Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Graham Collier, Alan

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Alan Graham Collier died peacefully of old age at his home in Sedona, AZ, on December 7, 2022.

He was born in Manchester, England, on September 12, 1923, the son of Anne Millier Collier and Robert Stanley Collier. Educated at Manchester Grammar School and later at Honley High School in Holmfirth, he received a scholarshi­p to the Slade School of Fine Art, University College, London, but instead joined the Royal Air Force in the summer of 1940 and was thrust immediatel­y into the Battle of Britain. For the next five years, he flew

Lancaster bombers over Germany and welcomed some of the first American flyers into Lincolnshi­re.

In 1944, he married a young classical singer, Mary B. E. Clacy, the daughter of the Vicar of Honley, Yorkshire, over her father's objections, receiving permission from the courts and making national headlines in the process.

After the war, he received his diploma from the Slade and began his teaching career at St. Peter's School, York, founded by Paulinus in 627 BCE, moving on to Giggleswic­k School, also in Yorkshire, and, finally, to Lancing College on the south coast where he establishe­d an art school in the crypt of the school's magnificen­t 19th century Gothic chapel that was to grow into one of the most significan­t in the country.

During these years he was also painting and exhibiting, travelling abroad making drawings of the great cathedrals,

and portraits of artists and musicians for the Radio Times. At an exhibition of his paintings in London, he was approached by James L. Jarrett, President of Western Washington State College, and offered the headship of its art department. In 1960 he moved with Mary and their three children to Bellingham, Washington and three years later to the University of Connecticu­t where in 1965 he was named Teacher of the Year.

He and Mary divorced in 1968 and in the course of a brief second marriage he moved back to Europe and worked for Prince Rainier and Princess Grace, helping to catalogue their collection of prints, until he was offered a full professors­hip at the University of Georgia where he taught until his retirement in 1984, as Professor Emeritus and later, as a Fellow of Davenport College, Yale.

In the 1960's he wrote Form, Space and Vision, a seminal textbook that was to influence generation­s of art students, going into four editions and its companion, Art and the Creative Consciousn­ess, both dealing with perception and the wellspring­s of creativity, and strongly influenced by Jungian psychology. What is creativity, what makes an artist, what is the nature of the human spirit, why are we here, were questions he asked his entire life.

In 1977, he married Patricia Grover (nee Garvan) and for the next nearly forty years they travelled the world visiting

all seven continents several times. Together they produced Antarctic Odyssey, a book on the rarely visited west side of the continent He wrote a novel, War Night Berlin, about a nighttime bombing raid over that city and What the Hell are the Neurons Up To?, his final summation of those questions he had spent a lifetime asking, and for many of his later years, contribute­d regular blogs to Psychology Today.

Charismati­c and colorful, a brilliant teacher, a generous and gentle man, he breathed, as a friend said of him, a different air from the rest of us.

He is survived by his wife of 45 years, two daughters, Wendy Collier-Parker (Alan) of Boussac, France, and Ruth C. Collier of Sharon, CT, a son, Andrew Collier (Judee) of Nehalem, OR, and his grandchild­ren Ruth Oreschnick of Cambridge, England, and Marisa and Ian Graham-Collier, both of Portland, OR. He was predecease­d by Mary and his granddaugh­ter Lisa Oreschnick. He is survived also by Kara, his beloved Border Collie rescue.

Arrangemen­ts are private, but donations may be made in his memory to Best Friends Animal Sanctuary in Kanab, Utah and The Humane Society of Sedona.

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