Tarr (Oxford World's Classics)

Tarr (Oxford World's Classics) by Wyndham Lewis Read Free Book Online

Book: Tarr (Oxford World's Classics) by Wyndham Lewis Read Free Book Online
Authors: Wyndham Lewis
Post-Impressionists’ in London. Early stories appear in
The Tramp: an Open Air Magazine
.
1911
Joins the Camden Town Group of artists.
1912
Displays large canvas
Kermesse
(now lost) at the Allied Artists’ Association exhibition at the Royal Albert Hall. Other artwork included in Fry’s ‘Second Post-Impressionist Exhibition’.
1913
Briefly joins Roger Fry’s Omega Workshop, then breaks with Fry over accusation of stolen commission for the Ideal Home Show. Portfolio of drawings for Shakespeare’s
Timon of Athens
published.
1914
Founds Rebel Art Centre with Kate Lechmere. (20 June) first issue of Vorticist journal
Blast
appears under Lewis’s editorship, including play
Enemy of the Stars
and contributions by Pound, Ford Madox Ford, and T. E. Hulme. (4 Aug.) England declares war on Germany, entering the First World War.
1915
Meets T. S. Eliot. (July) Second and last issue of
Blast
, ‘WAR NUMBER’ appears, including contribution by Eliot and announcement of death of Vorticist sculptor Gaudier-Brezska in the war. Completes original version of
Tarr
.
1916
Enlists in the Royal Garrison Artillery, as Gunner and then Bombardier. Fights in third battle of Ypres.
Tarr
begins to appear in serial form in
The Egoist
(Apr. 1916–Nov. 1917). While Lewis is at the front, Pound helps arrange sale of
Tarr
to Knopf in New York.
1917
Gains commission as an official war artist for Canadian Corps headquarters. Short story ‘Cantleman’s Spring Mate’ published in
Little Review
: its sexual frankness leads to suppression of the issue by the US Post Office.
The Ideal Giant
(play). T. E. Hulme killed near Lewis’s battery.
1918
Tarr
appears in America and England. Returns to London. Meets future wife Gladys Anne Hoskins (‘Froanna’).
1919
First one-man show, exhibition of war art, ‘Guns’ at Goupil gallery.
The Caliph’s Design: Architects! Where is your Vortex?
published by Egoist Press.
1920
(9 Feb.) Mother dies. Lewis forms ‘Group X’, which disbands after single exhibition in March. Meets James Joyce with T. S. Eliot during trip to Paris.
1921
(Apr.) Edits first issue of arts journal
The Tyro
. Exhibition, ‘Tyros and Portraits’. Begins period of ‘going underground’ to work on massive book project
The Man of the World
.
1922
(Mar.) Second and last issue of
The Tyro
.
1924
(Feb.–Apr.) Two excerpts from
The Apes of God
published in T. S. Eliot’s journal
The Criterion
.
1926
The Art of Being Ruled
(political and cultural analysis).
1927
Time and Western Man
(philosophical, cultural, and literary analysis).
The Wild Body
(short stories).
The Lion and the Fox
(study of Shakespeare). Edits first issue of
The Enemy: A Review of Art and Literature
(three issues to 1929).
1928
The Childermass
(novel). (Dec.) Revised version of
Tarr
published by Chatto and Windus.
1929
Paleface: The Philosophy of the ‘Melting Pot’
. Meets W. B.
Yeats.
1930
The Apes of God
(novel).
Satire and Fiction
. (9 Oct.) Marries Froanna.
1931
Hitler. The Diabolical Principle
.
1932
The Doom of Youth. Filibusters in Barbary. Snooty Baronet
(novel).
1933
The Old Gang and the New Gang. One Way Song
(poetry).
1934
Men Without Art
(literary and cultural criticism).
1936
Left Wings over Europe, or How to Make a War about Nothing. The Roaring Queen
(novel; suppressed).
1937
Blasting and Bombardiering
(autobiography).
Count Your Dead: They are Alive! The Revenge for Love
(novel). Exhibition of paintings and drawing at Leicester Galleries. Begins to lose his sight from pituitary tumour.
Twentieth Century Verse
special Lewis issue.
1938
The Mysterious Mr Bull
. Portrait of T. S. Eliot rejected by Royal Academy.
1939
The Jews, Are They Human?
(polemic against anti-Semitism).
The Hitler Cult: and How it will End
. Tate Gallery acquires
Portrait of Ezra Pound
. (3 Sept.) England declares war on Germany. Lewis and wife move to Canada and United States for six years.
1940
America, I Presume
.
1941
Anglosaxony: A League that Works. The Vulgar

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