Geoffrey Scott
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- For the American actor, see Geoffrey Scott (actor).
Geoffrey Scott (June 11, 1884 – August 14, 1929) was an English scholar and poet, known as a historian of architecture. His biography of Isabelle de Charrière entitled The Portrait of Zelide won the 1925 James Tait Black Memorial Prize.
Born in Hampstead, he was educated at Rugby School and New College, Oxford.
While still an undergraduate he was befriended by Mary Berenson, leading to his admission to the Florence 'circle' of Bernard Berenson. From 1907 to 1909 he was employed by Berenson; he worked on the design of the garden of I Tatti, the Berenson villa, with Cecil Ross Pinsent (1884–1963). This led to work on other gardens. It also brought him the friendship of John Maynard Keynes, who met him there.
In 1914 the publication of The Architecture of Humanism made him a reputation. He married[1] in 1916 Lady Sybil Cutting, widowed in 1910 (who later married Percy Lubbock). With little in the way of career, it has been suggested that an unlikely love affair with Vita Sackville-West from 1923 to 1925 spurred him into his later literary production.
At the time of his death, of pneumonia in New York, he had been retained as an editor of the papers of James Boswell.
He was one of Edith Wharton's close friends.
[edit] Works
- The Architecture of Humanism: A Study in the History of Taste (1914)
- A Box of Paints (1923) poems
- The Portrait of Zélide (1925) biography of Isabelle de Charrière
- Poems (1931)
[edit] References
- Geoffrey Scott and the Berenson Circle: Literary and Aesthetic Life in the Early 20th Century (1998) Richard M. Dunn