Camille Claudel

I saw the film “Camille Claudel”  which concentrates on the sculptress’s incarceration in an asylum for over 30 yrs. her family used her inheritance to pay for her to stay there. Only her brother visited her infrequently and he ignored her pleas to be released also the doctors advised her release but she died in the asylum forgotten. She had a passionate affair with Rodin and assisted him with several of his works. She had an abortion and he refused to marry her and her family thought her morally depraved. She destroyed a lot of her work when she was unhappy and then locked up. i love what i’ve seen of her work in paris and her life was tragic abandoned by all.

I went to see an exhibition today of work by Rose Dempster Bonner  at Orlean House Gallery. She lived from 1874-1967 and lived in East Sheen Richmond. I’d never heard of her before, she had 13 paintings shown at the Royal Academy (as have I) and did mainly portraits of skilful ability in oils and pastel. She was a single woman with an independent spirit and was probably gay and lived with a woman. Tragically she lost most of her sight in her fifties so couldn’t paint anymore. although her Mother lived with her and she did some remarkable paintings of her, when her Mother died she left her out of her will as she disapproved of her life style. However her 2 brothers were sympathetic to her attachment to her friend and gave her rightful share in the family estate.I enjoy visiting Orleans House and seeing the Octagon room built as a garden pavilion for a Thames side house by James Gibbs(1672-1746) who built St Martins in the fields at Trafalgar Square. The most famous resident of the original House( now demolished apart from the octagon room) was the Duc d’Orleans ,Louis Philippe who rented the house while in exile from France between 1815 and 1817. After the defeat of Napoleon at Waterloo, Louis Philippe returned to France becoming King in 1830. the house then became known as Orleans House.