We use cookies and other data for a number of reasons, such as keeping FT Sites reliable and secure, personalising content and ads, providing social media features and to analyse how our Sites are used.
Add this topic to your myFT Digest for news straight to your inbox
Celebrating the creatives whose youthful obsessions have inspired their artistry
The director’s new adaptation of ‘Orlando’ comes at a critical moment for conversations about gender fluidity
Kevin Puts’s score could do with more energy, but the drama of three women’s lives is compelling
Composer Kevin Puts discusses his new version of ‘The Hours’, starring Joyce DiDonato and Renée Fleming
From Mark Twain to Virginia Woolf, prime property where renowned authors once lived
With hybrid working set to become a permanent feature of our lives, it’s time to future-proof your space
Charleston, the hallowed Sussex haven of the Bloomsbury artists, provides the perfect backdrop for this season’s sumptuous styles
The cast navigates playwright Kate Scelsa’s zany twist on Edward Albee with deadpan flair
The hard-won visions of women artists reverberate in a Tate St Ives exhibition inspired by the writer’s work
The spirit of modernism is alive in a high-spirited dissection of ‘The Waves’
The Bloomsbury Group is ever present in a new exhibition of the artists’s work
The mezzo-soprano devised an intriguing programme based around mental illness
Wayne McGregor’s revived ballet is flawed, but strongly performed
How choreographer Wayne McGregor turned modernist fiction into dance
‘Hound of the Baskervilles’ written at Grade-II listed Undershaw
The program explores the urban experience seen through a woman’s eyes
Theatre and live video are interlaced in this overwhelming piece about war and weaponry
A richly detailed history of English literary life in the 20th century is alive to the influence of class but less sure-footed on gender
How much space can a family use? How much space does a family need, writes Judith Flanders
A mysterious cache of work by the photographer found at the V&A casts new light on her oeuvre
Aimee Farrell goes in search of artisanal chic, from boho coats for the Bloomsbury set to flower crowns fit for faerie festivals
There is no reason to suppose that TS Eliot is the last word on bankers with genius
Two attempts to fictionalise the lives of women at the heart of the Bloomsbury group
A psychological drama centres on a mourning couple, their dinner guests, and metaphorical collapse
Jez Butterworth’s play, starring Hugh Jackman, loses some of its impact in its Broadway incarnation
UK Edition