Olga Lehmann#Record sleeves

{{Short description|British visual artist (1912–2001)}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2020}}

{{Infobox artist

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| name = Olga Lehmann

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| birth_name = Louise Olga Mary Lehmann

| birth_date = 10 February 1912

| birth_place = Catemu, Valparaíso, Chile

| death_date = {{Death date and age|df=yes|2001|10|26|1912|02|10}}

| death_place = Saffron Walden, Essex, England

| nationality =

| field =

| education = Santiago College

| alma_mater = Slade School of Fine Art

| training =

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}}

Olga Lehmann (10 February 1912 – 26 October 2001) was a British visual artist.

Early life

File:130 Dark Avenger costume design 2.jpg costume design by Olga Lehmann, 1954.]]

Born in Catemu, Chile, to Mary Grisel Lehmann (née Bissett) and mining engineer Andrew William Lehmann, Olga Lehmann had one sister, Monica (Monica Pidgeon), and one brother, George (Andrew George Lehmann). Her father was of German and French descent (born in Paris) and her mother was Scottish.{{cite web | url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/wiltshire/content/articles/2009/04/06/olga_lehmann_bunker_murals_feature.shtml | title=Olga Lehmann's Burlington murals }} She was educated at Santiago College, and in 1929 moved to England, where she was awarded a scholarship to the Slade School of Fine Art, London University.

At the Slade she studied fine art under the tutelage of Henry Tonks and Randolph Schwabe, specializing in theatrical design under Vladimir Polunin and in portraiture under Allan Gwynne-Jones.The Slade 1871-1971, The Royal Academy of Arts, London, 1971.Who's Who in Art, "Olga Lehmann", pp. 347-348, Michigan: The Gale Group, 2002. Awarded prizes in life painting, composition, and theatrical design, she visited Spain in the early thirties; Spanish and Moorish themes were subsequently reflected in her art.

Career

File:Paintings Corsham underground factory canteen, by Olga Lehmann.webp

Her productive working life as an artist spanned almost six decades, from the 1930s to the 1980s. Throughout the 1930s she acquired a reputation in the fields of mural paintingContemporary Mural Painters: Miss Olga Lehmann. The Decorator, London, July, 1941. and portraiture.Spalding, Frances, Dictionary of British Art, Volume VI: 20th Century Painter and Sculptors, "Olga Lehmann", p. 295, Suffolk: The Antique Collector's Club Ltd., 1990, {{ISBN|978-1-85149-106-3}}. She exhibited her work at the Royal Society of Portrait Painters in 1933, and with the London Group in 1935.The Royal Society of British Artists: An Open Assembly, London, 1954. Later sitters of note consisted of people associated with the film or record industries such as singers Edric Connor, Carmen Prietto, conductor Richard Austin, and actors Dirk Bogarde and Patrice Wymore. During the Blitz in 1940, her studio-flat in Hampstead was destroyed by a bomb, and much of her early work was lost.

After World War II, her name chiefly became associated with graphic design for the Radio Times, and designing for the film and television industries. In 1939 she married author and editor Edward Richard Carl Huson, by whom she had one son, author and television writer and producer Paul Huson. She was predeceased by her husband in 1984, and she herself died in Saffron Walden, Essex, in 2001.

Works

=Illustration, design, and graphic work=

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|+ Radio Times illustrations

! issue !! title

{{dts|format=dmy|1941|June|29}}The Suicide Club meets...
{{dts|format=dmy|1941|July|11}}Kitchen Front
{{dts|format=dmy|1941|July|30}}Don't pass it on, but...
{{dts|format=dmy|1941|August|8}}The Raggle-Taggle Gypsies, O!
{{dts|format=dmy|1941|October|12}}But lovelier than the cornfield...
{{dts|format=dmy|1941|November|20}}The Canterville Ghost
{{dts|format=dmy|1941|November|23}}Three Sisters
{{dts|format=dmy|1941|December|15}}The Star in the East
{{dts|format=dmy|1941|December|28}}
–3 January 1942
What the other Listener thinks
{{dts|format=dmy|1942|January|10}}The Dancers
{{dts|format=dmy|1942|January|17}}The Dark Charmer
{{dts|format=dmy|1942|February|1}}And the more I bring off...
{{dts|format=dmy|1942|March|6}}Easy Murder
{{dts|format=dmy|1942|March|13}}Gestapo over Europe
{{dts|format=dmy|1942|March|26}}Pagliacci
{{dts|format=dmy|1942|April|2}}Grim Fairy Tale
{{dts|format=dmy|1942|April|8}}Faust
{{dts|format=dmy|1942|April|26}}Alexander Nevsky
{{dts|format=dmy|1942|May|3}}
–9 May 1942
Japan wants the Earth (cover)
{{dts|format=dmy|1942|June|14}}
–20 June 1942
Carmen (cover)
{{dts|format=dmy|1942|July|6}}Next of Kin
{{dts|format=dmy|1942|July|15}}The Words upon the Window Pane
{{dts|format=dmy|1942|July|21}}Ladies in Retirement
{{dts|format=dmy|1942|September|4}}Death in the hand
{{dts|format=dmy|1942|September|9}}Tales of Hoffmann
{{dts|format=dmy|1942|September|30}}The Magic Flute
{{dts|format=dmy|1942|October|16}}Maude
{{dts|format=dmy|1942|November|6}}The Beggar Student
{{dts|format=dmy|1942|December|4}}Ruslan and Ludmilla
{{dts|format=dmy|1942|December|19}}La traviata
{{dts|format=dmy|1942|December|18}}Programs up to Boxing Day and Turandot
{{dts|format=dmy|1943|January|4}}Cinderella
{{dts|format=dmy|1943|January|20}}The Force of Destiny
{{dts|format=dmy|1943|January|24}}
–30 January 1943
Hassan
{{dts|format=dmy|1943|February|6}}Madame Butterfly
{{dts|format=dmy|1943|February|17}}La bohème
{{dts|format=dmy|1943|February|26}}Robinson Crusoe
{{dts|format=dmy|1943|March|7}}Liebestraum
{{dts|format=dmy|1943|March|17}}Fidelio
{{dts|format=dmy|1943|April|11}}
–17 April 2007
Les Cloches
{{dts|format=dmy|1943|April|29}}Royal Gesture
{{dts|format=dmy|1943|May|2}}Dona Claries
{{dts|format=dmy|1943|May|17}}The Wild Duck
{{dts|format=dmy|1943|June|6}}A Princess of Tartary
{{dts|format=dmy|1943|June|25}}Master Peter's Puppet Show
{{dts|format=dmy|1943|August|2}}How to arrange a Concert
{{dts|format=dmy|1943|September|26}}
–2 October 1943
Samson and Delilah
{{dts|format=dmy|1943|October|17}}Ring up the Curtain
{{dts|format=dmy|1943|October|27}}Romeo and Juliet
{{dts|format=dmy|1943|December|22}}The Flying Dutchman
{{dts|format=dmy|1943|December|26}}
–1 January 1944
Cinderella
{{dts|format=dmy|1944|January|16}}Distant Point
{{dts|format=dmy|1944|January|19}}Carmen
{{dts|format=dmy|1944|February|14}}The Hostage
{{dts|format=dmy|1944|April|23}}
–29 April 1944
A Play Toward and Aïda
{{dts|format=dmy|1944|May|6}}The Man Stayed Alone
{{dts|format=dmy|1944|June|23}}Alexander Nevsky
{{dts|format=dmy|1944|June|25}}The Story of the Ballet
{{dts|format=dmy|1944|June|30}}Romeo and Juliet
{{dts|format=dmy|1944|September|24}}Emilia
{{dts|format=dmy|1944|October|7}}The Second Mrs Tanqueray
{{dts|format=dmy|1944|November|8}}Turandot
{{dts|format=dmy|1944|November|9}}The Story of the Ballet #2
{{dts|format=dmy|1944|November|10}}L’Arlesienne
{{dts|format=dmy|1944|December|4}}Treasure Island
{{dts|format=dmy|1944|December|26}}Boxing Day (4 corner vignettes)
{{dts|format=dmy|1945|January|9}}A Voyage to Lilliput
{{dts|format=dmy|1945|February|11}}The Story of the Ballet #3,
illustration of Sunday Rhapsody
{{dts|format=dmy|1945|March|28}}Scheherazade
{{dts|format=dmy|1945|April|25}}The Tale of Tsar Saltan
{{dts|format=dmy|1945|May|1}}Tuesday Serenade
{{dts|format=dmy|1945|July|18}}A Princess of Tartary
{{dts|format=dmy|1945|August|23}}Corner in Crime
{{dts|format=dmy|1945|August|29}}The Wizard of the Mountain
{{dts|format=dmy|1945|September|3}}The Wild Duck
{{dts|format=dmy|1945|September|9}}
–15 September 1945
Paul Temple Returns
{{dts|format=dmy|1945|November|1}}Golden Dragon City
{{dts|format=dmy|1945|November|21}}Schwanda the Bagpiper
{{dts|format=dmy|1945|December|19}}Prince Igor
{{dts|format=dmy|1946|January|30}}Tosca
{{dts|format=dmy|1946|February|21}}Treasure Island
{{dts|format=dmy|1946|April|6}}Music for Saturday Night
{{dts|format=dmy|1946|May|2}}Bounden Duty
{{dts|format=dmy|1946|August|10}}A Hundred Years Old
{{dts|format=dmy|1946|September|11}}Lord Mondrago
{{dts|format=dmy|1946|September|19}}It Might Have Been the Moon
{{dts|format=dmy|1946|September|22}}
–28 September 1946
La bohème
{{dts|format=dmy|1946|November|6}}Pagliacci
{{dts|format=dmy|1946|December|5}}The Turn of the Screw
{{dts|format=dmy|1946|December|21}}Children in Uniform
{{dts|format=dmy|1946|December|28}}Androcles and the Lion.
{{dts|format=dmy|1947|February|10}}Biography
{{dts|format=dmy|1947|March|15}}Save him, Doctor...
{{dts|format=dmy|1947|March|22}}Mary Rose
{{dts|format=dmy|1947|April|5}}The Silver Cord
{{dts|format=dmy|1947|April|21}}The Laughing Woman
{{dts|format=dmy|1947|June|11}}The Man who was Thursday
{{dts|format=dmy|1947|June|21}}To What Red Hell
{{dts|format=dmy|1947|September|7}}The Poet and the Child
{{dts|format=dmy|1947|September|13}}If
{{dts|format=dmy|1947|October|8}}The Flying Dutchman
{{dts|format=dmy|1947|October|16}}Beyond the Night
{{dts|format=dmy|1947|November|24}}The Narrow Corner
{{dts|format=dmy|1948|January|18}}
–24 January 1948
Xerxes
{{dts|format=dmy|1948|February|12}}The Black Cap has to wait
{{dts|format=dmy|1948|May|5}}Eugene Onegin
{{dts|format=dmy|1948|June|8}}The Family from One-End Street
{{dts|format=dmy|1948|August|2}}The Lost Horizon
{{dts|format=dmy|1948|August|30}}The Healing Stream
{{dts|format=dmy|1948|September|28}}The first post will be opened tonight
{{dts|format=dmy|1948|November|9}}Focus on Old Age
{{dts|format=dmy|1949|January|2}}Scamps in Paradise
{{dts|format=dmy|1949|January|18}}Focus on Child Adoption
{{dts|format=dmy|1949|March|25}}The Great Ruby Ming
{{dts|format=dmy|1949|July|22}}Bizet's Carmen
{{dts|format=dmy|1949|July|28}}The Rise and Decline of Johnny Godwin
{{dts|format=dmy|1949|August|14}}
–20 August 1949
The Story of ‘Lulu.’
{{dts|format=dmy|1950|August|26}}Point of Honour
{{dts|format=dmy|1950|September|1}}Summer Showtime
{{dts|format=dmy|1950|September|15}}Promenade Concert
{{dts|format=dmy|1950|December|26}}Boxing Day, two double-spreads
{{dts|format=dmy|1951|April|20}}Stars from the Shows
{{dts|format=dmy|1951|July|18}}Shanties and Forebitters
{{dts|format=dmy|1951|August|5}}Summer Showtime
{{dts|format=dmy|1951|August|17}}Songs from the Shows
{{dts|format=dmy|1951|October|1}}The Bottom of the Well.
{{dts|format=dmy|1952|March|2}}Dona Clarines
{{dts|format=dmy|1952|June|14}}Cried the Sparrow
{{dts|format=dmy|1952|July|4}}Songs from the Shows
{{dts|format=dmy|1952|July|31}}Summer Rain
{{dts|format=dmy|1952|October|13}}Pagliacci.
{{dts|format=dmy|1953|February|15}}La traviata
{{dts|format=dmy|1953|July|1}}The Flower in the Rock
{{dts|format=dmy|1953|July|26}}The Lady from Albuquerque
{{dts|format=dmy|1953|October|10}}The Laughing Woman.
{{dts|format=dmy|1954|July|25}}
–31 July 1954
The Flying Dutchman
{{dts|format=dmy|1954|September|14}}The Turn of the Screw
{{dts|format=dmy|1954|October|11}}The Turn of the Screw
{{dts|format=dmy|1954|October|17}}The Dark Eyed Sailor.
{{dts|format=dmy|1955|February|26}}The Cat and the Canary
{{dts|format=dmy|1955|April|12}}A Vegetarian Dish for April
{{dts|format=dmy|1955|September|30}}The Turn of the Screw
{{dts|format=dmy|1955|October|3}}From Morn to Midnight
{{dts|format=dmy|1955|December|30}}Music at Ten
{{dts|format=dmy|1955|December|31}}New Year's Eve, triple spread.
{{dts|format=dmy|1956|June|11}}Journey to Venezuela
{{dts|format=dmy|1956|November|30}}Memories of a Street of Artists
{{dts|format=dmy|1956|December|16}}The Lost Horizon.
{{dts|format=dmy|1957|January|13}}A Hundred Years Old
{{dts|format=dmy|1957|July|17}}Murder at Elstree
{{dts|format=dmy|1957|July|19}}Australian Saga
{{dts|format=dmy|1957|September|21}}Ruslan and Ludmilla
{{dts|format=dmy|1957|September|26}}Stories and Music from the Ballet.
{{dts|format=dmy|1958|January|25}}A Time of the Serpent
{{dts|format=dmy|1958|March|21}}Samson and Delilah
{{dts|format=dmy|1958|December|21}}
–27 December 1958
Chu-Chin-Chow
{{dts|format=dmy|1958|December|21}}The Wraiths.
{{dts|format=dmy|1959|April|25}}Lost Love
{{dts|format=dmy|1959|June|29}}Shadow of a Pale Horse
{{dts|format=dmy|1959|August|2}}Enter Three Witches
{{dts|format=dmy|1959|November|29}}
–5 December 1959
Where William Weare was Murdered.
{{dts|format=dmy|1960|July|23}}A Play for the Guide Festival
{{dts|format=dmy|1960|December|23}}Scamps in Paradise
{{dts|format=dmy|1960|December|31}}New Year's Eve, triple page spread.

  • In 1936 Lehmann executed black and white designs for Pilkington Glass Ltd., and designed wallpapers for John Line, Ltd.Jackson, L.: Twentieth-Century Pattern Design, Princeton Architectural Press, 2002.
  • In 1937 she illustrated the book Weekend Caravan, edited by S. Hillelson.Connelly, Bill, Olga Lehmann, Imaginative Book Illustration Society Newsletter, No 15, Summer 2000.
  • In 1938 she illustrated the book Happy Heart, Some frontier folk I have met, fish, flesh and fowl, by Cora L. Shearburn.
  • In 1940 Lehmann was permitted by the War Office to make sketches and drawings of London bomb damage, air raid shelters, and Air Raid Precautions personnel.
  • In 1941, Lehmann began drawing monthly illustrations for the British Broadcasting Corporation's publication the Radio Times, commissions that would last over a period of almost two decades.
  • Lehmann also started drawing illustrations for another BBC publication, The Listener, beginning with Louis Macneice's Cook's Tour of the London Subways. In 1941, Lehmann also illustrated the novel Look! The Wild Swans, by Juliette de Baïracli Levy (pictorial title page, frontis, six full-page and one half-page illustrations in black and white, pictorial card cover). She later illustrated a book of poetry by Levy, The Yew Wreath, (eight full-page black and white illustrations, pictorial card cover), and a second novel of Levy's, The Bride of Llew, (black and white illustrations, pictorial card cover).
  • In 1942 Lehmann joined the London artists' agency R. P. Gossop, for illustration commissions.
  • In 1946 Lehmann illustrated Fairy Tales from Turkey, collected by Naki Tezel, trans. Margery Kent, ed. Herbert Read (color frontis., seven full-page black and white illustrations).
  • In 1947 Lehmann illustrated A Youthful Poet's Dream (black and white vertical half-page in The Children's Own Treasure Book, Odhams Press).
  • In between 1948-1950 Lehmann also began drawing periodic illustrations for BBC Publications, the Arabic Listener.
  • In 1948 she illustrated An Indian Boyhood by Noel Sircar, London: Hollis & Carter (21 chapter-head illustrations in black and white scraperboard, pictorial dust jacket); The Peddler (black and white pictorial border) in The Modern Gift Book for Children, Odhams Press; "How Dan met the Fairies of Elbolton" (full-page color, pictorial border to title and two text illustrations) in "The Children's Hour Annual", Odhams Press.
  • In 1949 Lehmann illustrated the book jacket for Dead Lion by John and Emery Bonnett (Michael Joseph, London).
  • In 1950 Lehmann executed illustrations for a year's advertising campaign for Murphy Radio Ltd. She also drew illustrations for The London Mystery Magazine, vol 1, number 2, The Trod, by Algernon Blackwood; and numbers 3, 4, 5, 6, The Slave Detective by Wallace Nichols.
  • In 1952, she illustrated Singing Together – Rhythm and Melody, for BBC Publications.
  • Lehmann also illustrated the cover for the Christmas issue of London Calling, the overseas journal of the BBC.
  • She also drew the illustrations and designed the dust jacket for Evening Star, by M.E. Patchett, Lutterworth Press.
  • Lehmann illustrated the 1953 London Calling, Christmas Issue cover.
  • 1954–1957: Lehmann designed record sleeves for Argo Records (UK).
  • 1954, Lehmann again illustrated the London Calling Christmas Issue cover.
  • 1985: Lehmann illustrated and published The Wishing Chair and Other Verse, by her late husband, Carl Huson.
  • 1986: Lehmann illustrated and published Spoken Words: World War II Poems, Tales & Memories, by Carl Huson.
  • 1987: Lehmann illustrated and published Fine Feathers, a book of poems for children, by Carl Huson.

=Murals=

  • In 1934 Olga Lehmann was commissioned by a French company, Stic-B Paints, Ltd, to paint murals in the Palace Hotel, Buxton.
  • In 1935 Lehmann painted murals in the St Helier House Hotel, Jersey. She was chosen to design a canvas mural for the Queen Victoria Street Railway Bridge, London, to celebrate the Silver Jubilee of King George V and Queen Mary.
  • Between 1936 and 1938 Lehmann painted murals for architect Clive Entwistle, and received multiple commissions from Stic-B Paints for murals in hotels, private buildings, shops and nurseries. In 1938 she exhibited mural designs at the Building Centre, Bond Street. London, with Mary Adshead, Aelred Bartlett, John Hutton, Roland Pym and Laurence Scarfe, and painted murals in Fuller's Restaurant, Sloane Street in 1939, just before the outbreak of World War II.
  • In 1940 Lehmann painted murals for London Air Raid Precautions Headquarters, and received a permit from the War Office to execute sketches and drawings of London bomb damage, air raid shelters, and ARP personnel. In 1942 she painted murals at the Censorship Department, Holborn.
  • 1943: Lehmann designed and painted murals for the workers' canteen in Bristol Aircraft Company's underground, wartime factory in Spring Quarry, Corsham. These are now part of MoD Corsham, and are grade II* listed.Quinn, Andrew H.: Corsham Murals. Cultural Heritage, Defense Estates Annual Report, 2001, Ministry of Defense.{{NHLE |num=1409132 |desc=MoD CORSHAM: Quarry Operations Centre (QOC) Murals |grade=II*}} She also designed and painted murals in the Pavilion Hotel, Scarborough, and the Grand Hotel, Brighton, by which time she had entered the British film industry.
  • In 1953 Lehmann painted a mural on canvas featuring Captain Bligh for Errol Flynn's Tichfield Hotel in Port Antonio, Jamaica.

=Film, television, and theatrical design=

Leese, Elizabeth: Costume Design in the Movies, "Olga Lehmann". Frederick Ungar Publications. New York, 1976, 1983.{{IMDb name|0499731|Olga Lehmann}}.

=Exhibitions=

==One-woman==

  • The AIA Gallery, London.
  • The Augustine Gallery, Holt.
  • The Barnsdale Gallery, Yoxford, Suffolk.
  • Canning House, London.
  • Galeria Maldon.
  • Gainsborough's House, Suffolk.
  • The Guildhall, Thaxted.
  • Heffer's Gallery, Cambridge.
  • The Little Gallery, New Burlington Street, London.
  • The Rushmore Rooms, St Catharine's College, Cambridge.
  • The John Whibley Gallery, London.

==Mixed==

  • The London Group.
  • The Royal Portrait Society.
  • The Building Centre, Bond Street, London: Exhibition of Murals, 1938.
  • The Suffolk Art Society.
  • The Dunmow Art Group.
  • The New English Art Club.
  • The Contemporary Portrait Society.
  • The Phoenix Gallery, Lavenham.
  • The Wright Hepburn Webster Gallery, New York.
  • The National Society, London.
  • The Society of Graphic Fine Art, London.
  • The British Academy of Film and Television Arts, London.
  • The Lyttelton Theatre, London.
  • The Fry Art Gallery, Saffron Walden.
  • Royal Academy of Arts, Diploma Galleries, London: The Slade 1871-1971.
  • The Whitechapel Art Gallery: Mural and Decorative Painting, 1935.
  • The Tate Gallery: Mural Painting in Great Britain, 1939.

=Collections=

  • The Fry Art Gallery, Saffron Walden.
  • The Boundary Gallery, London.
  • The Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, University of Austin, Texas.
  • The British Film Institute, London.
  • Bruce Denman Collection.
  • David Cohen Collection.
  • Robert Worley Collection.
  • Nicholas de Piro Collection.
  • Bill Connelly Collection.
  • The Victoria and Albert Museum Archive of Art and Design, London.
  • The Royal Air Force Museum Art Collection, London.
  • The Imperial War Museum, London.
  • The Slade School of Fine Art, London.
  • University College London Art Museum.

=Record sleeves=

Created for Argo Records (UK), 1954 - 1957Scott, G.; Miles, B.; Morgan, J.: The Greatest Album Covers of All Time, "Under Milk Wood", London: Collins & Brown, 2005. {{ISBN|1-84340-301-3}}.

References

{{reflist}}

Further references

  • Bacon, C. W., Scratchboard Drawing, "Olga Lehmann", Studio Publications, 1951.
  • Branaghan, S., Chibnall, S, British Film Posters: An Illustrated History, British Film Institute, 2008, {{ISBN|1844572218}}.
  • Fishenden, R. B., The Penrose Annual; Review of the Graphic Arts, "Olga Lehmann", Hastings House, 1953.
  • Foss, B., War Paint: Art, War, State and Identity in Britain 1939-1945, Yale University Press, 2007.
  • Harper, S., Women in Cinema, "Olga Lehmann", Continuum, 2000.
  • York, Malcolm, Edward Bawden and his Circle, Woodbridge, Suffolk, Antique Collectors Club.