Wolpe began his career as an apprentice in a firm of metalworkers, followed by four years as a student of
Rudolf Koch at the Offenbach
Kunstgewerbeschule. In 1932 he visited London and met
Stanley Morison, who invited Wolpe to design a printing type of capital letters for the
Monotype Corporation. The typeface,
Albertus,[7][8] was first shown in 1935 and completed in 1940.
When
World War II was declared Wolpe, along with other German nationals living in England, was sent to an internment camp in
Australia. He was permitted to return to England in 1941 and joined the production department at
Faber and Faber.[9] His use of Albertus and hand-painted lettering became strongly identified with Faber jackets in the years that followed, and continued from 1958 on the Faber paper covered Editions.[10] He remained at Faber until his retirement in 1975 and is estimated to have designed over 1,500 book covers and dust jackets.[11][12]
A retrospective exhibition of Wolpe's career was held at the
V&A Museum in 1980 with Wolpe's involvement, and another in Mainz in 2006.[15][16][17] In 2017 Wolpe's font design publisher
Monotype released its Berthold Wolpe Collection, a set of updated digitisations of five Wolpe typefaces, and promoted them with an exhibition of Wolpe's work at the
Type Museum in London.[18][19]
Typefaces
Hyperion (1932), for the Bauer Foundry
Albertus (c. 1932-40), Wolpe's most popular typeface.
Pegasus, a
roman typeface with similarities to Albertus, in
Walter Tracy's words: "a roman with something of the angularity of the gothic."[20] Less popular than Albertus, privately revived by Matthew Carter for the 1980 exhibition on Wolpe's work, adding an italic and bold.[21][22] A digitisation was released in 2013 by Dinamo, and another in 2017 by Toshi Omagari as part of Monotype's Wolpe Collection.[23][24][25] Omagari's digitisation is used extensively by Tortoise Media.[26]
Tempest Titling (1935), an all-caps slanted display sans-serif for the Fanfare Press.[27][28]
Sachsenwald (1937-8), a modernised
blackletter. Never widely released due to the war, digitised 2017.[29]
Fanfare, a slanted condensed display sans-serif for the Fanfare Press.[30]
In 1959: A newe writing booke of copies, 1574, A fascimile of a unique Elisabethan Writing book in the Bodleian Library Oxford, Lion and Unicorn Press, London. In this book Wolpe added an introduction, notes and translations of the written texts in the original.
In 1960, Wolpe published Renaissance Handwriting: An Anthology of Italic Scripts, co-authored with
Alfred Fairbank, World Publishing Company & Faber and Faber
In 1967, Wolpe prepared revived editions of the early nineteenth century specimen books of London typefounder
Vincent Figgins.[31][32]
In 1975, Wolpe published a monograph on the Elizabethan writing-master
John de Beauchesne. The Life & Work of: John de Beauchesne & the First English Writing-books was published in a limited edition of 50 copies for the Society for Italic Handwriting, and was subsequently republished as a chapter in A. S. Osley's Scribes and Sources (1980).[33][34]
Personal life
His wife was fellow artist Margaret Wolpe (née Smith; sculptor and silversmith)[35][36] and his children are Paul (doctor); Toby (technology journalist);[37] Sarah [Wolpe-Lawrence] (designer and basket maker); Deborah [Hopson-Wolpe] (potter and printmaker – who uses BLW's Albertus typeface in her work).
^Osley, A. S. (1980). Scribes and sources: Handbook of the chancery hand in the sixteenth century : texts from the writing-masters (1 ed.). Boston: D. R. Godine.
ISBN9780879232979.
^McLean, Ruairi (6 July 1989). "Obituary: Berthold Wolpe". The Independent.