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  1. Dorothy Shakespear (14 September 1886 – 8 December 1973) was an English artist. She was the daughter of novelist Olivia Shakespear and the wife of American poet Ezra Pound. One of a small number of women vorticist painters, her art work was published in BLAST, the short-lived but influential literary magazine .

  2. Shakespear completed few paintings during and after World War II. While she received little recognition for her artwork in her lifetime, several posthumous publications and exhibitions have featured her work and acknowledged her contributions to the Vorticist movement.

  3. Introduction. Chapter. pp 1–6. Cite this chapter. Download book PDF. Ira B. Nadel. Part of the book series: Literary Lives ( (LL)) 68 Accesses. Abstract. Dorothy Shakespears early reaction to Ezra Pound was not unusual. 1 Throughout his life, Pound provoked, disturbed and challenged the status quo, whether in literature, politics or morals.

    • Ira B. Nadel
  4. 1 de mai. de 2011 · The painter Dorothy Shakespear (1886–1973), who was to contribute to BLAST II, is not shown. Dismorr and Saunders were as thoroughly trained, and could lay claim to as much professional recognition, as the other founding members of the Vorticist group.

  5. 28 de jul. de 2011 · The Vorticist movement had two female members, Helen Saunders and Jessica Dismorr, while Dorothy Shakespear was an unofficial member. Art historian Biddy Peppin, a relative of Helen Saunders, tells us the story of the female Vorticists. Transcription.

  6. 15 de jun. de 2018 · Olivia Tucker Shakespear (1863-1938): a married woman who became William Butler Yeats’s mistress in 1895, only to be forsaken by him a year later when he became infatuated with Maud Gonne. Dorothy Shakespear Pound (1886-1973): daughter of the above and wife of the poet Ezra Pound.

  7. Pound's Correspondence and the Concept of Modernism 385. Dorothy Shakespear that threatened their engagement in 1913. We sense the deep and abiding respect that Pound held for the literary judgment of Ford Madox Ford, a figure whose place in the history. of literary modernism is long overdue for reconsideration.24 We.