https://www.dollshousespastandpresent.co.uk/Magazine/Issue-28-29-Mar-Jun-2016/Page-5
Well, here we are four years later, and I am delighted to say that through the power of the internet my plea for more information about the Wrights and their miniatures has been answered twofold, as not only did Richard Wright (grandson of Ralph Wright) kindly get in touch, but so too did Patrick Daw (grandson of Bertha). Huge thanks to Richard & Patrick, and their respective families for all the information that they have given so freely. There is so much to tell that for logistical reasons I have had to split this article into two parts. Here below you can see Part One of their input and what a story! Part Two will follow shortly on my next posting. I hope you find it interesting.
Bertha Gwendoline Wright (Formerly Penrose) (née Baker)
Bertha as a child plus her father, stepmother & half siblings, from "Bad Aunt Bertha" (a publication collated and printed by the Baker-Penrose family). |
Bertha Gwendoline Baker was born in London into a Quaker family
in 1897. Her mother Mabel (née Main) was an Australian and her father Philip
Baker was Canadian, one of four Baker brothers who all worked for the family’s London
based firm Joseph Baker & Sons Ltd., (later became Baker Perkins). Tragically
her mother died when Bertha was just 3 weeks old. However, in 1901 her father married
Amy (née Dell) and much to Bertha’s great delight gained two half siblings –
Olive and Barton. After school, although Bertha initially trained and worked as
a secretary, she clearly had artistic ability and yearned to get a place at the
“Slade School of Art” in London.
Her wish was finally granted, but it appears that early on during
her time at Slade in 1918 she also began courting Alexander (Alec) Penrose, and
due to the distractions of her courtship and life, her studies suffered. She
left after only a couple of terms and married Alec in 1919. He was one of four
brothers from the wealthy Penrose family – see “A Collection of MiniatureTreasures Made by Bertha and Ralph Wright” for more information about the
Penrose family. They had two daughters together - Sheila and Angela but
unfortunately, according to Bertha’s memoirs, her marriage was not a happy one almost
from the start it seems. They finally divorced at the end of the 1920s. David
Garnett (prominent member of the Bloomsbury Group) had introduced her to
Ralph Wright in the mid-1920s, and their relationship progressed over time.
They would eventually go on to marry a few years after her divorce.
Bertha Wright aged 35, from "Bad Aunt Bertha" (a publication collated and printed by the Baker-Penrose family). |
She married Ralph in Marseilles in 1933 which is around the time their work in miniatures began. In the latter half of the 1930s Bertha joined the Communist Party (influenced by Ralph who had already joined), spending many hours assisting at meetings and visiting houses on behalf of the party for the “Care Committee”. During the years leading up to WW2, both Ralph and Bertha attended regular meetings, rallies, marches, and demonstrations. Bertha remained married to Ralph until his death in 1961. In the 1970s she moved over to France to live with her daughter Angela and husband Jo, and it is there that she lived out the rest of her days until her death in 1985.
“Bad
Aunt Bertha” – The Memoirs Of Bertha Wright
The loaned copy of Bad Aunt Bertha. |
Richard very kindly lent me a copy of his step-grandmother’s memoirs “Bad Aunt Bertha”, published as a limited edition by the Baker- Penrose family more than two decades after her death and meant for private consumption only (for obvious reasons). I have read it from cover to cover and will say that she was clearly a colourful character who embraced life, and that the title was apt! Through the social circles that she moved in, she encountered many well-known society characters of the time, including authors, poets, artists, etc. and of course, several from the infamous Bloomsbury Group. One of her affairs which is well documented in the public domain was with Clive Bell, husband of artist Vanessa Bell (sister of author Virginia Woolf) …all prominent characters from the Bloomsbury Group. Interestingly, Bertha’s memoirs only lead up to the beginning of WW2, so the information on what happened to her and Ralph after that time, has mostly been sourced from her grandsons.
Ralph Fletcher
Wright
The Mahler Family - Ralph Wright sitting crossed legged at front, Doro seated right of middle row. Image courtesy of the Wright Family. |
Ralph Fletcher Wright was born in 1888 and grew up near
Chirk, in North Wales. He was the third of seven children and attended
Bradfield College. During the holidays Ralph established a close friendship and
romance with Dorothea Mahler. They went on to marry in 1913 and had four
children - Margaret, Peter, Roger, and Christopher.
*Ralph & friend Ronald Frankau in WW1 (Frankau went on to become a successful comedian & entertainer in film and radio). Image courtesy of the Wright Family. |
Ralph served in the Army Cyclist Corps during WW1 right through to the end
of the war, acting in reconnaissance and communications. He rose to the rank of
Lieutenant and was along-side his brother King at Gallipoli in 1915. It was at
Gallipoli that King was killed on the beaches, and from which Ralph was sent
home with dysentery. During the final
months of the war, Ralph also lost his eldest brother Peter - tragedies from
which Ralph was never to fully recover.
After the war, Ralph and Doro lived in Beckenham with their young
family. During this time Ralph was working in London at the Central Library for
Students, where he met writers David Garnett and Frankie Birrell. Ralph was
invited to become a partner in their Soho antiquarian bookshop - Birrell and
Garnett Booksellers, a famous rendezvous at the time within Bloomsbury
circles. The company favoured French and
English literature from the 18th and 19th centuries, which was an area of
Ralph's expertise. Ralph is described by Garnett in his biography as: "... a rather short man, whose head of
glossy black hair, brushed straight back resembled a seal's head, emerging from
the water. He was sympathetic, sensitive and warm; particularly well versed in
French and English literature and a flair for conversation."
Image of Ralph Wright at his desk at the Daily Worker. Image courtesy of the Wright Family. |
All of this meant that Ralph socialised on the fringes of
the Bloomsbury Group, along with other famous authors, poets, etc. who were around
at that time during the 1920s and beyond. The bookshop changed hands in 1927. It
was through his friend David Garnet at a lunch in Soho during the mid-1920s,
that he was introduced to Bertha and from then on they met regularly in London and
holidayed together in Cassis (France) amongst many of their friends. His marriage to Doro finally ended, and as
already mentioned above, Bertha & Ralph finally married in 1933
During the mid-thirties, Ralph had yet another lifestyle
change, as he joined the Communist Party. Ralph was not a passive member and was
soon appointed literary editor at The Daily Worker. He would work all week in
London and return home to Marden for weekends. Eventually Bertha joined the
Communist Party too. They continued their regular visits to France and in fact
it was during a family camping holiday in 1939 when they heard news of the
outbreak of war. Ralph felt betrayed by the Communist Party and immediately
resigned his membership. However, he was to maintain a strong socialist
philosophy for the rest of his life. During WW2 Ralph became an ARP warden in
Marden. Sadly, tragedy was to strike the Wright family again in 1943 when
Ralph and Doro’s second son Roger was killed in action at Salerno during the
allied invasion of Italy.
Shortly after the war Ralph suffered severe heart problems which resulted in him living a more sedate lifestyle in Marden during the 1950s. Ralph and Bertha continued their trips to France during this time, both to Cassis and to Montcuq where Bertha’s daughter Angela and family lived. He retired to his letters, occasionally reviewing books for The New Statesman and began the mammoth project of translating the Memoirs of St Simon, which sadly he never finished. He died in 1961. Bertha’s youngest daughter Angela was quoted as saying “It seemed such a miracle to Ralph to be alive in 1918 that he asked very little of life after that, just his books, his glass of wine, his log fire, his Times every morning, and the woman he loved….”
So How
Did Ralph & Bertha Get Into Miniatures And Dolls Houses?
The Old House at Marden in Kent. Image courtesy of the Wright Family. |
In 1929 Bertha and her two daughters moved into “The Old
House” which was situated in the Kent village of Marden, a house bought by Alec
for Bertha, presumably as part of their divorce settlement. Ralph, whose
marriage had also ended around then, was a frequent visitor, along with many of
her society friends. Ralph’s and Bertha’s romance flourished. From then on, they
would set off to France regularly three times each year, alternating residence
between the Kent house and France. The Kent
house was rented out during their absence to gain much needed revenue to keep
their lifestyle going (*Ralph’s friend from the army days Ronald Frankau, the well-known
comedian, was one of the tenants and a regular face in Marden).
A picture of a Cassis house by Bertha Wright. Image courtesy of the Wright family. |
Cassis, a town on the French Mediterranean coast and a Mecca for artists and authors, was one of Bertha and Ralph’s favourite places. It was a place first introduced to Bertha back in the mid-1920s by Alec’s surrealist artist brother, Roland Penrose. Amongst many of their long-time friends in Cassis was a renowned experimental artist and collage maker Jean Yanko Varda.
Bertha’s
Picture Boxes
Bertha Wright exhibiting her picture boxes at some time during the 1960s, the exact event is unknown. Image courtesy of the Wright Family. |
It was from Varda that Bertha bought a box of modelling wax
in every colour imaginable, after finding a discarded wooden box on a beach at
Cassis, which once housed little cream cheeses. She discovered that a mirror
from her handbag fitted perfectly when slotted into the back of the box. Then
using red, pink, and green wax she created tiny fish, and hung them on fine
human hair (from her blonde friends) at different heights from the roof.
Seaweed was made from frayed knitting wools in green and brown colours, starfish
were made of wax, and reefs on the floor were made up of tiny shells. Spurred on
by this, she collected more “petit-suisse boxes”, sanded them down and had
small mirrors cut to fit the backs. She glazed the front of each box with
glass, when the box was tapped the fish moved, and the mirror gave an illusion of
there being multiple fishes. Bertha honed her modelling skills and staging of
weeds, shells, and rocks so that by the Christmas of 1932 she had a fine
collection of “useless fantasies” (her description) to inflict on friends as
gifts! After their marriage in March 1933, they returned from France to The Old
House full of ideas. It was then that their work in miniatures began properly.
They turned the playroom into a workshop/studio and set up a workbench.
Victorian Parlour Picture Box by Bertha Wright. Image courtesy of Patrick Daw. |
Once back in Kent, Bertha paid Mr Christopher
Hoad, a local carpenter/cabinet maker, to make the wooden casements for her
picture boxes out of American white wood, an arrangement that continued for several
years. Bertha spent hours experimenting
with various arrangements of mirrors and was delighted with the little German waxes
that she had purchased off Varda. When warmed they could be mixed like paint,
but one had to warm the discs of wax thoroughly to body heat- not near a flame
or fire, or else the outsides would have melted leaving the centres hard. She
discovered an ingenious method of warming the wax by placing the discs down her
bra! As well as wax she used other bits and bobs to create her scene.
The Fun Fair Picture Box by Bertha Wright c1933. Image courtesy of Peter Daw. |
Apparently, Bertha left eighteen picture
boxes behind when she departed the UK in 1976 to live with her daughter in
France, and all were distributed amongst the family. A selection of some of
those picture boxes can be seen in this article belonging to Patrick, sister
Daisy Macdonald and his brothers Peter Daw and James Derville. All have kindly given
permission to allow their photos to be featured in this article. The box
measurements generally vary from about 7” to 12” wide x 6” deep, with a fully
glazed sliding front and each have a smaller glass panel in the top.
French Town Picture Box by Bertha Wright. Image courtesy of Patrick Daw. |
Patrick explains that some of the
picture boxes have the rear wall lined with a mirror, and some have additional
mirrors angled in such a skilful way to provide interesting vistas using the
backs of the forefront features in reflection, or longer views at apparent
angles. An illustration of this technique can be seen in the French Town
Picture Box, seen above and below.
Another view of the French Town Picture Box by Bertha Wright. Image courtesy of Patrick Daw. |
In some of the scenes Bertha has
made a specific feature in part form only eg. a tree and positioned it against
the junction of two mirrors to create its wholeness completely (a technique
used by ship designers who use a half -hull attached to a mirror). The
scale of the scenes internally vary radically from box to box, some figures and
animals are inches high, others are tiny. Portions of the features such as
buildings have been carved out of wood. All the sculpted items within the boxes
are made from coloured wax rendering them very fragile, while other bits and
pieces are wood or found objects eg. a mother of pearl button for a clock face.
As you will see in one or two of the photos, some of the wax models have
succumbed to a little heat damage over time, particularly those that belong to Patrick’s
brother James who lives in Toulouse where the hot climate particularly has
taken its toll. However, Patrick believes they should not be too difficult to
restore.
Victorian Bedroom Picture Box by Bertha Wright. Image courtesy of Patrick Daw. |
In the summer of 1933 Bertha took some of her picture boxes to
a highly sceptical Mr Honeyman, manager of Lefevre Galleries in London. But it turned
out that he was completely enchanted when he actually saw them, and described
her work as “pure Dounaier Rousseau”, resulting in an invitation to
exhibit her picture boxes in the December of that year at the gallery. She had
to work flat out to supply around 24 picture boxes for the exhibition and it
was a great success, so much so that the gallery invited her to travel up to
Glasgow to exhibit her picture boxes there too. Unfortunately, the Glasgow trip
was not quite as successful and apparently, she only sold two picture boxes.
Circus Picture Box by Bertha Wright c1936. Image courtesy of James Derville. |
Bertha says in her memoirs about that time in her life: “I was living in a fairyland, a Lilliput of my own conception and was carried away by the excitement and success of creating these little people, animals and scenes out of wax with my own fingers. They became real tiny characters to me- the villages, jungles and so on, real places I had dreamed of, all tiny and perfect. I always make sketches from life or in museums or zoos of everything I wanted to model and took a lot of trouble over costumes.”
For those miniaturists amongst you reading Bertha’s
statement, I am sure you will be able to relate to these sentiments completely.
Possibly part of the attraction of the miniatures hobby is that one can switch
off from the real world, and totally immerse oneself into a make believe and
more perfect world of our own creating, which can be incredibly therapeutic.
Jungle Picture Box by Bertha Wright. Image courtesy of James Derville. |
Chimps In The Jungle Box by Bertha Wright c1933. Image courtesy of Peter Daw. |
As time went on, she obtained various commissions. One noteworthy
order was by Clough Williams-Ellis to make a model of his famous Italian
village hotel at Portmeirion in Wales, sadly there is no known photo of this
creation. Her model incorporated a slot for people to drop 3d into which
enabled the scene to light up momentarily. As part of the preparation for the
commission, she spent a week drawing to scale every building in the place,
including the trees and statues. It took her weeks to make but Bertha felt that
it was not as interesting as her own little invented scenes, which I find quite
a curious statement.
Flower Show Picture Box by Bertha Wright. Image courtesy of Patrick Daw. |
Another memorable commission was for Misha Black (a
distinguished British architect) of the Industrial Design Partnership to make a
number of models measuring 2’ x 1’ x 1’ depicting English village life. They
were to be exhibited at THE WORLD’S FAIR, an exhibition in New York during the
summer of 1939. The room box themes included A Working Man’s Club, A
Play By The WI, A Young Farmer’s Heifer Show, Armistice Day In
The Village and A Flower Show. I wonder if the Flower Show Box seen above
was like the one Bertha made for the exhibition. Sadly, there do not appear to
be any photos of Bertha’s specific creations made for the exhibition and
presumably they stayed in the US. Apparently, she was paid £200 for this
commission, which was a lot in those days – I understand the equivalent in
today’s money is around £13,000!
French Landscape Picture Box by Bertha Wright c1947. Image courtesy of Patrick Daw. |
One of her last commissions she talks about in her memoirs
was one ordered by her cousin Nettie around the early part of WW2 (this was Jannette
Braithwaite who was married to John Braithwaite, who later became chairman of
the London Stock Exchange after the war). She asked her to make a model of an
imaginary air raid in the east end of London. It was three feet long,
incorporating as much gory detail that she could muster, including a dead
horse, a lot of blood lying around and a little boy being sick. It took many
weeks to make and ended up in a Hendon “peace shop”. It was fitted with
penny-in-the-slot lighting. Now this is another of those picture boxes that
I would have loved to have seen, I wonder if that still exists somewhere too.
Chinese Picture Box by Bertha Wright c1936. Image courtesy of James Derville. |
The French Landscape picture box seen just a little further up on here is dated 1947. The photo of Bertha exhibiting her picture boxes seen even further up is
believed to have been taken in the 1960s and I had assumed that by 1960 she was
no longer creating…but then more photos of Bertha’s picture boxes landed in my
inbox, taken by Patrick’s sister Daisy!
French Street Market Picture Box By Bertha Wright, c1966. Image courtesy of Daisy Macdonald. |
One being The French Street Market seen above which is dated 1966. And another, Persian Palace seen below is dated 1970. What strikes me after seeing all these wonderful images of Bertha’s picture boxes is that she was clearly an accomplished artist and sculptor, with great innovation and imagination. To have had the ability to create such diverse scenes in her picture boxes and special commission models, was something quite extraordinary indeed.
Persian Palace Picture Box by Bertha Wright c1970. Image courtesy of Daisy Macdonald. |
I hope you have enjoyed this first part of Bertha & Ralph's story, and seeing Bertha's truly stunning and innovative miniature picture boxes. Many thanks to Richard Wright, Patrick Daw and their respective families for supplying not just their photos but information too, and of course giving me permission to publish it all on here.
©ktminiatures.com - Celia Thomas
Coming shortly will be Part Two of "The Story Of Bertha & Ralph Wright Plus Their Miniatures", which will include their dolls houses, furniture and much more...
NEW UPDATE
Matthew Bain, grandson of Ronald Frankau, got in touch a
couple of weeks ago after coming across the original 2016 article about Bertha
& Ralph and sent the following:
'Aunt Bertha' and Ralph (pronounced 'Rafe') were the
guardians of my mother Rosie and her sister Robbie during WWII. Rosemary and
Roberta Frankau (to give them their full names) were the daughters of Ronald
Frankau, a well-known entertainer of the '30s and '40s. Ronald and Ralph met
when they served together in the First World War. I met Bertha myself on a few
occasions when she came to our house, my mother was enduringly fond of her. My
mother sadly died in 2017
(obituary)
however I forwarded the article to Aunt Robbie and she has shared the following
recollections:
"Well, well Matthew, what a find! Yes, indeed I remember Bert’s (as she was
called then) boxes when Rosie and I lived with her and Ralph in school holidays
from about 1943 to 1945/6. By then they
were mirrored and were amazing French bar scenes and tropical animals! Because of the mirrors they went on and on
into the distance. Quite lovely. There was a special insert in their huge
fireplace wall (where we lived, in their 16th century house in Marden, Kent)
where she put them, changing them intermittently. No memory of doll’s
houses. By that time, we were living
with them he was suffering from what we now call PTSD. One of his 4 sons was
killed in the 2nd world war, and he had been in the first war (with Ronald). So
all he did was read (and to me) and put logs ("Georges") on the fire
and play the piano when he was ready for dinner! Rosie and I adored him."
SPECIAL THANKS to Matthew Bain and his aunt Roberta
Tovell (née Frankau), for giving me their kind permission to add their
information to this article.