In 1888, in
London, she met Bernard Berenson. She became an authority on art history and took up with Berenson in Italy. Berenson developed a reputation as an art expert, and it is believed that Mary substantially helped Bernard's work. Their book
The Venetian Painters of the Renaissance was published in 1894 under Berenson's name; Mary's mother reportedly asked that Mary not take credit for her work. She and Berenson eventually married in 1900 after her first husband died, although they both had affairs and Mary believed this was because they liked to hurt each other. Subsequently, Berenson brought together a social circle at
Villa I Tatti, the Berenson home, and developed its gardens. She hosted some of the most celebrated personalities of the period, including
Edith Wharton,
Gertrude Stein,
Gabriele D'Annunzio,
John Maynard Keynes, and
Isabella Stewart Gardner. By 1927, Mary tired of entertaining and left the duty of hosting to the couple's librarian Elizabeth Mariano. Mariano was one of Bernard's lovers, and Mary would much later write to give permission for Mariano to marry Bernard. In later life she was plagued by illness and by 1935 she was largely an invalid. In 1940, her eldest daughter died of surgery complications, and she was left by her husband under
Fascist regulations (as he was a
Jew) in the care of Mariano's sister. Mary remained in I Tatti until she died in 1945. == See also ==