GORDON RUSSELL’S
LIFE AND WORK

“He was probably the first designer who was involved in a total lifestyle…he was interested in the product but he was also interested in the life that surrounded it. He was interested in the garden, he was interested in the food, in hotel keeping…in the whole.”

“One of those peculiarly English geniuses who are not given the full recognition they deserve.”

Sir Terence Conran (1931-2020)

WHERE IT ALL BEGAN

The Gordon Russell Story began in 1904, when he was 12, and his father bought the Lygon Arm in Broadway (Sydney’s vision was to turn the inn into one of the most renowned country hotels in England, which he achieved with great success). Moving the family to the Cotswolds had an everlasting impact on Gordon, where the Arts and Crafts style had also taken roots- a movement that interested Gordon for the entirety of his life- whilst living at the Lygon Arms provided an interesting and stimulating environment for the budding designer.

Gordon left school at the age of 15 to work in the family business where he was put in charge of the repair workshops that serviced the hotel. His close observation of designer-makers at work provided him with an understanding of how an object is constructed- something that aided Gordon’s later detailed design drawings.

In 1914, Gordon served during the war where he was awarded the Military Cross, but even in the most harrowing of settings he was still thinking about design. So on his return to Broadway, he pursued his passion and began to create well-designed, affordable furniture that fused hand craftmanship and the use of machinery. Gradually he emerged as one of the first modern designers of the twentieth century.