Gluck

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Gluck Page 31

by Diana Souhami


  Vert et Noir, Le 90

  View from Blackdown 192

  Violets 188

  Wave, the

  White Lilac and Guelder Rose 165

  Wilfrid Arthur, Lord Greene 73, 207, 239–40, 242

  Gluckstein, Doreen 67, 246, 271, 310, 311

  Gluckstein, Francesca (‘The Meteor’; mother) 16, 26, 50–2, 76–7, 172, 176

  charitable works 32–3, 38, 198

  courtship and marriage 27–9

  death 275

  at Gluck’s exhibitions 106–9, 152–4, 157–9, 164–8

  madness 227, 246–54, 271

  musical aspirations 28

  nervous breakdowns 33–4

  practical help for Gluck 76–8, 172, 182–3

  royal respect 33, 106–8, 157–9

  see also Gluck and ‘The Meteor’

  Gluckstein, Hannah see Gluck

  Gluckstein, Isidore 23

  Gluckstein, Joseph (father) 10, 11, 23, 27, 28–30, 34, 50–1, 52, 66, 67, 74

  death 74

  finances for Gluck 48–9, 74

  marriage 27–9

  rift with Gluck 39, 48–50

  Gluckstein, Louis Hallé (brother) 30, 31, 38, 50, 52, 197, 198, 246–7, 249–54, 271, 299, 306, 310, 311

  public offices 189, 227, 247

  Steward of the Fund 226

  see also Gluck and Louis

  Gluckstein, Montague 23, 25

  Gluckstein, Roy 307, 311

  Gluckstein, Samuel 23, 24, 49, 198

  Gluckstein Family, The 21, 35, 20–34, 49, 74 85, 197

  carriage folk 25

  catering business 21, 25–7

  see also Lyons, J. & Co.

  Fund, The 22–7, 74, 138, 198, 271, 307 motto 21, 23

  patriarchy 21–4, 29–30, 197

  Steward of the Fund 24, 226, 307

  tobacco business 21–3, 25

  see also Salmon & Gluckstein, tobacconists

  Glyndebourne 121, 222, 270

  Goddard, Rayner 207, 219, 239, 240

  Graham, Helen 159, 164–6

  Grant, Duncan 10, 189

  Gray, Frances 37

  Greene, Nancy 130, 143

  Greene, Wilfrid, Master of the Rolls 130, 143, 162, 192, 207, 219, 222, 239, 240

  Griffin, Clare 306, 307, 308

  Guildford Cathedral 78, 186

  Haggard, Stephen 81, 162

  Hall, Radclyffe 63, 81

  Hallé family 27–9, 34, 36

  Hammamet 11, 94, 99–101, 127, 140, 148

  Villa Hammamet 99, 226

  Hampstead 80–1, 84

  Hardinge, George 188

  Harley, Victor 260, 265

  Harper’s Bazaar 95

  Harrison, Claude 272

  Haworth, Evelyn 130

  Heal, Ambrose 88

  Heald, Edith Shackleton 9, 12, 16, 142, 192, 205, 206, 213, 216 218–19, 240–2, 275, 294, 301

  death of 308–9

  with G. and Nora at Chantry 218–24

  and G. at Plumpton 192, 204

  illness 290, 297, 305–8

  jealousy of G. 222, 272, 274

  journalism 211–15, 270

  and Yeats 204, 216–17, 229–38

  Heald, Harry 215, 240, 242, 275

  Heald, Ivan 212, 215

  Hero and Humorist 215

  Heald, Nora 212, 225, 275

  editor of The Lady 192, 204, 211–12, 214, 275

  Heidelberg 34

  Henson, Jean and Violet 99–100, 127, 140, 226

  Hepburn, Katherine 301

  Hill, Oliver 14, 95

  Hollenden, Lord 142, 172, 174

  Hoist, Gustav 36

  Homelands Nursing Home 307, 308

  Homes and Gardens 80, 92, 163

  Hoppé, E. O. 10–11

  Hôtel Idéal Sejour, Menton 217

  Houghton Library, Harvard 216

  Hunt, Holman 257, 258

  Illustrated London News 300

  Impermanence of Painting 259

  Joseph, Hannah 23, 24

  Joseph, John 49

  Karinska, Madame 11, 98

  Kelly, Gerald 262

  Kimmins, Anthony 277

  Kimmins, Elizabeth 189

  King and Pope 31

  Knight, Laura 69, 261, 262

  Koch, Louis 104, 152, 162

  Kubla Khan 122

  Lady, The 94, 110, 192, 204, 211, 214, 218, 221, 270

  Lamorna, Cornwall 10, 38, 41, 42, 48, 52, 65, 67, 69, 71, 96, 139, 167, 221, 289

  Lancaster, Osbert 255

  Layard, Peter 51

  Leader, Benjamin 38

  Lebus, Bob 87

  Leila 27

  Lenzerheide 169, 173

  Letter Studio, Lamorna 41, 71, 97, 172

  Lewinski, J.S. 313

  Lichtenstein, Keith 304

  Lion, Leon M. 124, 143

  Lobb, John, bootmakers 10

  Loire valley

  London Pavilion 14, 64, 66

  Loppert, Susan 304–5

  Love Between Women 123

  Lovett, Robert 284, 294, 309

  Lydis, Mariette, Comtesse de Govonne 95, 98

  Lyons, J. & Co. 9, 11, 22, 26–9, 30, 64, 270

  Lyons, Joseph 26, 310

  MacBride, Sean 238

  McCrindle, Ronald 146, 222

  Macha, SS 237–8

  Maison Roblot, Menton 229–30, 232, 234, 237

  Mailing, Lewes 176, 186

  Manchester City Art Gallery 164

  Mansard Gallery 88

  Mary, Queen 12, 106–8, 154, 157, 162, 289

  Massine, Leonid 52

  Maufe, Edward 62, 78, 79, 80, 88, 105, 138, 143, 178, 182, 186, 189, 254, 291, 300

  Maufe, Prudence 62, 87, 186, 267, 291, 300

  Maugham, Syrie 13, 14, 90–2, 106

  ‘Meteor, The’ see Gluckstein, Francesca

  Millers Mead, Plumpton 176–9, 187, 189, 197, 202, 205

  Mill House, Plumpton 126, 140, 142, 143, 170,

  179, 182, 187, 219, 222

  Mills, Annette 85

  Mitchell, Yvonne 24, 301

  The Family 24, 31

  Mondrian, Piet 14

  Moorcroft Hospital, Hillingdon 246, 247–9, 254

  Moore, Henry 192

  Motley (stage designer) 84

  Mount Temple, Lady Molly 12, 13, 14, 92–3, 98, 105, 106, 111, 124–5, 130, 143, 146, 148, 162, 255

  see also Broadlands, Romsey; Gayfere House

  Munnings, Alfred 10, 38, 39, 255, 310

  Drawing of Gluck dressed as a gypsy 49

  Musgrave, Clifford 205, 282

  Naper, Ella 43, 65, 139

  Nash, Paul 192

  National Gallery 264

  National Portrait Gallery 300

  Newlyn School 10, 38

  of Painting 38

  Newman, James 258

  Nicholls, Bertram 189, 204

  Nijinsky, Vaslav 51

  NSPCC 310

  Obermer, Nesta (née Ella Ernestine Sawyer)

  (colour I), 9, 77, 94, 99, 108, 121–38, 148, 159, 162, 164, 167, 170, 172, 175, 181, 282, 294, 306, 311–12

  broadcasts 148–9

  childhood 122–3

  in Honolulu 135, 136, 227–8, 259, 278

  marriage 122, 123

  and the Meteor 164–8, 171, 181, 183, 270

  paintings 182

  in Switzerland 291–2, 302

  travels 122–3, 127, 130, 134–5, 169, 170, 172, 202, 219, 224–5, 270, 271

  war effort 201–2

  writings 123, 149

  see also Gluck and Nesta Obermer

  Obermer, Seymour 50, 94, 122, 124, 131, 169, 227

  On with the Dance (colour II), 14, 64–5, 66

  Oppenheimer, Sir Francis 13, 92, 106, Orioli, Guiseppe ‘Pino’ 43

  Painter’s Day, A 149

  Pandora’s Paintbox 258

  Pankhurst, Christabel 182

  Park Gate, Chelsfield 96, 140

  Patrick, Andrew McIntosh 297, 298, 304
311

  PEN Club 142

  Pickford, Mary 43, 64

  Pigeon Post 50, 94, 131

  Pilgrim’s Progress (Bunyan) 311

  Pirie, Val (later Spry) 89, 97, 141, 301

  Plumpton, Sussex 124, 126, 140, 142, 143, 166, 173–4, 182, 188, 189

  Pollock, Martin 218, 242

  Priestley, J. B. 214, 270

  Priory, The, Roehampton 253–4, 270

  Procter, Dod and Ernest 38, 304

  Reasons of the Beginning and Other Imaginings 123

  Reeves (artists’ materials) 258, 263, 264

  Reeves, Ella 89

  Reid Dick, William 162, 164

  Robersons (artists’ materials) 258

  Roblot, Maison 229–30

  Roquebrune, cemetery at 229, 230–3

  Rosapenna, N. Ireland 293

  Rouse, Arthur, trial of 73

  Rowney, Tom 265–6

  Rowney & Son (artists’ materials) 15, 258, 264, 265, 266

  Royal Magazine 10

  Royal Society of Arts 267

  Royle Publications 292

  RSPCA 310

  Rubinstein, Michael 292–3

  Russian Ballet 48, 52

  St Buryan 48, 65

  St John’s Wood 25, 34

  Art School 38

  St Louis 28

  St Moritz 123, 131, 132, 134, 137, 169

  St Paul’s Girls’ School 35–6

  Salmon, Barnett 23, 31

  Salmon, Sir Cyril 28, 73, 280–2

  Salmon & Gluckstein, tobacconists 20, 22, 23, 25

  Samson, Julia 253, 310

  Sawyer, Ella Ernestine see Obermer, Nesta

  Sawyer, Mrs Ernest 131, 132, 170, 172, 177, 178, 195

  Schiaparelli, Elsa 11, 14 98, 99, 146

  Scott-James, Anne 218

  Scott-James, Rolfe 204

  Selfridge, Gordon 38

  Settle, Alison 204, 214, 220, 222, 242

  Shackleton, Ernest 212

  Shalimar Paints Ltd 259

  Shaw, George Bernard 10, 215

  So Good, So Kind 123

  Solomons, Barnet 246, 247, 249, 252

  Solomons, Sarah 31

  Southease, Sussex 148

  Spencer, Stanley 306

  Spry, Constance 13, 14, 15, 77, 90–8, 101, 105, 109, 140, 170

  death of 275

  and fashion 11, 90–2, 98

  flower arrangements 88–90

  marriages 87

  Winkfield Place 226

  Spry, Shav 87, 97, 226

  Spry, Val see Pirie, Val

  ‘Stage and Country’ 63–5, 71

  Star Man’s Diary 12, 110

  Stern, Edward 108, 109

  Steyning Grammar School 204

  Stiebel, Victor 11, 98

  Storri, Terri 64

  Strong, Roy 300

  Studio 110

  Sussex Churches Arts Council 188–9, 204, 222

  Sutherland, Graham 262

  Swinstead, Joan 162

  Tate Gallery 164

  Thesiger, Ernest 65, 66, 106, 143, 255

  Thomson, Andrew 259–60

  Tite Street studio 63, 69, 130

  Tonkinson, David 271, 298, 299–300, 310

  Toye, Geoffrey 80, 143, 148

  Trocadero 11, 22, 64, 201, 246

  Truefitt gentlemen’s hairdresser 10, 109, 270

  Tybalt (G.’s cat) 284

  Vaizey, Marina 300

  Verney, Sir Harry 106–7, 158–9

  Vernon House, Carlyle Square 94, 95

  Vernon Picture (colour III), 94, 95

  Victoria, Queen, Golden Jubilee of 25

  Victory Ball 52

  Vile Bodies (Waugh) 54

  Villiers, Lord and Lady 124, 143, 146, 179

  Vye, Winifred 17, 290–1, 294, 298, 302, 304, 308, 309

  War Artists’ Committee 192

  Watts, Arthur 81, 106, 310

  Watts, George Frederic 257, 258

  Watts, Margaret 107

  Watts, Manorie 220

  Watts, Marjorie-Ann 84

  Waugh, Evelyn 54

  Well of Loneliness, The (Radclyffe Hall) 81

  Wellesley, Dorothy 216

  Wells, H.G. 142, 215

  Weidenfeld & Nicolson 10

  Westbrook, A. J. 152, 155

  Westbury Hotel 299, 300

  Whistler, Rex 64

  Wilkinson, Norman 14, 64, 90, 106

  Wilson & Sons 261, 264

  Winsor & Newton (artists’ materials) 258, 260, 263, 264, 265

  Wolff, Charlotte 123–4

  Women in Fleet Street 212

  Wood, Diana 275

  Woodroffe, G.E. 249

  Woolf, Virginia 192

  Worthing Beach 293

  Yeats, George 217, 231, 232–7

  Yeats, Jack 238

  Yeats, W. B. 12, 204, 215, 216, 220

  death of 217

  and Edith Heald 216–7

  Epitaph 230

  reinterment 229–38

  Yglesias, ‘Golly’ 189

  Yorke, Anne 272–4, 283, 290

  Yorke, David 272

  ‘YouWe’ (colour I), 9, 121–30, 143, 162

  Zar 170, 171, 174, 179, 181, 187, 204

  Zinkeisen, Doris 64

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  I first saw Gluck’s paintings at her memorial exhibition at The Fine Art Society in 1981. Photographs and articles about her life were also displayed. Interest made me look for a biography of her, but I found that none had been written. Five years later, Jane Hawksley, then an editor at Pandora Press, wrote to me saying she liked reading my reviews of books and asking if I had a book I wanted to write. I thought again of Gluck.

  Since that initial fillip the kindness and assistance of many people have made this biography possible. I would like to acknowledge my gratitude and indebtedness to them, though I am responsible for all opinions expressed.

  My special thanks go to Gluck’s nephew, Roy Gluckstein. I would not have got far without his help. He allowed me to have sight of her manuscripts and other family papers and responded to my requests with fairness and promptness. His mother Lady Gluckstein, his brother David, and sister Jean Jaffa, provided me with candid and humorous accounts of Gluck. Geoffrey Salmon told me the story of the family’s history and the rise in the fortunes of J. Lyons & Co., the family business. Julia Samson, Gluck’s cousin, gave me her affectionate insights into Gluck’s character.

  Gluck had a long and distinguished association with The Fine Art Society in London and I am particularly grateful to the Society’s directors, Tony Carroll and Andrew Mcintosh Patrick. They have done all they could to make this book a success. They commented on the manuscript, gave permission to reproduce photographs of her paintings, opened their records to me and supplied me with many useful contacts.

  On a snowy afternoon in January 1987 I talked by a huge log fire with Hermia Priestley, a close friend of Gluck’s since the 1940s. I felt that I gained from Mrs Priestley a special understanding of Gluck and her aspirations. Equally memorable and useful were my meetings with Valerie Spry. She vividly evoked London of the 1930s and Gluck’s social milieu at that time. Keith Lichtenstein, who collected Gluck’s paintings and believed in her talent when the world had forgotten her, helped me to understand her worth as a painter. Susan Loppert, who had planned to write a biography of Gluck in 1974, generously made her notes available to me. David Tonkinson and Vernon Blackburn, Gluck’s accountants and hommes d’affaires, gave me their memories of Gluck and access to files of correspondence relating to her business matters. Professor Andrew Thomson helped me to understand her campaign to improve the quality of artists’ materials. Christine Leback Sitwell allowed me sight of the first draft of the thesis, now published, which she wrote on this campaign.

  I am indebted, too, to June and Raul Casares and to Dr Ivan Heald, who supplied me with information about the professional achievements and way of life of the sisters Nora and Edith Shackleton Heald; to Nesta Macdonald who loaned me letters
, and cuttings from the Evening Standard and the Sunday Express of Edith Shackleton’s leading articles in the 1920s; to David Yorke for his frank assessment of Gluck’s psychological make-up; to those who worked for Gluck at the Chantry House and told me much about her later life: Clare Griffin, her personal assistant, Mr Lovett the gardener, Winifred Vye, the housekeeper and Mrs Guy who did the housework.

  I am most grateful, also, for the help and information given to me by Chloe Blackburn, Dr Richard Boger, Meggie Bowman, the Duke and Dowager Duchess of Buccleuch, Betsan Coates, Georgina Cookson, William Davenport, Liz Drury, Peter Giffard, Robert Harris, Lady Lancaster, Marjorie-Anne Lowenstein, Julia Lowenthal, Diana Menuhin, Ralph Merton, George Morton, Gilbert Odd, Tom Parrington, Anne Pemberton, Dr and Mrs Konrad Rodan, Lt-CoL Nelson Sawyer, Edward Staysack, Marjorie Watts and Adrianne Whitney.

  My best thanks, too, to my agent Tessa Sayle for her support, to Peter Campbell for designing the book and for his comments on the manuscript and to Philippa Brewster, my editor. Acknowledgement is due to the Houghton Library, Harvard, who own the letters of W. B. Yeats to Edith Shackleton Heald paraphrased on pages 216 and 217; to the Huntington Library, California for the photograph on page 216 and to the Hulton Picture Library for the photograph on page 233.

  About the Author

  Diana Souhami is the author of many highly acclaimed books: Selkirk’s Island, winner of the 2001 Whitbread Biography Award; The Trials of Radclyffe Hall, shortlisted for the James Tait Black Prize for Biography and winner of the Lambda Literary Award; the bestselling Mrs. Keppel and Her Daughter, winner of the Lambda Literary Award and a New York Times Notable Book of 1997; Natalie and Romaine; Gertrude and Alice; Greta and Cecil; Gluck: Her Biography; and others. She lives in London and Devon.

  All rights reserved, including without limitation the right to reproduce this ebook or any portion thereof in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of the publisher.

  Copyright © 1988, 1989 by Diana Souhami

  Cover design by Kathleen Lynch

  ISBN: 978-1-4976-8335-8

  This edition published in 2014 by Open Road Integrated Media, Inc.

  345 Hudson Street

  New York, NY 10014

  www.openroadmedia.com

  DIANA SOUHAMI

  FROM OPEN ROAD MEDIA

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