David Carter (industrial designer)

David Carter RDI, CBE, was born in Leicester in 1927. He trained at the Leicester College of Art (now DeMontfort University), simultaneously spending a good part of 2 years in an engineering works. He served in the Navy, where he was in radar, and in 1948 returned to full-time study in the industrial design (engineering) department of the Central School of Art and Design.[1] he went on to a variety of industrial design positions and then in 1960 he set up on his own as a consultant, going on to employ a growing team of engineers, designers, model-makers and assistants as David Carter Associates.[2]

Simultaneously, he started teaching at the Birmingham College of Art and Design, where his head of department was the late Naum Slutzky, who had been one or Carter's teachers during his time at the Central, and whom Carter identifies as a powerful influence in his work.[3]

Under Carter’s continued leadership the David Carter Associates became DCA Design Consultants in 1975[4] and later renamed itself as DCA Design International Ltd in 1986.[5] He retired from DCA in 1992, though the company continues to trade to this day from its traditional home and headquarters on Church Street, Warwick in the UK.

Carter’s industrial design work has won many prizes including:

Carter established himself as a renowned industrial designer, becoming a member of the Royal Society of Arts, the Design Council, the Society of Industrial Artists and Designers and the Royal College of Art.

Carter was president of the Society of Industrial Artists and Designers during 1974–75, was appointed Royal Designer for Industry in 1974[9] and was a trustee of the Conran Boilerhouse Foundation, chairman of the Design Museum and chairman of the Royal Society of Arts Design Board in 1983. He was appointed a commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1980.

References

  1. 'Design' 1967, Title 221, Article 4, pages 30 to 34: The Council of Industrial Design Awards and the Duke of Edinburgh's Prize for Elegant Design 1967. http://www.vads.ac.uk/diad/article.php?year=1967&title=221&article=d.221.29
  2. 'Design' 1967, Title 221, Article 4, pages 30 to 34: The Council of Industrial Design Awards and the Duke of Edinburgh's Prize for Elegant Design 1967. http://www.vads.ac.uk/diad/article.php?year=1967&title=221&article=d.221.29
  3. 'Design' 1967, Title 221, Article 4, pages 30 to 34: The Council of Industrial Design Awards and the Duke of Edinburgh's Prize for Elegant Design 1967. http://www.vads.ac.uk/diad/article.php?year=1967&title=221&article=d.221.29
  4. Companies House, details of DCA Design Consultants - http://wck2.companieshouse.gov.uk/bd90619f36ed61e36b965594a235110e/compdetails
  5. Companies House, details of DCA Design International - http://wck2.companieshouse.gov.uk/bd90619f36ed61e36b965594a235110e/compdetails
  6. List of winners of the Prince Philip Designers Prize: 1959—1968 http://www.designcouncil.org.uk/about-us/prince-philip-designers-prize/19591968/
  7. Merrick, Jay (2000-09-20). "The trendy aristocrats of Retroland". The Independent. http://www.independent.co.uk/incoming/the-trendy-aristocrats-of-retroland-701634.html. Retrieved 10 July 2008.
  8. The Council of Industrial Design Awards and the Duke of Edinburgh's Prize for Elegant Design 1967 - http://www.vads.ac.uk/diad/article.php?year=1967&title=221&article=d.221.29
  9. Avocet: In Pursuit of Style, Tolu Solanke, 2010 - http://www.blurb.com/bookstore/detail/2116263

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 3/3/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.