50 GORDON SQUARE
The path then moves toward the houses of members of the Bloomsbury Group.

This group were avant-garde and dangerous to Woolf’s status as an upper-class woman.
This ‘bohemian’ environment was also where Woolf explored the concept of sexuality,
untangling heteronormativity.


As Dorothy Parker famously quipped,
‘they lived in squares and loved in triangles.’
The group was full of great minds who loved to talk.
Woolf reminisces: ‘it was late at night; the room was full of smoke;
there were buns, coffee and whiskey strewn about; we were not wearing white satin or seed pearls;
we were not dressed at all.’