Lady Ottoline Morrell

1902

This stunning portrait, taken in 1902, captures the enigmatic beauty and poise of Lady Ottoline Violet Anne Morrell, one of Edwardian Britain’s most remarkable society figures. With her unmistakable style—lace collar, pearls, and an introspective gaze—Ottoline embodied the elegance of her era while quietly shaping the cultural future of Britain.

Not merely a face of aristocracy, she was a powerful patron of the arts and literature, a confidante to T.S. Eliot, D.H. Lawrence, Aldous Huxley, and Siegfried Sassoon, and an icon in the Bloomsbury Set and beyond. Her salon became a refuge for revolutionary minds, nurturing modernist thinking in an age of constraint.

📜 Her portrait is more than a photograph—it's a window into the early 20th-century soul of British creativity.

✨ Have you inherited portraits of extraordinary women from your family archive?
🖼️ Help preserve them. Upload them to Oldpik.com and keep their stories alive.

Contributed by OldPik on January 7, 2024

Image

Lady Ottoline Morrell
You must be logged in to comment on the photos.
Log in

No comment yet, be the first to comment...

Nearby photos

Building the Metropolitan Railway.

c. 1845 OldPik

Earliest known photograph of Victoria, here with her eldest daughter, Victoria

c. 1852 OldPik

Zoological Gardens in Regents Park

The Nelson Column, Trafalgar Square

Photo of Alice Liddell taken by Lewis Carroll