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Showing posts with the label The Summer Diary of a Lady Artist

Ann Fonsweer's "crimes"

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  This scrap of paper shows an incomplete sentence by an unknown writer. Her "crimes", her rough justice, her education of young men,...       The Summer Diary of a Lady Artist is available from Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com .

Strange Discovery

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 A gentleman in Bedfordshire was listening to Cambridge105 Radio ,   and heard a mention of a reprint of The Summer Diary of a Lady Artist . He had lived in Apple Limeway briefly (where the events in the diary take place) so he investigated further and found an image on the title page of the book . Summer Diary of a Lady Artist frontispiece. Something struck him about the "logo", presumably of the publishing company: Two Sisters Publishing . Two Sisters Publishing logo It reminded him of something, something his grandfather had, an old black and white photo. He contacted me by email (at ckfonsweer@gmail.com ), with the scanned photo attached: Ann Fonsweer's cabinet?   The photo is old and the photographer was inexpert but it is clear what reminded him of the logo of Two Sisters Publishing. The gentleman thinks the photograph was taken in the 1950s or 1960s. It seems to be a (wooden?) cabinet, but what is inside is impossible to guess. And why his grandfather took a photo ...

Old Postcards from Apple Limeway

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 Here are some very old postcards of Apple Limeway, the setting of most events in The Summer Diary of a Lady Artist by Ann Fonsweer. Presumably Ann knew these places well, and though she was an artist her drawings refer to her surroundings only tangentially.     The Summer Diary of a Lady Artist is available from Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com .

Ann Fonsweer Archive, Edinburgh, 1959

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 This photo seems to show the location of the Ann Fonsweer Archive. (Ann Fonsweer wrote what was to become The Summer Diary of a Lady Artist , an account of revenge and cougar love.) The "archive" was actually a drawer in a lawyer's office in Edinburgh. Ann Fonsweer Archive, 195? It is thought that the office was in the rooms above the shops, the ones with the arched windows. It was in this archive that new drawings, unseen for decades were discovered. There was also the strange discovery of a cut-out hand a little smaller than an inch in size:   It could be that Fonsweer used templates for some of her drawings, because there are quite a few figures with hands very similar to the one shown above. Presumably the actual template (the hand shaped hole) has been lost, but she, or someone for her, kept what had been cut out. For example on page 19:   The Summer Diary of a Lady Artist is available from Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com .   Fonsweer's "Crimes" Doycroft...

"There is a river..."

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 In the Summer Diary of a Lady Artist there is an entry for the 25th August 1935: "There is a river just over a mile away. Sometimes, very very early in the morning, I bathe in that river."    The drawing on the opposite page is incongruous. And there is something wrong with the arms. Maybe a drawing mistake impossible to correct on an ink sketch?  The photo was taken in the 1920s but the fashion in bathing costumes changed slowly one hundred years ago. Presumably the river mentioned on the first page of the diary is the same as the one she "bathes" in. The Summer Diary of a Lady Artist is available from Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com .

Doycroft Asylum

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  In Ann's Diary it is called Doycroft Hospita l (by Ann) and Doycroft Daft House (by Mrs. Busyness). Its official name was Doycroft Asylum. It was located just outside of Norwich. Doycroft Asylum, 1937 The Summer Diary of a Lady Artist is available from Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com .   (An aside: At the same time as Ann's Summer Diary (1935) there was a terrible case of an eleven year old child, Mary Marston. She murdered all her family in their beds with dress making scissors, then burnt the house down. Mary was not considered of sane mind, and was not convicted of murder. She was sent to Doycroft Asylum, and ended her days there.)

Ann Fonsweer's Summer Diary and LSD

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 Some young UK readers and non UK readers have been puzzled by these symbols on the first page: They are pronounced LSD but stand for Pounds Shillings and Pence. Like English spelling the language was corrupted by Latin scholars, and £sd actually stands for Librae, Solidi, and Denarii.  When Ann was around this monetary system was used with 20 shillings in the pound, 12 pence in a shilling. When she mentions the money owing to her from her brother she uses the £sd symbols. And here is what she would have handled:            LSD the hallucinogenic drug was discovered in 1938 by Hofman, 3 years after the events in the diary, so though the drawings of Fonsweer seem to suggest hallucination, artificial stimulants were not used it seems...         A reprint of The Summer Diary of a Lady Artist is available from Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com , ISBN 978-1-4466-7410-9. Contact: ckfonsweer@gmail.com

A story of cougar love...

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Another way of looking at The Summer Diary of a Lady Artist ... ...is an illustrated account of revenge, violent protection of the innocent and cougar love. Available from Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com .

Ann Fonsweer's Strange Signature

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 Ann Fonsweer, the artist who became posthumously famous after the publication of her illustrated diary, had a strange signature. Most of the examples we have come from the diary itself, the images which follow are scanned from the reprinted edition of that diary. She seems to have adopted the "name" or "identity" of Alpha Eff. (The Greek letter "α" and an English language letter "f". Clearly referring to Ann Fonsweer.    These examples of her signature show that they are easily copy-able, so if someone offers you a "genuine Fonsweer" ask for provenance and don't rely on the signature!  A reprint of The Summer Diary of a Lady Artist is available from Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com , ISBN 978-1-4466-7410-9. Contact: ckfonsweer@gmail.com      

Marshal Edwards and Ann Fonsweer

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 A friend recently said that she'd seen a condescending reference to Ann Fonsweer in the book Marshal Edwards Patron of the Arts by H Christopher. I asked for more detail, and she had meant to take some notes and then had forgot, she was in a rush to catch a train! They were both living in Cambridge in 1935, but he was at the University, Trinity College, and she was living in Apple Limeway. A reprint of The Summer Diary of a Lady Artist is available from Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com , ISBN 978-1-4466-7410-9. Contact: ckfonsweer@gmail.com

St. John's Church, Apple Limeway

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 This photo shows the interior of the St. John's church, Apple Limeway. St. John's Church Apple Limeway, Cambridgeshire, 1930 circa Here is a postcard which shows the exterior of the church:  Ann mentions the church in her diary: Sunday 14th July 1935 I went to church this morning. I walked there with the Sisters and smiled at everybody. I looked at the stained glass as I always do, ignored the sermon and just thought. It is hard to tell what the Sisters believe. There is a slight air of superiority when they sit on their pew. But they live together in a cottage as small as mine. It has occurred to me that there is only one bedroom. They must sleep in the same room. So what are they superior about?   I contrived to walk back with them. I asked them how they ended up in this village in that cottage. They told me a vague story about a father and a small legacy and Linda’s love of gardening. A reprint of The Summer Diary of a Lady Artist ( An illustrated novel of cougar lov...

Frontispiece of the original edition of "The Summer Diary of a Lady Artist"

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 Here is the frontispiece of the original edition of "The Summer Diary of a Lady Artist" by Ann Fonsweer. "This is an illustrated diary of revenge, violent protection of the innocent, and cougar love. In the interwar years, in Cambridgeshire, Ann Fonsweer has stolen an education by piggybacking on the private schooling of her brother. When the diary starts, brother and sister are estranged, and Ann survives on what money he sends her. The diary reveals these financial money worries as well as the anger she feels towards her previous lovers. She is attracted to a youth in her village, who reveals to her a future crime. She decides to prevent the crime. Every page of the diary is accompanied by an odd pen and ink drawing, secretive hard to interpret."   A reprint of The Summer Diary of a Lady Artist ( An illustrated account of cougar love and the protection of the innocent ) is available from Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com , ISBN 978-1-4466-7410-9. Contact: ckf...

Apple Limeway railway station

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 Ann Fonsweer travelled between Apple Limeway to Cambridge using the train. Here is a photo of Apple Limeway Station, probably in the 1930s when she was still living in the village. See this post for the location of Apple Limeway.   A reprint of The Summer Diary of a Lady Artist is available from Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com , ISBN 978-1-4466-7410-9. Contact: ckfonsweer@gmail.com

Rare edition

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 Not only is this a rare edition of Ann Fonsweer's Summer Diary Of A Lady Artist, but it is the only survivor of a limited (and neccessarily private) print run. The book was discovered in the Two Sisters Publishing archive .   Douglas Ainslee must have got hold of a copy because he said of the book: " This is a dark and mysterious text disguised as a diary, and there a sort of infinity in the spaces between the words. "   A reprint of The Summer Diary of a Lady Artist is available from Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com , ISBN 978-1-4466-7410-9. Contact: ckfonsweer@gmail.com

Apple Limeway, Cambridgeshire

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  Apple Limeway, near Cambridge, is where all the events described in the book, The Summer Diary of a Lady Artist take place.   Old Lime Hall, Apple Limeway.   It was in Old Lime Hall where Ann had her first interview with George Randal.   A reprint of The Summer Diary of a Lady Artist is available from Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com , ISBN 978-1-4466-7410-9  

Sunday 14th July 1935, "Corrupter"

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  A reprint of The Summer Diary of a Lady Artist is available from Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com , ISBN 978-1-4466-7410-9. Contact: ckfonsweer@gmail.com

Tuesday 9th July 1935, My Cheque Appears, My Key Disappears

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  A reprint of The Summer Diary of a Lady Artist is available from Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com , ISBN 978-1-4466-7410-9. Contact: ckfonsweer@gmail.com  

Saturday 6th July 1935, Boy fishing

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  A reprint of The Summer Diary of a Lady Artist is available from Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com , ISBN 978-1-4466-7410-9. Contact: ckfonsweer@gmail.com

The Summer Diary of a Lady Artist by Ann Fonsweer

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  Ann was a verb, not a noun, and the words and drawings in this book are just traces, fixed in time, of her actions, desires and thoughts. A reprint of The Summer Diary of a Lady Artist is available from Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com , ISBN 978-1-4466-7410-9. Contact: ckfonsweer@gmail.com