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SELECTED Long Live Great Bardfield: The Autobiography of Tirzah Garwood

Long Live Great Bardfield: The Autobiography of Tirzah Garwood

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When Tirzah Garwood was 18, she went to Eastbourne School of Art, where she was taught by Eric Ravilious. Over the next 4 years she did many wood engravings and these were widely praised and several were displayed by the Society of Wood Engravers. Alas, after she and Eric were married in 1930 a large part of her time was spent on domestic chores. In 1935 she had the first of her 3 children. In 1942, the year she was operated on for breast cancer, she wrote her autobiography (in the evening, after the children were in bed).

In The Wood Engravings of Tirzah Ravilious (1987) the novelist and designer Robert Harling wrote: ‘The manifold talents of Tirzah as wood engraver, artist and designer (especially of exquisite marbled papers) were well-known to her friends, but have been virtually extinguished by the steadily growing fame of Ravilious’s achievements. Tirzah was content for this to be so, for she was uncommonly and genuinely modest and a devoted wife and mother, but as far as her work was concerned, she certainly lost out.’

When she began her autobiography Tirzah wrote: ‘I hope, dear reader, that one may be one of my descendants, but as I write a German aeroplane has circled round above my head taking photographs of the damage that yesterday’s raiders have done, reminding me that there is no certainty of our survival. If one are not one of my descendants then all I ask of one is that one love the country as I do, and when one come into a room, discreetly observe its pictures and its furnishings, and sympathise with painters and craftsmen.’

And as her daughter Anne Ullmann observes in the Preface, writing was therapeutic, it helped her at a time of adversity to sort out a way forward.’ She concludes: ‘Time and the honesty of Tirzah’s words have made this an immensely important document and it is a valuable primary record of a woman who was at the centre of an important group of artists, and who was herself a very good artist in her own right.’

Long Live Great Bardfield: The Autobiography of Tirzah Garwood