
‘Evict the Charleston Scroungers': row in Lewes over the Bloomsbury group's legacy
When the doors closed on two art shows in the Sussex town of Lewes last weekend, a record number of people had crossed the threshold of Southover House to look at works by Picasso and Grayson Perry.
For 18 months, the former council office building has housed a pop-up outpost of Charleston, the former home of key members of the Bloomsbury group, which is nearby in the village of Firle.
But despite its popularity over half-term, Lewes's new Charleston site is at risk. District councillors are to decide on Thursday whether to pull the plug or extend the lease on the site for another 25 years. A fresh lease would allow for a collaboration with three prestigious cultural institutions; the Victoria and Albert Museum, the National Portrait Gallery and the Tate.
While many who live in Lewes and the surrounding area at the foot of the South Downs hope that Charleston wins the day, members of a vociferous local campaign group are dismayed to see a council property given over to what one told the Observer he regards as an old-fashioned 'legacy', or establishment, arts organisation.
Other protesters have argued that the site should be given instead to the NHS, or to a youth organisation – or perhaps used to create much-needed housing.
A few angry fly posters have encouraged local people to rise up and 'Evict the Charleston Scroungers', urging the council to give health professionals the keys to Southover House, which they claim has 'inexplicably been given to a group of undeserving conceptual artists'.
Nathaniel Hepburn, Charleston's director, knows that some will be against a longer lease but said he hopes the district council will see the risk of ending the self-funded cultural project after 'an amazingly successful first 18 months'.
The leader of the Green-led Lewes district council, Zoe Nicholson, is a fan. 'It's done a fantastic amount, but one of the most important things to me is the amazing job they've done of exposing our young people to what the arts can be, especially when the government funding for this area has dropped away,' she said. 'As a small local authority, we would be doing something that really makes a difference, without any grant funding or national funding and yet with some great partnerships.'
Charleston, the historic home of painters Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant, took over the 23,000 sq metre site when the district council offices moved to Newhaven.
Within a few months, at a cost of less than £1m – raised largely from local donations – it set up a venue that now attracts about 2,000 visitors a week and runs an educational partnership with the neighbouring further education college.
While it receives no public subsidy, almost half its visitors enter for free, or on concessionary tickets, due to a monthly 'pay what you can' scheme.
At the heart of the row is the popular image of the Bloomsbury group as an entitled cluster of indolent aesthetes. In fact, although largely well-born and London-raised, Grant, Bell and their frequent visitors, Roger Fry and Bell's sister, Virginia Woolf, had all turned their backs on respectable society and material comfort to pursue art, learning and their radical theories in peace.
Woolf was anti-authority and evangelised for public access to books and art, once writing: 'To admit authorities, however heavily furred and gowned, into our libraries and let them tell us how to read, what to read, what value to place upon what we read, is to destroy the spirit of freedom which is the breath of those sanctuaries.'
Nicholson said the factors being weighed in the renewal decision are the likely benefits to the town's economy and the work planned to make the site accessible to low-income families. 'We don't want to sell off our assets if we don't have to,' she added.
'If we can do something for the public good, we will try to protect it in perpetuity. I've heard people asking why this shouldn't be a place for our youth or perhaps new council houses. They are good questions, but we looked at converting it into housing – and we'd have to spend a lot to make it acceptable. Anyway, we are doing that in other places.'
A new health centre, she added, is also planned in the area.
Charleston, close to the home of Woolf and her husband, Leonard, was once a centre for discussion and creativity in the 1920s and 30s and is now the custodian of the Bloomsbury collection of art. Among its portraits is one of another regular guest, the philosopher and economist John Maynard Keynes, currently on loan to Sotheby's.
'When Keynes was conceiving what later became the Arts Council, he lived at Charleston and then at nearby Tilton,' said Hepburn. 'He was thinking of towns like Lewes when he wrote: 'Certainly, in every blitzed town in this country one hopes that the local authority will make provision for a central group of buildings for drama and music and art. There could be no better memorial of a war to save the freedom of the spirit of the individual.' Now, more than 80 years later, the new arts centre he dreamed of might be about to happen.'
A plan to develop the site as the National Bloomsbury Gallery, agreed with directors of the three national museums, would see large Bloomsbury group collections being taken out of London storage for display. Hepburn might well use Woolf's own words this week when he tries to persuade Lewes to secure a building he argues will bring treasure to their doorstep. 'Never pretend that the things you haven't got are not worth having,' Woolf wrote.
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Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
Exclusive: Sarah, Duchess of York: My ‘profound' trauma in childhood and public life
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When her mother, Susan, abruptly abandoned her to live with an Argentinian polo player Hector Barrantes, Sarah was left to look after her father, Major Ron Ferguson, with her elder sister Jane, who later moved to Australia. Tragedy struck in 1998 when Susan Barrantes was killed in a car crash, aged 61. Coming just a year after the death of her beloved sister-in-law, Princess Diana, in a car crash – it left the Duchess completely bereft. She has previously blamed her fragile emotional state on her parents' marriage breakdown. In a 2018 TV interview with US show Modern Hero, she said: 'Suddenly she'd gone and she never came back and I never saw her again really. I built a huge wall to the real Sarah. And I believed it was because I was worthless. Why would you leave your child? You wouldn't.' Little wonder, then, that Sarah has always stuck by her ex-husband, Prince Andrew, with whom she still shares a home at Royal Lodge, Windsor, despite his own string of nightmare headlines. She was similarly unwaveringly loyal to her father following revelations he had frequented a London massage parlour, The Wigmore Club, in 1988. Father and daughter remained extremely close until Major Ferguson's death in 2003, aged 71. He had cancer during the last decade of his life, having been diagnosed with prostate cancer in 1996 as well as skin cancer. The Duchess had a similar 'double diagnosis' of breast cancer and skin cancer in 2023 and 2024 – which has also had an understandable impact on her mental health. As she writes: 'Most recently, I don't mind admitting that my mind went to some dark places – focusing on my own mortality – when I was diagnosed with first breast cancer and then skin cancer, which my father had when he died and also killed my best friend.' This is not the first time Sarah has admitted to seeking help for her internal struggles. Like Diana, she dabbled with psychics and, in 1992, was reported to have visited a 'mystic healer' called Madame Vasso. 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I've always worked hard on my emotional wellbeing, so as well as exploring these issues, I was keen to understand how I could better use whatever platform I might have to advocate for more open discussion about mental health challenges and better policies in this area. I am particularly concerned about the crisis in mental health we are seeing in our young people. There are escalating rates of anxiety, depression and other wellbeing issues in the next generation. This crisis is driven by a combination of social, economic, and digital factors, compounded by the many challenges people face in accessing timely and effective support. All of this inspired my recent visit to Paracelsus Recovery in Zurich, which kindly hosted me as a guest. I am not embarrassed to reveal the clinic offered me a sanctuary, renowned as it is for its bespoke, cutting-edge treatment for those grappling with mental health and addiction issues – particularly those whose struggles are often hidden behind the facade of a public role. You may have heard of Paracelsus, named after the 16th-century Swiss physician and pioneer who went against the grain by declaring that those suffering from mental illness were not possessed by evil spirits but deserved humane treatment instead. The clinic that bears his name has proved successful because of two remarkable individuals: Dr Thilo Beck, the clinic's lead psychiatrist, and Jan Gerber, its chief executive and founder. Their insights into conditions such as complex post-traumatic stress disorder, adult attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and the need for mental health advocacy have left an indelible mark on me and made me determined to do more. Dr Beck, with his decades of experience and roles advising governments on health policy, and his determination to make his expertise available to all, doing extraordinary work with homeless people suffering from mental health and addiction problems, provided an understanding of complex PTSD and adult ADHD. He explained that these conditions often manifest in subtle ways, making them challenging to diagnose, especially in high-functioning individuals. I learnt that complex PTSD, resulting from prolonged exposure to trauma, can lead to an inability to control or regulate one's emotional responses, feelings of detachment and a pervasive sense of hopelessness. I wasn't there to be diagnosed, but we discussed my own childhood and the profound scars that were left when my mother left the family when I was 12 for a new life in South America. This certainly led to feelings of unworthiness and I'm sure contributed to an unhealthy attitude to food that often threatened to spiral into a full-scale eating disorder. Spending most of my life in the public eye has been a great privilege, but has also presented its own challenges. The tabloid headlines of the 1980s and 1990s and intrusions into private life have doubtless left a mark, as do comments on social media (which I regard as a cesspit). Most recently, I don't mind admitting that my mind went to some dark places – focusing on my own mortality – when I was diagnosed with first breast cancer and then skin cancer, which my father had when he died and also killed my best friend. A lot has been written about ADHD in recent years, and I've sometimes wondered whether there might be signs of it in me. 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The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
My unexpected Pride icon: Jurassic Park's strutting, swaggering T rex is pure camp
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Top Gear
an hour ago
- Top Gear
Question of the Week: which movie car do you dream of owning the most?
Question of the Week A Fast and Furious legend came and went for sale all too quickly last week, and that got us thinking… Skip 4 photos in the image carousel and continue reading Lead movie cars are cool when they're done right, and Han's Veilside 'Fortune' Mazda RX-7 from Tokyo Drift is one of the finest examples of this. That it hogged most of the attention in a movie packed with characterful metal - from Sean's RB26-swapped '67 Stang to Takashi's menacing 350Z - is telling of just how right its builders got it. Advertisement - Page continues below So you can imagine our frustration that one of the three original cars used in filming appeared for sale last week… before the listing ended on a whim. Chances are, someone saw the £345k price as a worthwhile investment. Shame, that. We were just about to hit 'post' on a bound-to-be-successful crowdfunding pitch... sniff. You might like Just look at it. That body kit completely transforms the RX-7's looks with new light signatures and a spate of bumper attachments. Chromed and dished five-spoke alloys sit at each corner, and the gorgeous silhouette is finished up in a 'House of Kolor Orange' and black livery. It was left completely stock, too, so the sequential twin-turbo, twin-rotor '13B' engine still put out 276bhp, got to 62mph in 5.3s and topped out at 155mph. No devilishly over-complicated internals here; just brutal Nineties simplicity that probably could be driven with a pair of Uwabakis on. Advertisement - Page continues below Sure, the bucket seats are slightly worn, but you will find an aftermarket sound system, a DVD screen on the passenger's side, and lots of carbon fibre along the dashboard and centre console. That R34-humbling NOS bottle is still perched between the seats, albeit probably empty after all these years. Still, very desirable. Anyway, that got us thinking: if you could pick one, and only one, which movie car do you dream of owning more than any other? Any movie, any era. Let us know below, and we'll round up our favourite answers at the end of the week. Go. Thank you for subscribing to our newsletter. Look out for your regular round-up of news, reviews and offers in your inbox. Get all the latest news, reviews and exclusives, direct to your inbox.