Geoffrey Grigson

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Geoffrey Grigson
BornGeoffrey Edward Harvey Grigson
(1905-03-02)2 March 1905
Pelynt, Cornwall, England
Died25 November 1985(1985-11-25) (aged 80)
Broad Town, Wiltshire, England
Pen nameMartin Boldero
OccupationPoet, essayist, editor, critic, anthologist and naturalist
EducationSt John's School; St Edmund Hall, Oxford
Notable awardsDuff Cooper Prize
Children4, inc. Lionel Grigson; Sophie Grigson
RelativesJohn Grigson (brother); Wilfrid Grigson (brother); Giacomo Benedetto (grandson)

Geoffrey Edward Harvey Grigson (2 March 1905 – 25 November 1985) was a British poet, writer, editor, critic, exhibition curator, anthologist and naturalist. In the 1930s he was editor of the influential magazine New Verse, and went on to produce 13 collections of his own poetry, as well as compiling numerous anthologies, among many published works on subjects including art, travel and the countryside. Grigson exhibited in the London International Surrealist Exhibition at New Burlington Galleries in 1936,[1] and in 1946 co-founded the Institute of Contemporary Arts. Grigson's autobiography The Crest on the Silver was published in 1950. At various times he was involved in teaching, journalism and broadcasting. Fiercely combative, he made many literary enemies.[2]

Life and work

Grigson was born at the vicarage in Pelynt,[3] a village near Looe in Cornwall. His childhood in rural Cornwall had a significant influence on his poetry and writing. As a boy, his love of objects of nature (plants, bones and stones) was sparked at the house of family friends at Polperro who were painters and amateur naturalists. He was educated at St John's School, Leatherhead, and at St Edmund Hall, Oxford.[3]

Poet and editor

After graduating from Oxford University, Grigson took a job at the London office of the

Morning Post.[4] He first came to prominence in the 1930s as a poet, then as editor from 1933 to 1939 of the influential poetry magazine New Verse.[5] Among important works by many influential poets — notably Louis MacNeice, Stephen Spender, Dylan Thomas, W. H. Auden, Paul Éluard and Grigson himself — New Verse featured concrete poetry by the sculptor Alberto Giacometti (translated by David Gascoyne) and folk poetry from tribal villages of the Jagdalpür Tahsil district of Bastar State, Chhattisgarh, transcribed from the Halbi language by Grigson's brother Wilfrid Grigson. During this period, Grigson published some of his own poetry under the pseudonym Martin Boldero.[6] An anthology of poems that appeared in the first 30 issues of New Verse was published in hardback by Faber & Faber in 1939, and re-published in 1942; the second edition states that the first "came out on the day war was declared".[7]

During

Evesham, Worcestershire, and as a talks producer for the BBC at Bristol.[8][9]

Art curator

In 1946, Grigson was one of the founders of the Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA) in London, together with Roland Penrose, Herbert Read, Peter Watson and Peter Gregory.[10][11] In 1951, Grigson curated an exhibition of drawings and watercolours drawn from the British Council Collection, which for three decades toured worldwide to 57 art galleries and museums.[12] The exhibition consisted of more than 100 works, including those of John Craxton, Barbara Hepworth, Augustus John, Wyndham Lewis, Henry Moore, Paul Nash, Ben Nicholson, John Piper, and Graham Sutherland.

Art critic and author

Grigson was a noted critic, reviewer (for the

anthologies. He published 13 collections of poetry, and wrote on a variety of subjects, including the English countryside,[13][14] botany, travel, and especially art –– with books on Wyndham Lewis, Henry Moore, and most notably, Samuel Palmer
.

In 1951, he was General Editor of the 13-volume About Britain series of regional guidebooks published by William Collins to coincide with the Festival of Britain.[15] After the repression of the Hungarian Revolution of 1956, at the initiative of Stephen Spender, Grigson joined a group of British writers and artists who applied for visas to visit dissidents in Hungary.[16] The visas were refused.

Champion and scholar of Samuel Palmer

Grigson's Samuel Palmer: The Visionary Years (1947), an aptly poetic chronicle of the artist's early life influences and experiences, which contained 68 photo illustrations, introduced to a broad audience the early works of one of England's greatest Romantic painters. Grigson's follow-up, Samuel Palmer's Valley of Vision (1960), included a selection of the artist's own writings and an additional 48 plates. Both books featured a number of previously unpublished paintings, drawings, and sketches. They established Grigson as the foremost authority on Palmer's revered 'Shoreham Period', and helped trigger a surge of interest in Palmer's youthful, ecstatic, fantastical depictions (during a time of post-war riots and Industrial Revolution) of Nature's abundance, in an idyllic Kentish countryside.[17][18][19][20]

Controversially, these books also caught the attention of famous art forger Tom Keating, who used their illustrations as models for a series of Palmer fakes that he did in the 1960s and '70s.[20] In 1976, along with Palmer experts from the Ashmolean, Fitzwilliam, Tate, and British Museums, Grigson helped Times reporter Geraldine Norman confirm that 13 suspect Palmers that had come on the market over the previous decade were forgeries.[17] At Keating's 1979 art fraud trial at the Old Bailey, in his searing testimony on the credulity of the Bond Street art merchants who bought and sold some of the fake Palmers, contentious art critic Brian Sewell referred to a personal letter in Grigson's The Visionary Years that made ridiculous a key element of the provenance they had proffered, much to the delight of Keating's defence barrister.[21][22]

In the catalogue for a major retrospective held by the British Museum and The Metropolitan Museum of Art on the bicentenary of Palmer's birth (2005), Colin Harrison, curator at the Ashmolean Museum, in his essay on the artist's rediscovery, credited Grigson's 1947 book with effectively establishing a canon of Palmer's early work.[20]

Final years

Grigson was the castaway featured in an edition of Roy Plomley's Desert Island Discs on BBC Radio 4 first broadcast on 16 October 1982.[23] In 1984, he was interviewed by Hermione Lee in an edition of Channel 4's Book Four.[24]

Grigson in his later life lived partly in

département in France, which features in his poetry. He died in 1985 in Broad Town, Wiltshire, where he is buried in the churchyard of Christ Church.[25]

Family

Born in 1905, Grigson was the youngest of seven sons of Canon William Shuckforth Grigson (1845–1930), a

Second World Wars,[31][32] among them John Grigson.[33] This was one of the highest rates of mortality suffered by any British family during the conflicts of the 20th century.[34] Grigson's surviving brother, Wilfrid Grigson, was killed in an air crash in 1948 while serving as a post-Partition official in Pakistan.[34]

Geoffrey Grigson's first wife was Frances Franklin Galt[8] (who died in 1937 of tuberculosis). With her, he founded the poetry magazine New Verse. They had one daughter, Caroline (who married designer Colin Banks). With his second wife, Berta Emma Kunert, Grigson had two children, Anna and Lionel Grigson. Following divorce from his second wife, Grigson married Jane Grigson, née McIntire (1928–90). Their daughter is Sophie Grigson. Among Grigson's grandchildren is the political scientist Giacomo Benedetto.[35]

Honours and legacy

Grigson was awarded the Duff Cooper Prize for his 1971 volume of poetry Discoveries of Bones and Stones.[36] A collection of tributes entitled Grigson at Eighty, compiled by R. M. Healey (Cambridge: Rampant Lions Press), was published in 1985, the year of his death.[8] In 2005, to mark the centenary of Grigson's birth a conference was held at St Edmund Hall, Oxford.[2]

In 2007, Pallant House Gallery in Chichester presented the exhibition Poets in the Landscape: The Romantic Spirit in British Art. The exhibition explored "the creative links between poetry, the pastoral vision and British art in the work of Romantic artists of the 18th and 19th centuries, and the Neo-Romantic artists of the mid-20th century", with exhibits of Grigson's anthology The Poet's Eye, featuring lithographs by John Craxton, and copies of New Verse.[37]

In 2017, the British Museum presented a major exhibition of British landscape paintings from the century following the death of J. M. W. Turner. The exhibition title was "borrowed from the poet and critic Geoffrey Grigson's 1949 collection of essays Places of the Mind",[38] and, in doing so, "acknowledges how every landscape drawing is a construct of the mind and imagination of its creator".[39]

Works

  • The Arts To-day (John Lane The Bodley Head, 1935), editor.
  • Several Observations (Cresset Press, 1939), poems.
  • Under the Cliff, and Other Poems (Routledge, 1943).
  • Henry Moore (Penguin, 1944).
  • Visionary Poems and Passages or The Poet's Eye (Frederick Muller, 1944), editor. Lithographs by John Craxton.
  • Wild Flowers in Britain (William Collins, 1944).
  • The Isles of Scilly and Other Poems (Routledge, 1946).
  • The Mint: a Miscellany of Literature, Art and Criticism (George Routledge & Sons, 1946).
  • Before the Romantics: an Anthology of the Enlightenment (Routledge & Sons, 1946), editor.
  • Samuel Palmer: the Visionary Years (Kegan Paul, 1947).
  • Wild Flowers in Britain (Collins, 1947).
  • John Craxton. Paintings and Drawings (Horizon, 1948).
  • An English Farmhouse and Its Neighbourhood (Max Parrish, 1948).
  • Places of the Mind (Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1949).
  • Poems of John Clare's Madness (Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1949), editor.
  • Poetry of the Present: an Anthology of the 'Thirties and After (Phoenix House, 1949), editor.
  • The Crest on the Silver: an Autobiography (Cresset Press, 1950).
  • The Victorians: an Anthology (Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1950).
  • Flowers of the Meadow (Penguin Books, 1950).
  • Festival of Britain "About Britain" Guides (Collins, 1951), general editor.
  • Thornton's Temple of Flora (Collins, 1951).
  • Essays From the Air: 29 Broadcast Talks (1951).
  • A Master of Our Time: a Study of Wyndham Lewis (Methuen, 1951).
  • Gardenage, or the Plants of Ninhursaga (Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1952).
  • Legenda Suecana. Twenty-odd Poems (printed for the author, 1953)[40]
  • Freedom of the Parish (Phoenix House, 1954). About Pelynt, Cornwall.
  • The Englishman's Flora (Phoenix House, 1955).
  • The Shell Guide to Flowers of the Countryside (Phoenix House, 1955).
  • Painted Caves (Phoenix House, 1957).
  • The Shell Guide to Trees and Shrubs (Phoenix House, 1958).
  • English Villages in Colour (Batsford, 1958).
  • The Three Kings: a Christmas Book of Carols, Poems and Pieces (Gordon Fraser, 1958), editor.
  • Looking and Finding (Phoenix House, 1958; revised edition John Baker, 1970).
  • The Shell Guide to Wild Life (Phoenix House, 1959).
  • A Herbal of All Sorts (Macmillan, 1959).
  • The Cherry Tree (Phoenix House, 1959), poems.
  • English Excursions (Country Life, 1960).
  • Samuel Palmer's Valley of Vision (Phoenix House, 1960).
  • The Shell Country Book (Phoenix House, 1962).
  • Poets in Their Pride (Dent, 1962).
  • Gerard Manley Hopkins (Longmans, Green & Co., 1962).
  • Collected Poems 1924–1962 (Phoenix House, 1963).
  • O Rare Mankind! (Phoenix House, 1963).
  • The Shell Nature Book (Phoenix House, 1964).
  • Shapes and Stories, with Jane Grigson (Readers Union, 1965).
  • The Shell Country Alphabet (Michael Joseph, 1966; Particular Books, 2009, with introduction by Sophie Grigson).[41]
  • William Allingham's Diary (Centaur Press, 1967).
  • A Skull in Salop, and Other Poems (Macmillan, 1967).
  • An Ingestion of Ice Cream and Other Poems (Macmillan, 1969).
  • Shapes and People – A Book about Pictures (J. Baker, 1969).
  • Poems and Poets (Macmillan, 1969).
  • Notes from an Odd Country (Macmillan, 1970).
  • The Concise Encyclopedia of Modern World Literature (Hawthorn Books, 1970), editor.
  • The Faber Book of Popular Verse (Faber & Faber, 1971), editor.
  • Discoveries of Bones and Stones (Macmillan Poets; Macmillan, 1971).
  • Sad Grave of an Imperial Mongoose (Macmillan, 1973), poems.
  • The Faber Book of Love Poems (Faber & Faber, 1973), editor.
  • The Faber Book of Popular Verse (Faber & Faber, 1973), editor.
  • The First Folio (Poem of the Month Club, 1973).
  • The Contrary View: Glimpses of Fudge and Gold (Macmillan, 1974).
  • A Dictionary of English Plant Names (and some products of plants) (Allen Lane, 1974).
  • Angles and Circles and Other Poems (Gollancz, 1974).
  • Britain Observed: the Landscape Through Artists' Eyes (1975).
  • The Penguin Book of Ballads (Penguin, 1975), editor.
  • The Goddess of Love: The Birth, Triumph, Death and Return of Aphrodite (Quartet, 1978).
  • The Faber Book of Epigrams and Epitaphs (Faber & Faber, 1978), editor.
  • The Faber Book of Nonsense Verse: With a Sprinkling of Nonsense Prose (Faber & Faber, 1979), editor.
  • The Oxford Book of Satirical Verse (Oxford University Press, 1980), editor.
  • The Penguin Book of Unrespectable Verse (Penguin, 1980), editor.
  • The Faber Book of Poems and Places (Faber & Faber, 1980), editor.
  • History of Him (Secker & Warburg, 1980), poems.
  • Blessings, Kicks and Curses: a critical collection (Allison & Busby, 1982).
  • Collected Poems 1963–1980 (Allison & Busby, 1982).
  • The Private Art: a Poetry Notebook (Allison & Busby, 1982).
  • The Cornish Dancer and Other Poems (Secker & Warburg, 1982).
  • Geoffrey Grigson's Countryside (Ebury Press, 1982).
  • Recollections, Mainly of Writers and Artists (Hogarth Press, 1984).
  • The English Year from Diaries and Letters (Oxford Paperbacks, 1984).
  • The Faber Book of Reflective Verse (Faber & Faber, 1984), editor.
  • Country Writings (Century, 1984).
  • Montaigne's Tower and Other Poems (Secker & Warburg, 1984).
  • Persephone's Flowers and Other Poems (David & Charles, 1986).

References

  1. OCLC 9735630
    .
  2. ^ a b "Geoffrey Grigson", St Edmund Hall, University of Oxford.
  3. ^ .
  4. ^ Adrian Caesar, "Geoffrey Grigson's New Verse", in Dividing Lines: Poetry, Class, and Ideology in the 1930s, Manchester University Press, 1991 (pp. 107–121), pp. 109, 111.
  5. ^ "Geoffrey Grigson", Encyclopædia Britannica.
  6. ^ "Correspondence. William Empson and Geoffrey Grigson on climbers, criticism, and the morality of rudeness", Poetry, January and May 1937. Poetry Foundation.
  7. ^ Geoffrey Grigson, ed. (1942). New Verse – An Anthology, London: Faber & Faber, p. 7.
  8. ^ a b c Julian Symons, "Grigson, Geoffrey Edward Harvey (1905–1985)", rev. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2009, accessed 2 December 2013.
  9. ^ Matthew Bell, "The BBC bunker they don't want you to know about", The Independent, 30 October 2010.
  10. ^ "History", ICA website.
  11. ^ Barry Miles, London Calling: A Countercultural History of London since 1945, Atlantic Books, 2010, page 62. “London Calling” states that: “The ICA was founded in 1946 by the artist and critic Roland Penrose, the poet and art critic Herbert Read, (and) the Cornish poet and editor Geoffrey Grigson, and two sponsors: the art collector and benefactor Peter Watson... and Peter Gregory, the owner of Lund Humphries... Penrose, Grigson and Read were the ideas men”.
  12. ^ "British Drawings and Watercolours of the 20th Century from the Collection of the British Council", Visual Arts, British Council.
  13. ^ Grigson, Geoffrey (1948). Piper, John (ed.). AN ENGLISH FARMHOUSE AND ITS NEIGHBOURHOOD (1st ed.). Max Parrish.
  14. ^ Frances Spalding, John Piper, Myfanwy Piper: Lives in Art, Oxford University Press, 2009, pp. 126–27.
  15. ^ Richardson, R. C. (2015), "Cultural Mapping in 1951: The Festival of Britain Regional Guidebooks" (Abstract), Literature and History 24(2): 53–72.
  16. ^ Letter to The Times, 15 November 1956.
  17. ^ a b Norman, Geraldine (16 July 1976). "Authenticity of Palmer drawings is challenged. A question of art: Are thirteen Samuel Palmer drawings brilliant modern forgeries?". The Times. pp. 1, 12.
  18. ^ Grigson, Geoffrey (1947). Samuel Palmer: The Visionary Years. London: Kegan Paul. pp. 4, 7, 8, 23–25, 33, 45–48.
  19. ^ Grigson, Geoffrey (1960). Samuel Palmer's Valley of Vision. London: Phoenix House. pp. 1–10.
  20. ^ .
  21. ^ Grigson, Geoffrey (1947). Samuel Palmer: The Visionary Years. London: Kegan Paul. p. 119.
  22. .
  23. ^ Desert Island Discs Castaway Archive, BBC Radio 4, October 1982.
  24. ^ "Geoffrey Grigson interview, 1984", YouTube.
  25. ^ "Geoffrey Grigson (1905-1985)", The Literary Cemetery.
  26. ^ Nikolaus Pevsner (1970), Cornwall, Penguin Books, p. 132.
  27. ^ "Find War Dead – First World War", Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC).
  28. ^ Grigson, Kenneth Walton, died 20 July 1918 aged 23. CWGC.
  29. ^ Grigson, Lionel Henry Shuckforth, died 9 May 1917 aged 19. CWGC.
  30. ^ Grigson, Claude Vivian, died 15 October 1918 aged 18. CWGC.
  31. ^ "Find War Dead – Second World War", Commonwealth War Graves Commission.
  32. ^ Grigson, Aubrey Herbert, died 27 April 1942 aged 41. CWGC.
  33. ^ Grigson, John William Boldero, died 3 July 1943 aged 50. CWGC.
  34. ^ a b Jeremy Archer, "One Family's Sacrifice – The Story of the Seven Sons of Canon and Mrs William Shuckforth Grigson", The Keep Military Museum, Dorchester, Dorset.
  35. ^ Benedetto, Giacomo. "Giacomo Benedetto".
  36. ^ "Past winners" Archived 22 December 2020 at the Wayback Machine, The Duff Cooper Prize.
  37. ^ Simon Martin, Martin Butlin & Robert Meyrick, "Poets In The Landscape", Pallant House Gallery, 31 March to 10 June 2007.
  38. Routledge & Kegan Paul
    , 1949.
  39. ^ Kim Sloan, Jessica Feather, Anna Gruetzner Robins, Sam Smiles and Frances Carey (curators), "Places of the Mind", British Museum, 23 February to 28 August 2017.
  40. ^ "Geoffrey Grigson. Legenda Suecana 1953", Bookride, 21 May 2009.
  41. ^ Kathryn Hughes, "The Shell Country Alphabet by Geoffrey Grigson: Kathryn Hughes welcomes the reissue of a forthright 1960s guide to touring the countryside" (review), The Guardian, 8 August 2009.

Further reading

External links