Norman Potter Explained

Norman Potter
Birth Name:Norman Arthur Potter
Birth Date:17 April 1923
Birth Place:London, England
Death Place:Falmouth, Cornwall, England
Occupation:Cabinetmaker, writer, educator
Notable Works:What is a Designer? (1969)

Norman Arthur Potter (17 April 1923  - 22 November 1995) was a cabinetmaker, political dissident, poet and author of What is a Designer?[1]

Life

By trade, Potter was a cabinetmaker and designer, a minimalist decades before the term became fashionable. He was a Christian anarchist and was imprisoned several times for his political actions.[2] In 1949, he set up a workshop at Corsham in Wiltshire that produced modern furniture. In the late 1950s, Potter attained a full-time position teaching design at the Royal College of Art. In 1964, Potter, along with several colleagues, established a Construction School at the West of England College of Art and Design in Bristol. Potter sustained his political activism through this period, joining the student revolts of 1968. It was also in 1968 that Potter wrote What is a designer. A little over twenty years later, he followed up with Models & Constructs in 1990. Potter died of a heart attack in 1995 while bicycling in Falmouth.[3]

Books by Potter

In the late 1960s Potter taught at Chesterfield College of Art and Design and had a great effect on their Environmental Design where he showed that the ability to write reports and be creative with a typewriter was just as important as drawing and design.

Notes

  1. News: Rawsthorn. Alice. 2013-06-16. Remembering a Heroic Rogue. en-US. The New York Times. 2021-06-19. 0362-4331.
  2. News: Norman Potter obituary. https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220621/https://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/obituary-norman-potter-1525950.html . 21 June 2022 . subscription . live. 16 December 1995. Tanya. Harrod. London. The Independent.
  3. "Norman Potter, 1923-1995." Robin Kinross. Unjustified Texts: Perspectives on Typography. London: Hyphen Press, 2002. pp. 68-71.