Margaret Agnes Rope


Margaret Agnes Rope was a British stained glass artist in the Arts and Crafts movement tradition active in the first four decades of the 20th century. Her work is notable for the intensity and skill of the painting and the religious fervour underpinning it. She should not be confused with her cousin, Margaret Edith Rope, another British stained glass artist in the same tradition, active from 1910 until the mid-1960s, with whom she cooperated on some windows.

Life

The two Margaret Ropes were first cousins, granddaughters of George Rope of Grove Farm, Blaxhall, Suffolk and his wife Anne . The elder Margaret Rope, Margaret Agnes Rope, was the second child of Henry John Rope, M.D and Agnes Maud. "Marga" was her nickname. She was born on 20 June 1882 and christened Margaret Agnes at St Mary's Church, Shrewsbury on 7 July. It was an Anglican family but, soon after her husband's early death in 1899, her mother converted to Roman Catholicism. She brought her children up in some degree of poverty, exacerbated by her father's will, which denied money to any descendant "in religion". Of the children, two became nuns and one a priest. Two other siblings were Irene Vaughan, a botanist, and Michael Rope, an aeronautical engineer, who died in the R101 airship disaster. Only one, Denys, a doctor of medicine, continued as an Anglican, following his father.
She was educated at home until she went in 1900 to the Birmingham Municipal School of Art. Studies included enamelling and lettering. From 1901, she studied stained glass under Henry Payne. She had an illustrious career at the school including a number of scholarships, plus many awards in the National Competition for Schools of Art. In 1909, she left the school and worked from home especially on the large west window of Shrewsbury Cathedral, the first of seven she did there. From 1911, she worked at The Glass House until 1923 when, on 14 September, she became a Carmelite nun, Sister Margaret of the Mother of God. As a nun, she was first at Woodbridge, Suffolk, later at Rushmere, near Ipswich, and, after the Second World War, at Quidenham Hall, Norfolk. At Woodbridge, she was able to continue her work, sending glass to and fro by train to the Glass House in Fulham for cutting, firing and leading up. This continued until 1939. After the war and the move to Quidenham, she was not well enough to do more than help with the designs for the windows for the monastery church, which were made by her cousin. She died on 6 December 1953 aged 71.
Although she is buried at Quidenham, a memorial window to her can be found at the Church of the Holy Family and St Michael at Kesgrave, near Ipswich, itself a memorial to her brother Michael Rope. This memorial was a window adapted by her cousin from an incomplete work of hers. Her archive was held at the Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery but has since been transferred.
She is reputed to have been a strong character, smoking and motorbike-riding being among her pastimes before she took her vows. Her stained glass work also shows strength of character as well as artistry in design and execution of a high order. Much of her best work is typified by strong colours, jewelled intensity and consummate glass painting skills. The sense of individual personality that shines from many of the faces she portrayed is powerful.

Works

Apart from student pieces on secular themes, her artistic output was exclusively for churches, nearly all Roman Catholic. Common themes of her windows were the Catholic English Martyrs, the Annunciation and the lives of the Saints. In a shorter career than her cousin, only 30-odd years, she inevitably produced fewer windows - around 60. The most notable examples are listed below with locations and some illustrations. First are windows in the United Kingdom, followed by those in other countries, in alphabetical order of county or country. Inaccessible windows have been omitted. Asterisks indicate windows of particular importance.
LocationDetailsNotes-
Cheshire: Oxton, Birkenhead, Holy NameEnglish Martyrs; SS. Elizabeth, Mary, John the Baptist; SS. Therèse of Lisieux & Winifride*** See gallery-
Cheshire: Hoylake, St HildeburghSt George - memorial window.-
Cheshire: Stockport, Our Lady & the ApostlesThe Holy FamilyEast window-
Dyfed: Llandovery, Our LadyMemorial window to her sister's children** See gallery-
Gwent: Llanarth, S.Mary & S.MichaelSS Francis & Benedict.-
Lanarkshire: Lanark, S.MaryThe Last Days & Crucifixion, Parable of the Prodigal Son*** See gallery-
London: Clapham, St MaryThe Holy Family, Crucifixion, Virgin & Child, Blessed Sacrament.-
London: Tyburn Convent20 roundels commemorating the English Martyrs***-
Norfolk: Quidenham Carmelite MonasteryMany windows in the chapel designed by her but made by her cousinAlso S.Theresa, S.Joseph, Holy Trinity in the enclosure-
Oxfordshire: Clifton HampdenSt George & Dragon.-
Shropshire: Newport, SS Peter & PaulSS Peter & Paul, SS Winefride & Nicholas, Our Lady Help of Christians*** See Gallery-
Shropshire: Cathedral Church of Our Lady & S.Peter of AlcantaraEnglish Martyrs, Visitation with S. Cecilia, Congress window, Soldier window, S. Lawrence, BaptisterySeveral of her early windows, inc. her first major work. See gallery: 3 images-
Suffolk: Blaxhall, S.PeterNativity with Saints ** An early work -
Suffolk: Kesgrave, Holy Family & S.MichaelHoly Family & S.Michael, David & Isaiah, SS.Thomas More & John Fisher, SS.Margaret & Catherine, S.Dominic, Holy Saturday Procession, Virgin & Child Many works including cartoons in this memorial church to her brother Michael. See gallery.-
Surrey, All SaintsS.Hedwig.-
Australia: Geraldton, WA: S.Francis Xavier6 windows including Janua Coeli, Rosa Mystica, Resurrection, Bp Kelly memorialin Cathedral designed by Monsignor Hawes -
Italy: Rome, Venerable English CollegeS.Ralph Sherwin.-
South Africa: Balgowan, SchoolSamuel, David, S.Michael, Virgin & Child, Gabriel, John the Baptist, Loaves & fishesSeven memorial lancets in school chapel**
South Africa: Randfontein, S.John the Divine"This do and thou shalt live".-
USAThe Well of Love, Goblin MarketStudent pieces not usually on display at Los Angeles County Museum and New York Metropolitan Museum -

Exhibition

A major exhibition of Rope's work, under the title Heavenly Lights, opened at Shrewsbury Museum and Art Gallery in September 2016.

Gallery