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Mary Barnes

 
American Author: Charlotte Mary Sanford Barnes

  • Born: 1818
  • Died: April 14, 1863

Charlotte Mary Sanford Barnes made her acting debut at the Tremont Theater, in Boston, in 1833, playing Juliette to the Romeo of her mother, Mrs. Mary Barnes. She wrote and starred in a New York City production of Octavia Bragaldi; or, The Confession in 1837.

Most Famous Works

  • Octavia Bragaldi (1837)
  • The Night of the Coronation (1838)
  • The Forest Princess (1848)
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Works: Works by Charlotte Mary Sanford Barnes
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(1818-1863)

1837Octavia Bragaldi; or, The Confession. The author's first and best-known drama is originally produced in New York City, starring Barnes in the title role. The tragedy in blank verse follows attempts by Edgar Allan Poe and Thomas Holley Chivers to adapt the true events of the Beauchamp murder, which had caused a sensation in Kentucky in 1825. The play, set by Barnes in fifteenth-century Milan, details accumulating acts of deception, seduction, jealousy, and murder, leading to the heroine's suicide.
1848The Forest Princess. This historical melodrama shows Pocahontas in America and England. Barnes also publishes Octavia Bragaldi, a blank-verse drama based on the Beauchamp murder in Kentucky (1825), first produced in 1837.

Wikipedia: Mary Barnes
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Detail from a Mary Barnes painting

Mary Edith Barnes (9 February 1923 in Portsmouth, England – 29 June 2001 in Tomintoul, Scotland) was an English artist and writer who suffered from schizophrenia but recovered to become a successful painter. She is particularly known for her documentation of her experience at R.D. Laing's experimental therapeutic community at Kingsley Hall, London.

Contents

Life

Mary Barnes trained as a nurse and joined the army in World War II. She worked in Frankfurt for two years before retuning to London as a full time nurse.

Therapy

In 1963, after reading Laing's book, The Divided Self, she contacted him and began therapy, which intensified when she entered Kingsley Hall in 1965 and underwent regression therapy. During the process, she discovered a talent for art. She would later be described as "an ambassador for Laing" emerging from her journey to co-author a book about it with Joseph Berke, the resident psychiatrist who helped her.

Her works, vivid oils often depicting religious themes - were first shown at the Camden Arts Centre in 1969. She subsequently became a respected artist, painting evocative works based on her experiences and showing her work on tour worldwide, accompanying it with talks on her experiences and mental health. In 1979 a play was produced, with script by Barnes with David Edgar.

In 1985, she moved to Scotland. Something Sacred, her book of conversations, writings and paintings, was published in 1989. In 1993, she moved to Tomintoul, where she died in 2001.

Publications

References

  • Mary Barnes - Obituary, The Times, London, July 9, 2001
  • Mary Barnes: Gifted artist who documented her struggle with mental illness in paint and print, The Guardian, London, July 13, 2001

External links

  • Book Review - Mary Barnes
  • Mary Barnes, tribute site to "Nurse, Madwoman, Explorer of the Underworld, Celebrant of Death and Rebirth Member of Kingsley Hall Community, Artist, Writer, Healer, Catholic mystic, Visionary"

 
 

 

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Answers Corporation American Author. © 1999-2009 by Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Works. The Chronology of American Literature, edited by Daniel S. Burt. Copyright © 2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Mary Barnes" Read more