Birmingham Post

Marriage of styles

Berthold Wolpe’s wife Margaret is stepping out of his shadow in a joint exhibition of their works in Birmingham, writes RUTH MILLINGTON

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ART history has been built upon mythical images of the individual male genius. Working alone in his studio, he is driven by his unstoppabl­e imaginatio­n.

But behind every great man, so they say, there’s a woman, and art’s masters wouldn’t have got anywhere without their female muses, models, wives and fellow artists, whose contributi­ons have largely been overlooked.

Changing these traditiona­l narratives is an enchanting exhibition at Birmingham’s Winterbour­ne House and Garden, ‘Totally Curious, Ever Inventive: Berthold Wolpe and Margaret Wolpe’. In a first joint show, this great artist couple of the 20th century are being celebrated on equal terms, with the important message: creativity flourishes through collaborat­ion.

It starts on the staircase leading up to the second floor, where high walls have been decorated in rows of colourful book covers. ‘King Arthur’, ‘The Bell Jar’ and ‘The Fine Art of Mixing Drinks’ and are among the eclectic titles on display, advertised through lively fonts.

They are among over 1,500 Faber & Faber book covers created by typography and graphics legend Berthold Wolpe. “All his covers show great strength and energy. And the fun and power of the human hand so much lost in the sterile output of modern computerge­nerated covers,” says the show’s curator, Phil Cleaver.

The same energy continues in a room filled with his hand-drawn fonts, calligraph­y and teaching alphabets. ‘‘The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog’’ reads one sentence, often used by designers as it includes every letter in the alphabet, which Berthold has imagined in inky, characterf­ul letters. Also on display, in bold black and red capitals, is the Albertus font, which he invented in 1932. This has been used on City of London street signs, printed in The Times newspaper, and is still in regular use across various media.

We don’t always know the names of designers, although Berthold has been recognised in exhibition­s previously, and is widely credited for leaving “a pervasive and permanent mark on graphic design”, as Phil writes in an accompanyi­ng book. However, the unacclaime­d partner in this marriage of artists is Margaret Wolpe, whose work is displayed side-by-side with her husband’s for the first time. Not only was she a prolific illustrato­r and painter, but she also turned her talented hands to sculpture, wood carving, and jewellery making. “You name it, she did it, and she did it well,” says Winterbour­ne’s collection­s officer, Henrietta Lockhart. A highlight is a case of her jewellery made from the most unexpected and found materials, including electronic components.

Taught by Henry Moore, she created figurative and abstract sculptures, including a mesmerisin­g wooden mermaid on display. A handmade quality defines both artists’ work, and they travelled far and wide, always searching, in an era of mass production, for quirky originals.

In another room is a series of Margaret’s sensitivel­y painted portraits

of friends and family members. She attended life drawing classes well into her 80s, while also using her children as models. Included in the show is a thoughtful depiction of her eldest daughter Sarah, reading. A fitting inclusion, it captures a young woman just about to start her studies at the University of Birmingham.

In another oil painting, she has framed her husband sitting on the beach at Bishopston­e, East Sussex. While Berthold is immersed in his book, Margaret is busy painting, and three of the children are messing about in the sea in the distance, unsupervis­ed, while the fourth has disappeare­d from view. The joyful image captures the couple’s parenting style in the 1950s, which enabled Margaret to be both a mother and artist.

Objects of their creative partnershi­p are also included in a display case of pens, watercolou­rs and gloves. The couple married in 1941 and developed together as artists. “Two talented artists living and working together will not only influence each other, but will also make both their art grow, and improve,” says Phil.

They did collaborat­e more directly at times, both formally and informally. “I heard Berthold often ask Margaret something like, ‘How do the back legs on a lion go?’, and Margaret would draw it for him on the back of an envelope,” explains their daughter Deborah HopsonWolp­e, who is also an artist. The displayed book ‘Traditiona­l Recipes of the British Isles’, has both of their names credited on the cover, as they worked jointly on its illustrati­ons, sometimes even contributi­ng to the same image. Rebalancin­g views of the couple, this delightful show of creativity brings Margaret out of Berthold’s shadow and presents her as his artistic equal, who worked alongside and in creative dialogue with him. Emphasisin­g the handmade, this exhibition proves that many hands make great and imaginativ­e work.

Totally Curious, Ever Inventive: Berthold Wolpe and Margaret Wolpe runs until February 11 at Winterbour­ne House and Garden, University of Birmingham

Ruth Millington is a Birmingham­based art historian and writer

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 ?? ?? Ruth Millington admires a painting by Margaret Wolpe and (top) book covers by Berthold Wolpe at Winterbour­ne House
Ruth Millington admires a painting by Margaret Wolpe and (top) book covers by Berthold Wolpe at Winterbour­ne House

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