David Morrison - 4th August 1941 - 1st September 2012
Poet, short story writer and painter.
Widely published and exhibited. Founder and former editor of the Scotia Review.
Examples of Paintings
Click Here For Some Works By David Morrison
Music and Poetry Day for Scotia Review - 10th January 2004
David Morrison was born in Glasgow in 1941 and died 1st September, 2012, in Wick, aged 71. He was educated at Glasgow High School for boys and Hamilton Academy. At the age of 18 he entered librarianship as an assitant, then went to Glasgow College of Commerce and Strathclyde University to qualify as a professional librarian. Over the years he has been County Librarian for Caithness and Area Librarian for Caithness and Sutherland. In the 1970's and 1980s he ran the Wick Folk Club and the Wick Festival of Poetry, Folk and Jazz both recognised on the national calendar. In 1970 he founded "Scotia Review", a radical literary magazine. After editing the magazine for 34 years he handed over its editorship in 2004. Caithness was his adopted, spirtual home, a land of big skies and never ending interest.
David Morrison is widely published and anthologised. He has exhibited in one man shows and group exhibitions all over Scotland and in London.
Archived Material from David Morrison and Scotia Review is held by the Scottish Room, National Library, Scotland and Scottish Poetry Library, Edinburgh.
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Obituary by GEORGE GUNN Published in the "Scotsman" newspaper 7 September 2012
Born: 4 August, 1941, in Glasgow. Died: 1 September, 2012, in Wick, aged 71.
With the sudden death of David Morrison, Caithness in particular and Scotland in general have lost one of their more colourful creative spirits. Poet, painter, editor and librarian, he was many things to many people and, however local he was in his political and cultural commitments, Morrison was a literary figure of national significance and it is no coincidence that the subheading and stated purpose of Scotia Review, the magazine he founded in 1970 and subsequently edited for the next 34 years, was 'for the Scottish Muse and Nation'.
Although born in Glasgow into a family of teachers and two generations of Presbyterian ministers, David Morrison was always drawn to the expressive arts and, before his formal training in librarianship at Strathclyde University, he had harboured ambitions to be a singer but the combination of a speech impediment and his mothers refusal to sign his consent forms for the Royal Scottish Academy of Music Drama forced him to seek an alternative vocation.
So it was he found himself as principal assistant librarian at the Edinburgh College of Art in the early 1960s and, by his own admission, 'unhappy'.
But his life was to have two major upturns. The first was his marriage to Edna Hanson in 1963. She remained his life-long companion, his inspiration and the mother of his two children, Ewan and Glenna.
Ewan is now a very successful novelist and Glenna an accomplished actor. So, however sudden his death, his life does have a symmetry.
The other upturn was the move to Caithness in 1965. Here, in the flat plateau of the Pictish peatlands with its huge open landscape and cathedral skies, David Morrison discovered his spiritual home and his artistic resource.
It was in Caithness he found work as the county librarian and did much to revolutionise the provision of books in the far north, but, more importantly, in Caithness he developed his artistic, cultural and political consciousness, made his home and raised his family.
As he wrote in his poem Caithness:
'This landscape cries out for verticals
Placed here and there, where the sun's set
Will pierce and dance, taunt around a hole,
Cast shadows, shaft life on this ancient tomb.'
This cry, this 'coronach', is a constant feature of his poetic output, which stretched to 13 collections and various pamphlets and were gathered into The Cutting Edge: collected poems 1966-2003, published by the University of Salzburg in 2006. This restlessness, whether a product of professional or political frustration or by the wind blowing across the fields and cliffs of Caithness, gives Morrison's work, both literary and visual, a sense of urgency.
There may be a few constants: family, friends, Scotland – but everything seems to be on the move. The legacy of Scotia Review – in the sheer number of established and young unknown writers (and this is where I first got to know David almost 40 years ago) and by the ground-breaking Wick Festival of Poetry, Folk and Jazz in the 1970s, is testament to this urgency and need for movement.
It was heartening that in 1984 the National Library of Scotland held a celebratory exhibition of the work of Scotia Review and I knew that David was very proud of this recognition.
He was a romantic nationalist in verse, an abstract expressionist in paint, a generous publisher and promoter, and a loyal and faithful friend; his energy touched many and his sincerity impressed those with the sense to see it.
The list of writers David brought to Caithness reads like a who’s who of 20th-century Scottish literature: Norman MacCaig, Sorley Maclean, Fionn Mac Colla, Iain Crichton Smith – the list is long. There are few young artists from the north of Scotland who were not inspired – and practically helped – by David Morrison.
Sometimes big personalities in small places can create sparks and it will come as no surprise to the many who knew him that sometimes Wick and David Morrison would stare simmeringly at each other over an issue. He had no use for parochialism of any hue and whether his attention was fixed on Wick or Edinburgh it was the greater world that fascinated him. Sometimes his mood would grow black but he had a surfeit of humanity to ensure that it never lasted long. His gift was that he always accentuated the positive.
If there was a tragedy, it was that he did not promote his own work as tirelessly as he did the work of others.
If that has the consequence that his poetry and painting are not as fashionable as they could or should be, then it is the converse that it is the mark of humility and that in any age is a rare quality.
There have not been and, I suspect, there will not be many to come like David Morrison. Scottish cultural life has lost a rare and vital catalyst. He lit up my life and I will miss him terribly. His legacy, thank goodness, is more vital than my sorrow.
David Morrison is survived by his wife Edna, his son Ewan and daughter Glenna and four grandchildren.
Entry in History Of Wick Library
David Ralston Morrison, ALA,
Caithness County Librarian,
Caithness and Sutherland Divisional Librarian,
And then Wick Branch Librarian.
David Ralston Morrison, born in Glasgow on the 4th of August 1941. Married Edna May Wade Hanson on the 21st August 1963 in David Livingstone's Memorial Church, they have two children, one boy and one girl, Ewan & Glenna. David & Edna also have two grandchildren, Theo and Frances May, children of Ewan & Beatrice Morrison (nee Colin).
David was educated at Glasgow High School for boys, Hamilton Academy and Strathclyde University. Started librarianship with Lanarkshire County Libraries, prior to coming to Caithness, was a librarian in the Edinburgh School of Art.
Came to Caithness in 1965 to taken up the position of Principal Assistant Librarian under the County Librarian, Dr. F. W. Robertson. David was based in Thurso Library where he oversaw the removal of the library from the Old Town Hall in Thurso to its present situation at Davidson Lane, Thurso.
When Dr. Robertson retired, David was appointed to the position of County Librarian on the 4th January 1972.
Until regionalization to Highland Regional Council in 1975 the following was achieved.
1. Introduction of the Mobile Library Service.
2. Introduction of Primary Schools Service.
3. Introduction of 2 more professional staff.
4. Significant increase in book fund.
In 1975 came the regionalization of Highland Regional Council. David was not afraid to be quoted, “What was promised was maximum devolution of decision making. In reality since 1975 all we had has been maximum centralization.”
1975 - 1992. David was appointed as Divisional Librarian for Caithness and Sutherland, then Area Librarian for Caithness and Sutherland, latterly because he refused to venture to work and live in Inverness, his job title become Wick Branch Librarian.
6 December 2014
Ednas has decided to sell some of the paintings that David has left. If you are interested in buying one contact Edna.
Telephone
01955 603703
E-mail
ednadave@aol.com
Postal Address
David Morrison - 4th August 1941 - 1st September 2012
18 MacArthur Street
Wick
Caithness
KW1 5AX
Contact
David Morrison
News for David Morrison - 4th August 1941 - 1st September 2012
New David Morrison Gallery Added
A new David Morrison Gallery has been added to the web site showing some of his recent works. To view the pictures just click through to the gallery.The Cutting Edge. Collected Poems 1966-2003 By David Morrison
Foreword by Gerry Cambridge. Introduction by Iain Crichton Smith "Though his poetry has a masculine outspokenness and force, he is very sensitive to the feminine part of his nature." Iain Crichton Smith "David Morrison takes a clear look at life and all who share it and writes about them (and himself) with admirable energy.If you contact this Artist, please let them know, you found them in the Arts.Caithness.Org