The interiors of Charleston: the house the Bloomsbury Group turned in to a living work of art

Nestled in bucolic Sussex gardens the seventeenth-century exterior belies the riot of imaginative decoration inside; a legacy of its function as artistic residence to the Bloomsbury Group

'The house seems full of young people in very high spirits, laughing a great deal at their own jokes...lying about in the garden which is simply a dithering blaze of flowers and butterflies and apples,' wrote Vanessa in 1936. Indeed over the next sixty years the house would become a magnet for the intellectual avant-garde.

The house is now a museum and gallery, but has suffered due to the closures imposed by the coronavirus lockdown. An independent charitable trust with no public funding, the house relies on ticket and shop sales, as well as its cafe and events programme for income. The crisis also coincided with Charleston’s main fundraiser – its annual literary festival in May, a flagship event that has been running for over 30 years. Nathaniel describes the cancellation of the 10-day festival as ‘absolutely crippling’, although some talks are still running this week online here. You can help Charleston by donating to their emergency appeal here, or by heading over to the charity auction hosted on Emily Maude's Instagram page here. Artists and makers including Bridie Hall, Wallace Sewell, Molly Mahon and Monika Forsberg have contributed pieces to the auction, making it a stylish way to help out the trust.

charleston.org.uk