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  1. Charles Raymond Bell Mortimer CBE (25 April 1895 – 9 January 1980), who wrote under the name Raymond Mortimer, was a British writer on art and literature, known mostly as a critic and literary editor . He was born in Knightsbridge, London, and brought up in Redhill, Surrey. He was educated at Malvern College and Balliol College, Oxford, which ...

  2. 1 de out. de 2005 · Bloomsbury Rooms: Modernism, Subculture, and Domesticity begins and ends with a reference to The New Interior Decoration (1929), a ‘schizophrenic’ collaboration between Dorothy Todd, recent editor of Vogue, and Raymond Mortimer.

  3. Raymond Mortimer. (1895-1980), Literary and art critic and editor. Sitter in 16 portraits. Literary and art critic and editor; wrote for Vogue and the Nation but came to wide attention with his reviews in the New Statesman of which he became literary editor (1935-47); chief reviewer for the Sunday Times (1948-52). Like.

  4. Journalist Raymond Mortimer was one of many to find contact with Bloomsbury a transformative experience. As a smart young man about town, he was soon writing pieces for the New Statesman and Vogue. Slim, dark and attractive, with a mop of curly hair, Raymond would never be Lytton’s idea of a ‘beauty’, but he cut a dashing figure.

  5. contemporaryartsociety.org › artists › raymond-mortimerRaymond Mortimer | CAS

    Charles Raymond Bell Mortimer CBE (25 April 1895 – 9 January 1980), who wrote under the name Raymond Mortimer, was a British writer on art and literature, known mostly as a critic and literary editor.

  6. Charles Raymond Bell Mortimer CBE (25 April 1895 – 9 January 1980), who wrote under the name Raymond Mortimer, was a British writer on art and literature, known mostly as a critic and literary editor. Edward Sackville-West, with Raymond Mortimer (right), at Garsington Manor, June 1923. He was born in Knightsbridge, London, and brought up in ...

  7. Charles Raymond Bell Mortimer CBE (25 April 1895 – 9 January 1980), who wrote under the name Raymond Mortimer, was a British writer on art and literature, known mostly as a critic and literary editor . He was born in Knightsbridge, London, and brought up in Redhill, Surrey. He was educated at Malvern College, and Balliol College, Oxford ...