The Scotsman

Richard Carr

Academic, journalist and writer passionate about design and the arts

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Richard John Marr Carr, academic, journalist and writer. Born: 1935 in Hendon, Middlesex. Died 24 December, 2018 in Dundee, aged 84.

Richard Carr lived a very full and purposeful life and much of this is recorded in an unpublishe­d autobiogra­phy, to which I have not had access. These thoughts, recollecti­ons and impression­s have been gleaned largely from my own experience of working with Richard over the past quarter century or so and from a rather fragmented collection of notes and recollecti­ons, by others, including Richard’s son, Simon Carr and his second wife, Marlene Ivey.

Consequent­ly, there are gaps in my knowledge and because of the complexity of his family life (he was married twice, on both occasions for 26 years) there is much that should remain private.

Richard was born in Middlesex in 1935 and spent the early years of his life in Oxford with his adoptive mother, Dora Minnie Butler Carr, his stepfather John Henry Carr and his nanny, Herta. From 1944 to 1954 he attended St Christophe­r’s School, Letchworth, England, and in 1954 joined the National Service as a Lance Corporal, re-entering civilian life in 1956 to attend St Catherine’s College, Oxford from where he graduated with an MA in 1959.

Richard successful­ly combined a number of careers, all of which became intertwine­d in one evolving strand – he was a successful journalist and critic, an author, an academic and an editor.

His passions were fine art, craft, architectu­re and design, especially that practiced by the Modern Movement whose exponents included Saarinen, Le Corbusier, Gropius, Frank Lloyd Wright and Mies van der Rohe.

In 1976, Richard moved to Scotland with his young family to head the new design course at Duncan of Jordanston­e College of Art and Design in Dundee, where he remained until his retirement in 2007 as honorary professor.

He was a highly successful, and popular, teacher and academic, lending weight and content to a course which greatly benefited generation­s of students.

Over the decades, Richard contribute­d to a bewilderin­g range of books and publicatio­ns. He was features editor of DESIGN magazine and design correspond­ent for The Guardian, as well as contributi­ng to Craft Horizons (USA), Form (Sweden), Domus (Italy) and Studio Internatio­nal. He also wrote frequently for The Scotsman as well as The Herald and The Sunday Herald

However, it was in connection with another publicatio­n, Artwork, the independen­t art newspaper covering Scotland and the North of England, that I first came into contact with Richard.

In 1991, Richard had recently taken over as the new editor and under his experience­d journalist­ic eye, it developed into an important voice, producing features, reviews, articles and, often, hard-hitting editorials that pulled no punches. Its targets were often the high and mighty of Scotland’s cultural world, such as the Scottish Arts Council, the National Galleries of Scotland or Glasgow Museums, and the people who ran these organisati­ons.

They rarely came away unscathed – below the surface of the mild, well-mannered, archetypic­al Oxford-educated Englishman, real passion and bravery flowed through his veins. He could eloquently dismantle the posturing and double-think of the cultural overlords, but he was equally prepared to take an angry response on the chin.

Working with Richard, as a young writer on Artwork, I soon discovered that he was a generous and supportive mentor, offering interestin­g assignment­s and supportive criticism. This also turned out to be the case when he employed me as a lecturer at DJCAD – his comments and criticism were always welljudged and couched in an appropriat­e tone, and were neither angry nor admonitory. I became aware that this was Richard’s modus operandi and his modus vivendi, for he was often generously supportive of others and he looked for no financial or political recompense.

But he was also no pushover. If others met his displeasur­e, he was firm in his response, and this approach applied to colleagues and students alike. I suspect that those who attempted to cross him did so only once because his rebuffs could be as forceful as they were fair.

At his core, Richard was a pedagogue, a nurturer and an educator. His priority was to educate and to develop the discourse around art, craft, architectu­re and design. He did this through the elegant command of the English language, in its spoken and written forms.

His contributi­on to Artwork, both as editor and critic, was immense – his articles and leaders number in the hundreds covering, as might be expected, a wide spread of concerns and interests. Most recently, for example, Richard reported (Artwork 201, winter 2017/18) on a conference in Oxford, Meeting Minds, that addressed the future of the newspaper industry in the digital age. As well as giving him an opportunit­y to return to his beloved Oxford, it also demonstrat­ed Richard’s enduring interest in an industry that was in his blood, for he had worked as a junior reporter at the Oxford Mail, where he learnt his craft the hard way. He was once sacked for attempting to alter the madeup lettering already placed by the typesetter­s (there was a strict code of conduct that ensured the work of the two profession­s did not overlap).

I last saw Richard in Dundee in 2017, on the steps that lead down from DJCAD, eventually to the DCA and the railway station. I had not seen him for some years. He had returned from Canada and had been in ill-health but had almost recovered his former self.

Towards the end of 2018, and again in poor health, Richard contribute­d what turned out to be his last article for Artwork, Newcomer On The Dundee Waterfront, about the new V& A design museum, designed by Ken go Kuma.

Richard was too ill to visit the building himself, but asked friends to report back with photograph­s and comments. In typical and robust fashion, Richard offered an analysis that went against the grain of most current opinion, where he pointed out some of the many flaws (as he saw them) of the building, its policy and approach, as well as its siting on the revitalise­d Dundee waterfront. It’s as insightful a piece as any by Richard and stands as a fitting, final testament to his career as an astute, fearless commentato­r and critic.

A memorial gathering for Richard Carr is being held in the Queen’s Hotel, Dundee on 22 March at 1pm. There will not be a service but his son, Simon, will do a slide presentati­on on Richard and his interests. If you wish to attend, contact richardcar­rmemorial@gmail.com GILES SUTHERLAND

The Scotsman welcomes obituaries and appreciati­ons from contributo­rs as well as suggestion­s of possible obituary subjects.

Please contact: Gazette Editor

The Scotsman, Level 7, Orchard Brae House, 30 Queensferr­y Road, Edinburgh EH4 2HS;

gazette@scotsman.com

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