Friday 11 November 2022

A Blog about Herstory of the Women Artists who were Documenting WWII

 Who Were the Women War Artists 
in Britain During WWII?


During the Second World War, there was a special department set up to employ artists to document the war.  Following a call for artists that was broadcast through a BBC radio announcement, 37 artists were commissioned to become official war artists, through the 'WAAC' programme. A War Artists Advisory Committee, formed within the Ministry of Information, by one of Winston Churchill's parliamentary secretaries, Harold MacMillan and Sir Kenneth Clark. It was established on 16th November, 1939. 


WVS (Women's Voluntary Service) Clothing Exchange. Painting by Evelyn Gibbs

Of the 37 artists who were approved by the WAAC to be official war artists and employed on both full-time and part-time contracts, initially, only 4 of those were women. This was at a time when over 70% of artists were unemployed.

Those first 4 women were Essex born watercolour specialist Dorothy Josephine Coke (1897-1979) who studied under Sir Henry Tonks at The Slade School of Art and painted women mechanics during WWII, Evelyn Dunbar (1906-1960) who was paid a salary to document the land girls, Evelyn Gibbs (1905-1991) who studied at Liverpool School of Art and the Royal College of Art. She founded the Midlands Group of Artists in 1943 and her work is held by the Imperial War Museum. Ethel Gabain (1883-1950) painted A Child Bomb Victim Receiving Penicillin during WWII as well as painting Alexander Fleming in the laboratory where he had discovered the drug.

        Land Girls Pruning at East Malling.  Painting by Evelyn Dunbar 1944


Architect Jane Drew (1911-1966) who was the only woman on the Architectural Design Council, designed air-raid shelters for the East End of London and also worked out schemes for home defence for the ARP (Air Raids Precautions Department), including a patented device for blackout ventilation of windows.


     A painting by Dorothy Josephine Coke, of WAAF woman instrument mechanics during WWII.

According to an article published in the Evening News in December 1939, artist Marjorie Morrison was the first woman to be engaged to design a mural for an Air Raid Precaution hoarding that was already in position.  This photograph shows her at work painting boards to hide the entrance to The Building Centre in Bond Street, London. 


Olga Lehmann (1912-2001) also a graduate of Slade School of Art was working as a portrait and mural artist and gave up her private commissions; painting murals in homes, businesses and on luxury ocean liners once the war broke out. Wanting to be part of the war effort, she requested and received a sketching permit from the Ministry of Information.  Lehmann was one of only another 8 females that were granted the role of official war artist and suddenly found themselves creating art in a wide range of circumstances, in the middle of war.

Collaborating with Architect Jane Drew, they planned murals to help boost morale of the public, by brightening up main thoroughfare areas of Regent Street, where closed-down shops looked grim due to the ugly sandbags in front of them. As of February 2nd, 1940 these murals had not been executed due to the soaring cost of wooden boards for the hoardings.

Then in May 1940 'The War As I See It' exhibition was opened by the curator, art and fashion historian and writer James Lever (1899-1975) at The British Art Centre, The  Stafford Gallery in St.James Place, London SW1. Showing over 100 war paintings from a variety of contemporary artists including the well-known French illustrator Mariette Lydis, British lyrical painter Margaret Thomas (1916-2016) is another artist who had initially studied at the Slade before furthering her education at the Royal Academy.

For the official WAAC commissions, many of the subjects that appointed women war artists covered were from the Home Front, featuring Royal Ordnance Factories (such as munition factory workers), voluntary services such as the WVS (Women's Voluntary Service), farming/agriculture, nurses and child evacuees.

       Southend Children being Evacuated 1940. Lithographic Print by Ethel Gabain


Ethel Gabain in her wonderfully detailed prints, showed children at a railway station being evacuated to the countryside from Southend-on-Sea on 2nd June 1940. The children are clutching their necessary supplies and unaware of what their onward journey might bring. 

Another of her lithographs was of women in the St Pancras area who were salvage-workers on demolition sites brick sorting and chipping during the Blitz of 1941.  She was a well-respected French-Scottish print-maker who had also studied at the Slade School of Art in London. Her commissions through the WAAC included documenting the work of the WVS (Women's Voluntary Services), child evacuees and women working in industries such as agriculture and medicine. 
Some 38 of Gabain's war-time lithographic artworks are held in the WAAC collection at the Imperial War Museum.


Tedious but essential hard graft for Islington Borough Council.

Going against the grain of the kind of work they would usually doing.

Women Filling Sandbags. Lithographic Print by Ethel Gabain.

Much of the labour that was documented by Women War Artists was in industries relating to what would usually be considered a man's world, such as the underground factory in Corsham, near Bath, illustrated by Olga Lehmann, where women were making Bristol Centaurus engines for Hawker Tempest warplanes.

      Factory workers underground at Spring Quarry, working on Centaurus Engines for war planes.
      Painting by Olga Lehmann, who was also commissioned to create murals at the underground factory          with the aim of brightening up the canteen areas for workers who very rarely saw the light of day.

    
Dame Laura Knight was commissioned to create a recruitment poster for the re-establishment of the WLA (Women's Land Army) that had first been established during WWI to recruit women, initially as volunteers, as many of the male agriculture workers had signed up for the armed forces.

After WWI the Women's Land Army was disbanded and reintroduced in 1939 for WWII. Towards the end of the war in 1944, around 80,000 female workers who would fondly became known as 'land girls' had joined the WLA, working mostly outdoors, rolling up their sleeves and proffering their skills to increase food productivity.  This rural work would give the women a healthier lifestyle and vitally, would ensure that there was enough food to get Britain through the war, by encouraging the growing of crops at home in Blighty rather than through imports.

         
 
Land Girls Ploughing. c1941. Oil on Canvas by Evelyn Dunbar.


Around 17 paintings and studies by Dame Laura Knight were exhibited between the National Gallery and the Royal Academy during the war. 'Girl Power' was a feature of her paintings as can be seen in the intense focus to her work being given by factory worker Ruby Loftus. This famous painting from 1943 'went viral' as we would say today and was reproduced in newspapers and magazines around the world.


Ruby Loftus Screwing a Breech Ring by Dame Laura Knight

In the painting that follows, Corporal Daphne Pearson of the WAAF (Women's Auxiliary Air Force) was painted by Laura Knight with a gas mask in her hand. In actuality, for the portrait sitting, the subject was insistent on holding a rifle, however, this was against regulations and was therefore not permitted to be shown. This is why Corporal Daphne Pearson looks like she has braced herself ready for battle in this painting.

                             
                                 Corporal Daphne Pearson painted by Dame Laura Knight

The Devastation Was Real

                                Progress by Olga Lehmann. 1940. Scraper board technique. Included in the exhibition
                                        'This is War As I See It' that took place in central London in April 1940. 

Progress, the central figure in this satirical artwork by Olga Lehmann holds 
a torch representing 
education. There are bomber planes swirling around, as well as  barrage balloons and devastating scenes of the Blitz, including a church on fire, firemen wearing gas masks and injured civilians fleeing the scene. Some of Olga Lehmann's WWII paintings are in the collection of the Victoria & Albert Museum in London.


    Olga Lehmann painted several scenes of the impact of the Blitz on London, including this one      of the St John's Wood area after an air raid in 1940. 


Evelyn Dunbar, one of the approved women war artists was tasked in 1941, during the London Blitz to paint scenes of hospital trains, including a goods wagon, converted into makeshift wards. Carriages belonged to the London and North East Railway. Her paintings are held in the Imperial War Museum.



A Child Bomb Victim Receiving Penicillin. Painting by Ethel Gabain. 1944

Makeshift Hospitals

                                                         Hospital Train by Evelyn Dunbar


                                                           Hospital Train by Evelyn Dunbar



Putting on Anti-Gas Protective Clothing. Painting by Evelyn Dunbar

A Bit of Light Relief for Air Raid Precautions Wardens

On August 20th, 1940 Olga Lehmann became the first mural artist to have been appointed by Air Raid Precautions to create a mural to decorate their headquarters. Her murals were unveiled by Mr Harold Scott, Chief Administrative Officer of the London Civil Defence Region.

                                    One of a series of murals painted at the ARP Headquarters by
                                    Olga Lehmann. 1940.

Thank God It's Christmas!

Even during WWII there were Christmas celebrations.  This painting by Olga Lehmann shows Christmas in the church crypt at St John's Wood which served as an air raid shelter during the London Blitz.


                              

War is Over

Doris Zinkeisen, a costume designer from Scotland was one of the commissioned women war artists who documented British life during WWII and was also the first artist to enter the notorious Bergen-Belsen concentration camp after its liberation by the British Army on April 15th 1945. The death camp was on fire. Doris Zinkeisen described the horrific scenes that she saw in letters to her husband. Those who died at Bergen-Belsen after contracting typhus included Anne Frank and her sister Margot. 

This painting of burning Bergen-Belsen is held in the British Red Cross Museum and there are also other paintings by Zinkeisen documenting relief work that the charity carried out in the camp where it is thought that over 50,000 human beings perished. Those that the Nazi regime did not believe should live for whatever reasons including their religion, the Jews, their way of life, the Roma Gypsies, their sexual preferences, Homosexuals, Czechs, non- Jewish Poles and those with anti-Nazi political beliefs. 


                           

    November 11th. Armistice Day of Remembrance


Today as I write this blog, is November 11th. Armistice Day for those killed during WW1. The official day of remembrance as it marks the ending of WWI.  This day is a reminder, not only of WWI but of all wars and of all those affected by war, wherever they are in the world. May peace prevail.

Thank you for reading. I hope you found this of interest and will continue to promote the work of those often over-looked women artists of Herstory.



Poppy Dress Window Display for the Royal British Legion Poppy Appeal
Fundraising Campaign. Created by Mandie Stone. 2015


Resources:

https://busheymuseum.org/artists-ethel-gabain

https://www.iwm.org.uk/history/what-was-the-womens-land-army

https://www.stjohnswoodmemories.org.uk

https://the-past.com/review/the-wartime-art-of-laura-knight

www.redcross.co.uk

www.annefrank.org

Tuesday 24 May 2022

Olga Lehmann and Friends 

Award Winning Designers of
Costumes, Storyboards and Sets for the
Hollywood Movie Industry

As mentioned in one of my previous blogs, Olga Lehmann in her industrious and illustrious career as an artist, was prolific as a costume designer for some top Hollywood movies. The British Film Institute at Berkhamsted (BFI National Archive) hold a breathtakingly beautiful archive of her design illustrations, plans and storyboard designs for films including The Man in the Iron Mask, Let's Be Happy (1956), The Master of Ballantrae (1980) and A Tale of Two Cities (1984).

The Lovers, Illustration by Olga Lehmann for Tom Thumb Opening Credits


One of my favourites has to be the wonderful, fun and family friendly Tom Thumb movie (1958) for which Olga created the wonderful artwork to accompany the credits as well as being the Costume Designer. The designs she created for the costumes in the fairground scenes are particularly vibrant and exciting.


Watch out for these 2 dodgy geezers?
Cor blimey, it's only those comedy actors Terry Thomas and Peter Sellers - looking quite villain-ish in these fun illustrations by Olga Lehmann for the opening credits of Tom Thumb (1958)


Olga Lehmann has a unique artistic style of her own when it comes to her designs for costumes. It is really worth making an appointment to visit the archive at the British Film Institue (BFI) to view the portfolio of wonderful original artworks in real life. With the white gloves on of course, to protect these images forever!


A costume design by Olga Lehmann for
Angela Lansbury in
The First Modern Olympics, Athens 1896


Olga Lehmann didn't always work on her own as Costume Designer, she would be with wardrobe managers, including Brenda and  Daryl and fortunately would sometimes have a fully-fledged Costume Design Assistant.  In 1983 when she was working on the TV movie adaptation of JM Barrie's Master of Ballantrae, she discovered that it would be filmed back to back with another movie, The First Modern Olympics: Athens 1896 starring some big names, including actresses Angela Lansbury and Bond Girl, Honor Blackman. Whenever I think of Honor Blackman, I always think of the 1960s song "Kinky Boots' from The Avengers - a song with lyrics that it would probably be impossible to get away with these days.

Now, where was I. Oh yes, I was mentioning that Olga didn't always work on her own creating her designs. Filming two big movies back to back, in various locations, was to be a fair amount of work for Olga and luckily she was able to enlist Robert Worley as her assistant. Robert was talented and had a degree in Costume and Theatre design. He and Olga had met a couple of years before, when she 'discovered' him while they were working on A Tale of Two Cities (1980 TV movie), for which Olga received credit as the Costume Designer and has described Robert as being worth his weight in gold. The two of them became lifelong friends as well as work colleagues.


Costume Designs by Olga Lehmann for A Tale of Two Cities (1980)

Robert Worley has himself carved a very successful career as a Costume Designer, receiving Emmy nominations for his work and becoming winner of the British Independent Film Award, The British Independent Film Award and the Hollywood Critics Association Award for his costume designs for The Personal History of David Copperfield (2019).  A hat-trick of awards that he shared with another renowned Costume Designer Suzie Harman. I wonder if they designed many hats to achieve this hat-trick! Fabulous!

The teleplay for the 1984 movie made for TV, The Master of Ballantrae was written by William Bast the author and screenplay writer. Bast was co-developer of The Colbys  TV series, with his partner of 49 years Paul Huson. Paul Huson is the son of Olga Lehmann and has worked extensively in the film industry as well as being a writer of many books on witchcraft, Tarot and the occult. Olga Lehmann adored her son Paul and his partner Bill 'her two boys' and until late in her life, she would spend many months of the year creating art at their beautiful home in California, where she would enjoy painting scenes of the garden and surrounding panoramas.

The Master of Ballantrae, based on the 1889 novel by Scottish author Robert Louis Stevenson was filmed near Bath, in country landscapes that doubled for Scotland.  St.Catherine's Court, the stunning manor house, set in fourteen acres of land, owned by former Bond Girl, the actress Jane Seymour was also used as a set location. Olga Lehmann spent much of her life 'on set' rubbing shoulders with the stars.  The film starred such legends as Sir John Gielgud and Brian Blessed and the costumes were such a success that Olga Lehmann won her fourth Emmy Nomination the following year. Not bad going!

When Olga Lehmann and Robert Worley were teamed up creating costumes in Greece while shooting was going on for the First Modern Olympics 1896, it was continuously raining and the film had to be digitally enhanced to remove the rain and bring in the Greek sunshine. Olga was grateful to be back home in England in time for Christmas, a season for which she would design her own greeting cards to send to family and friends.

Robert Worley as well as being an award winning Costume Designer for the movies, became an art dealer, co-creating an art gallery in Yoxford, Suffolk, with business partners, Bob Ringwood and Michael Stennett.  Three very talented and renowned creatives, who have achieved great success with illustrious careers as artists and designers. Some of Michael's artworks are held in the Royal Collection and BAFTA winning British Designer, Bob Ringwood has to his name, a list of Hollywood films he designed costumes for that is longer than the longest arms you can imagine and includes such epics as the Batman series of movies, Troy (2004), Star Trek. Nemisis (2002), Empire of the Sun (1988) and Santa Claus, the movie (1985).

These established artists were not only passionate about art and design, they were very fond of Olga Lehmann and her work and organised a retrospective of her paintings, that took place at Barnsdale Gallery in June 2001. The exhibition was a sell-out success and Olga sold £5,000 worth of her artwork to a variety of art buyers.



Michael Stennett of The Barnsdale Gallery, passed away on June 11th, 2020 at the age of 74.  He was very active in the village of Yoxford and had been a prolific designer for opera and ballet, having in his portfolio the achievements of designing costumes for New Zealand opera singer Dame Kiri De Tanawa and for the famed ballet dancer Rudolph Nureyev.  Recently, in February 2022, around 300 pieces of Michael's own paintings and drawings were sold at auction, fetching around £52,000 for charity. There are some insightful articles about him and his life on the East Anglia Times website, should you be interested in learning more about this fascinating character (I've put them in the link at the end of this blog).

At the time of her retrospective at the Barnsdale Gallery, Olga Lehmann was in her late 80s and had become quite frail.  I'm not surprised after being on her feet for so many years, producing such an enormous body of work that covered so many genres.  Her great friend Robert Worley picked her up from her home in Saffron Walden, Essex and took her to the Private View in her wheelchair.







Olga looked very glamorous in a 1980s Jaeger jacket, with her hair beautifully coiffed, bright lipstick on and her nails painted. Her son Paul Huson was there, proudly joining in the celebrations of his mother's career as a successful artist who had worked tirelessly in the world of art and film. Sadly, Olga was to die four months after her retrospective exhibition launched.   

On 26th October, 2001 at the ripe old age of 89 Olga left this world having achieved more than many of us could imagine in a career that spanned 72 very busy, talented and creative years.

Words:
Mandie Stone BA(Hons) Creative Arts, HND Fine Art, PGCE Art & Design.


Olga Lehmann's Costume Designs for the TV movie Ivanhoe (1982)
Characters: Ivanhoe and Front De Boeuf



Selected sources:

www.imbd.com Film Industry Database

East Anglian Daily Times:

Michael Stennett
https://www.eadt.co.uk/things-to-do/leading-opera-designer-and-yoxford-resident-michael-stennett-dies-2694416

https://www.eadt.co.uk/news/michael-stennett-art-auctioned-8715536

Robert Worley
https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0941512/
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt6439020/mediaviewer/rm982813185/?ref_=tt_ov_i

Bob Ringwood
https://www.ballet.org.uk/blog-detail/bob-ringwood-designing-le-corsaire/

Tom Thumb Movie - a must watch, whatever your age!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M3DZHXawRDY

Photos: Courtesy of: Paul Huson

Note: From June 2022, the Olga Lehmann collection of original designs for costumes and storyboards that is held by the BFI should be available to view digitally - as they are currently updating their resources section on the website.