Lady in the Dark

Iris Barry and the Art of Film

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Robert Sitton: Lady in the Dark (2014, Columbia University Press)

496 pages

English language

Published Jan. 22, 2014 by Columbia University Press.

ISBN:
978-0-231-53714-8
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Iris Barry (1895-1969) was a pivotal modern figure and one of the first intellectuals to treat film as an art form, appreciating its far-reaching, transformative power. Although she had the bearing of an aristocrat, she was the self-educated daughter of a brass founder and a palm-reader from the Isle of Man. An aspiring poet, Barry attracted the attention of Ezra Pound and joined a demimonde of Bloomsbury figures, including Ford Maddox Ford, T. S. Eliot, Arthur Waley, Edith Sitwell, and William Butler Yeats. She fell in love with Pound's eccentric fellow Vorticist, Wyndham Lewis, and had two children by him. In London, Barry pursued a career as a novelist, biographer, and critic of motion pictures. In America, she joined the modernist Askew Salon, where she met Alfred Barr, director of the new Museum of Modern Art. There she founded the museum's film department and became its first curator, assuring film's …

2 editions

Subjects

  • Museum of modern art (new york, n.y.)
  • Film critics
  • Great britain, biography
  • Motion picture film
  • Motion picture film collections