewis and Western Man Basingstoke and London Macmillan Chaney Edward 1990 Wyndham Lewis The Modernist as Pioneering Anti Modernist Modern Painters Autumn 1990 III no 3 pp 106 09 Edwards Paul 2000 Wyndham Lewis Painter and Writer New Haven and London Yale U P Edwards Paul and Humphreys Richard 2010 Wyndham Lewis 1882 1957 Madrid Fundacion Juan March Gasiorek Andrzej 2004 Wyndham Lewis and ModernismWyndham Lewis and Modernism Tavistock Northcote House Gasiorek Andrzej Reeve Tucker Alice and Waddell Nathan 2011 Wyndham Lewis and the Cultures of Modernity Aldershot Ashgate Grigson Geoffrey 1951 A Master of Our Time London Methuen Hammer Martin 1981 Out of the Vortex Wyndham Lewis as Painter in Cencrastus No 5 Summer 1981 pp 31 33 ISSN 0264 0856 Jaillant Lise Rewriting Tarr Ten Years Later Wyndham Lewis the Phoenix Library and the Domestication of Modernism Journal of Wyndham Lewis Studies 5 2014 1 30 Jameson Fredric 1979 Fables of Aggression Wyndham Lewis the Modernist as Fascist Berkeley Los Angeles and London University of California Press Kenner Hugh 1954 Wyndham Lewis New York New Directions Klein Scott W 1994 The Fictions of James Joyce and Wyndham Lewis Monsters of Nature and Design Cambridge Cambridge University Press Leavis F R 1964 Mr Eliot Mr Wyndham Lewis and Lawrence In The Common Pursuit New York University Press Michel Walter 1971 Wyndham Lewis Paintings and Drawings Berkeley University of California Press Meyers Jeffrey 1980 The Enemy A Biography of Wyndham Lewis London and Henley Routledge amp Keegan Paul Morrow Bradford and Bernard Lafourcade 1978 A Bibliography of the Writings of Wyndham Lewis Santa Barbara Black Sparrow Press Normand Tom 1993 Wyndham Lewis the Artist Holding the Mirror up to Politics Cambridge Cambridge University Press O Keeffe Paul 2000 Some Sort of Genius A Biography of Wyndham Lewis London Cape Orage A R 1922 Mr Pound and Mr Lewis in Public In Readers and Writers 1917 1921 London George Allen amp Unwin Ltd Rothenstein John 1956 Wyndham Lewis In Modern English Painters Lewis To Moore London Eyre amp Spottiswoode Rutter Frank 1922 Wyndham Lewis In Some Contemporary Artists London Leonard Parsons Rutter Frank 1926 Evolution in Modern Art A Study of Modern Painting 1870 1925 London George G Harrap Schenker Daniel 1992 Wyndham Lewis Religion and Modernism Tuscaloosa U of Alabama Press Spender Stephen 1978 The Thirties and After Poetry Politics People 1933 1975 Macmillan Stevenson Randall 1982 The Other Centenary Wyndham Lewis 1882 1982 in Hearn Sheila G ed Cencrastus No 10 Autumn 1982 pp 18 21 ISSN 0264 0856 Waddell Nathan 2012 Modernist Nowheres Politics and Utopia in Early Modernist Writing 1900 1920 Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan Wagner Geoffrey 1957 Wyndham Lewis A Portrait of the Artist as the Enemy New Haven Yale University Press Woodcock George ed Wyndham Lewis in Canada Vancouver University of British Columbia Publications 1972 External links editThis article s use of external links may not follow Wikipedia s policies or guidelines Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links and converting useful links where appropriate into footnote references August 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Wyndham Lewis Society Wyndham Lewis at IMDb Wyndham Lewis at Encyclopaedia Britannica Works by Wyndham Lewis at Project Gutenberg Time and Western Man essay by Kirsty Dootson Works by Wyndham Lewis at Faded Page Canada Wyndham Lewis The Enemy Speaks audiobook CD Wyndham Lewis Collection at Cornell University Library Wyndham Lewis Self Condemned essay in The Walrus 36 artworks by or after Wyndham Lewis at the Art UK site Cyril J Fox Wyndham Lewis collection at the University of Victoria Wyndham Lewis collection 1945 1956 at the University of Victoria Works by Wyndham Lewis at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Portraits of Wyndham Lewis at the National Portrait Gallery London nbsp Long Live the Vortex and Our Vortex 1914 at the Poetry Foundation Wyndham Lewis Collection at Clara Thomas Archives amp Special Collections York University Wyndham Lewis Art Collection 1898 1949 and 1915 1977 undated at the Harry Ransom Center University of Texas at Austin Wyndham Lewis at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Data from Wikidata Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wyndham Lewis amp oldid 1213588781, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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