Gordon Russell (designer)

Sir (Sydney) Gordon Russell, (20 May 1892 – 7 October 1980) was an English designer, craftsman and educationist.

Biography
Gordon Russell was born in Cricklewood, London to Sydney Bolton and Elizabeth Russell. His father was a clerk in a bank but was later offered a job in George Allsop in Burton-on-Trent, the brewers. The family moved to live in Repton. When Gordon was twelve years old his father bought the Lygon Arms Inn in Broadway Worcestershire and the family moved again to live in the hotel. Gordon went to the Grammar School at the nearby village at Chipping Campden. In 1921 Gordon married Toni Denning. In 1925 he bought a one-and-a-half acre plot on Dover's Hill overlooking Chipping Campden where they built their home, named Kingcombe. They lived at Kingcombe for the rest of their lives, extending it several times over the years, and raised their four children there.

Career
He came under the influence of the Arts and Crafts movement from 1904 after his father had moved to Broadway in the Cotswolds to be hotelier at the Lygon Arms, through the Guild of Handicraft, the community of metalworkers, enamellers, wood carvers, furniture makers, and printers brought in 1902 by C. R. Ashbee from east London to Chipping Campden.

Following service as an officer in World War I, for which he was awarded the Military Cross in 1918, he became a furniture maker and designer. In 1925 Russell won a Gold Medal at the Paris Exhibition with a cabinet, with internal drawers lined with boxwood, ebony and laburnum, and valued in 2013 at £50,000 to £60,000. He designed the "Stow" range of furniture in the mid 1920s. During World War II he was instrumental in developing utility furniture as Chairman of the government's Utility Furniture Design Panel. In 1943 he became Chairman of the Utility Design Panel. In 1947 Gordon Russell became director of the Council of Industrial Design (COID) (later renamed the Design Council. He became the first chairman of the Crafts Council. Notable designs by Russell include chairs for the re-built Coventry Cathedral. His brother Richard Drew Russell was also a designer.

He was awarded a knighthood in 1955 for services to design. He wrote a number of books on furniture, including Furniture (1947), How to Buy Furniture (1947), The Story of Furniture (1947, with Jacques Groag, later published as Looking at Furniture (1953, 1964)). In 1968 he published his autobiography, Designer's Trade.

Portrait bust of Sir Gordon Russell
Gordon Russell sat for sculptor Alan Thornhill for a portrait in clay. The correspondence file relating to the Russell portrait bust is held in the archive of the Henry Moore Foundation's Henry Moore Institute in Leeds and the terracotta remains in the collection of the artist. A Bronze is in the collection of the Gordon Russell Museum in Broadway, Worcestershire.

References and sources

 * References


 * Sources
 * Fiona MacCarthy, "Russell, Sir (Sydney) Gordon (1892–1980)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, September 2004; online edn, May 2006 accessed 9 December 2006