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| New York Public Library exhibition post for ‘Virginia Woolf – A Modern Mind’ 
 
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“Buildings fall; even the earth perishes. What was yesterday a cornfield is today a bungalow. But words, if properly used, seem able to live for ever.” – Virginia Woolf, BBC broadcast Words Fail Me, 1937. 
I was lucky enough to be in New York in 2023 when the New York Public Library held their exhibition ‘Virginia Woolf – A Modern Mind’. As is the way with this blog, I had good intentions of writing about it at the time, but then life got in the way. I have finally got round to capturing my thoughts on this exhibition, and on reflection, I am so pleased that my trip to New York coincided with being able to see this incredible collection. 
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| New York Public Library exhibition ‘Virginia Woolf – A Modern Mind’ | 
Housed in just one small room in the New York Public Library, this exhibition was packed with books, manuscripts, and artefacts all relating to Virginia Woolf and The Hogarth Press.  I had never seen so many Virginia Woolf first editions with Vanessa Bell front covers all in one place at the same time. It was the first time I really understood how transformative Woolf’s work must have been at the time she was writing. When so many books from that time were plain, cloth bound editions, to have those vibrant covers must have been so refreshing. 
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| Virginia Woolf books, Jacob's Room, To The Lighthouse and The Waves | 
I don’t think I had also realised how exciting the rest of the Hogarth Press works were either. Equally vibrant and modern, in a world that had just come out of the horrors of the first world war.
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| The Memorial by Christopher Isherwood by The Hogarth Press | 
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| A Letter To A Young Poet by Virginia Woolf published by The Hogarth Press | 
The exhibition commentary consisted of short biographical information about Woolf, picking out key highlights from her work and life, and large quotes from her diaries and writings illustrated with some of the few photographs of her at different stages in her life. As well as copies of her books, there were letters to friends, manuscripts, and sketches from Vanessa Bell for front cover designs. One object that was fascinating was Virginia Woolf’s passport from 1923. 
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| Virginia Woolf's passport from 1923 | 
There wasn’t much in this exhibition that I didn’t know about, but somehow seeing all the books together in one place gave me a very different sense of what the impact The Hogarth Press must have had on the world of publishing, and those common readers who bought the books. What I hadn’t seen before was the business correspondence, such as this short card from Virginia Woolf detailing how their subscription service would work. 
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| A letter to a subscriber about The Hogarth Press | 
The ‘Complete Catalogue of the Hogarth Press’ must have been exciting post to receive. Persephone Books still sends out postal communications to their readers and I am always excited when something from them lands on the door mat. 
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| Complete Catalogue of the Hogarth Press | 
There was a mention of Persephone Books in the notes about ‘Cheerful Weather for the Wedding’ by Julia Strachey, published by The Hogarth Press in 1932 with a wonderful cover by Harold Knight. This book was out of print for a long time, until Persephone Books published it in 2002, reviving interest in it. 
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| | Cheerful Weather for the Wedding’ by Julia Strachey, published by The Hogarth Press | 
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I was pleased to see that the exhibition included the work of Vanessa Bell, in particular this sketch for the cover of ‘On Being Ill’. It is quite different from the finished book, but you can see some of the ideas coming through, the use of squares, and the capitalisation of the title and author name. 
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| Sketch for 'On Being Ill' | 
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| On Being Ill published by The Hogarth Press 
 
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The exhibition highlighted the collection of Woolf materials the New York Public Library holds. After Virginia’s death in 1941, Leonard Woolf worked on her diaries and felt that it was important that her papers be held together in one collection. The library is keen to state that the collection is open to anyone, “all you need is a research project – and a library card” and a plane ticket to New York!
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| To The Lighthouse published by The Hogarth Press 
 
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I was so pleased I happened to be in New York when this exhibition was on, it isn’t often you get to see so much of Woolf’s work in one place, and I enjoyed it so much I visited twice while I was there. 
 
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