The Scotsman

Chris Carrell

Arts administra­tor who guided Glasgow’s successful City of Culture bid

- SUSAN MANSFIELD

Chris Carrell, arts administra­tor. Born: 9 March 1941 in Barnard Castle, County Durham. Died: 13 April, 2021 in Portsmouth, aged 80

Avisionary arts administra­tor who spent 13 years at the helm of Glasgow’s Third Eye Centre, Chris Carrell was a crucial figure in shaping Glasgow’s successful bid to be 1990 City of Culture. His energy and ability to enable others helped shape the grassroots arts scene for which the city is now internatio­nally recognised.

Born Ronald Christophe­r Carrell in Barnard Castle in 1941, he never knew the father after whom he was named, pilot Officer Ronald Carrell, who died in a bombing raid in Germanyin october 1940. after the war, his mother and stepfather, Frank hutchins, moved to kent.

Chris attended Worksop College in Nottingham­shire as a weekly boarder and studied art at Kings College, Durham, where his tutors included Victorpas more and richard hamilton. His work was selected by Pas more for the young contempora­ries exhibition in London in 1962 which included artists such as RB Kitaj, David Ho ck neyand peter blake. the following year he married artist Rose Frain, with whom he had two children, Severin and Shanna. Later, he had another daughter, Lucy, with Bronwen Ross.

After a brief time as an art teacher and lecturer in the North-east, he co-founded Ceolfri th, a bookshop and poetry press in Sunderland which championed the work of local poets.

From there, he founded Sunderland Arts Centre, where he began to put into practice the ideas he would use to great effect in Glasgow: mixing “high” and “low” art forms, championin­g community engagement and reaching out to new audiences. highlights of his time in Sunderland include Beyond the horizon, a festival of science fiction, and Ha’way the Lads, an exhibition and book dedicated to Sunderland Associatio­n Football Club, to mark its centenary and celebrate its 1973 FA Cup victory.

In 1978 he was appointed director of the Third Eye Centre, taking over from founder Tom Mcgrath. He built on and expanded Mcgrath’s model, attracting a wide range of audiences and helping to make the Third Eye Centre an iconic venue

in the city. An exhibition, A History of Scottish Football, attracted 30,000 visitors in six weeks in 1984 and went on to tour Scotland.

Alasdair Gray’s seminal novel, Lanark, was launched at the Third Eye Centre in 1981 and, in 1983, Chris organised noise and Smoky Breath, an exhibition in the Mitchell Library which celebrated how Glasgow had inspired writers.

The accompanyi­ng book was one of the first to bring together in the same volume the burgeoning literary talent in the city at the time.

Artists from Scotland were given the same platform at the Third Eye as top artists around the world. Notable exhibition­s included John Bellany, George Wyllie, the New Glasgow Boys, the first survey of the first 50 years of Scottish photograph­y and a celebratio­n of the work of Jimmy Boyle and the Special Unit at Barlinnie prison.

In 1986, working with Malcolm Maclean, Carrell programmed an exhibition As an Fhearann (From The Land), exploring the Highland Clearances and Gaeldom. It went on to tour in Scotland and Canada for four years. Maclean says the show was instrument­al in inspiring the Scottish Arts Council to engage seriously with Gaelic culture. The Third Eye Centre also championed marginal communitie­s, staging a season of work by artists with disabiliti­es out of which grew Project Ability, of which Chris was a director.

Chris’s approach embraced all art forms, from fashion and rock music to experiment­al visual art and performanc­e. Colleagues describe Chris as a modest man with a legendary ability to connect with others and enable them to realise their own projects, thereby conjuring a large and varied programme despite a small team and limited budget. His teambuildi­ng abilities were also legendary and might involve bussing the entire staff, including the cleaners, with a crate of beers, to a muddy field out of town to play rounders.

It was a crucial time in Glasgow’s history, when the city was recognisin­g the importance of culture in post-industrial­renewal. carr ell was on the board of Mayfest, the Glasgow Garden Festival (the test-bed for the City of Culture bid), and a driving force in the bid itself. Andrew Nairne, who worked for Chris at the Third Eye, said: “His achievemen­ts in Glasgow were truly remarkable. He is one of a very small number of people who were the catalyst for the glasgow we take for granted now–a dynamic, creative city of internatio­nal standing .” another former employee, Robert Livingston, wrote of him that “probably no other single individual did more... to make the case for glasgow to be declared 1990 City of Culture”.

At thee nd of the1980s,assovi et Bloc countries were beginning to open up to the West, Chris fostered links with Easterneur­ope, programmin­g seasons of work from Poland in 1988 and Russia in 1989.

Scotsman theatre critic Joyce Mcmillan was one of a group of journalist­s Chris took to Russia in 1989. She describes the trip, on which they met everyone from dissident artists to Soviet culture ministers, as “life-changing” and a tribute to Chris’s ability to organise and build connection­s.

After the closure of the Third Eye Centre in 1991 (it would later reopen as the CCA), Chris moved to Portsmouth as city arts officer. Over the next decade, he continued to implement his ideas of inclusiven­ess and engagement. For the Europe in Portsmouth Festival, he brought artists from all over the EU to install large scale works around the city, and was detailed to escort its most famous visitor, Princess Diana, on a tour of the works.

In Portsmouth, Chris met his second wife, Carole Pook, and became stepfather to her three children. In retirement he became interested in biography and social history, recording several oral histories of service men, including his own stepfather. In 2017 he travelled to the Commonweal­th war cemetery at charlotte n burg, berlin, to visit the grave of the father he had never known.

He died after along battle with Parkinson’s Disease. He is survivedby his second wife ca role, three children, four grandchild­ren, his stepchildr­en and his brother John.

 ??  ?? 0 Chris Carrell championed community engagement and reaching out to new audiences
0 Chris Carrell championed community engagement and reaching out to new audiences

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