Willie Rodger Politician as a Small Child Willie Rodger Politician as a Small Child Politician as a Small Child
Willie Rodger Politician as a Small Child Willie Rodger Politician as a Small Child Politician as a Small Child
About Willie Rodger RSA (1930-2018)

Born in Kirkintilloch, Willie won a place at Glasgow School of Art where he studied in the commercial art department from 1948 until 1953. The School’s head Douglas Percy Bliss was an early proponent of Edward Bawden’s work and the young Willie became an enthusiastic disciple. From the beginning he chose relief printing - wood and lino cuts - as his principal medium, rising to become the recognised master of his craft in Scotland over the ensuing decades.

He exhibited widely and regularly in the 1950s and 60s and was a member of the Glasgow Group alongside Ian McCulloch, Jack Knox and James Morrison in the 1970s. As with many artists of his generation he entered art education, spending two decades as principal teacher of art at Clydebank High School until his retirement in 1987.

He continued to practice throughout his teaching career, enjoying many high-profile public commissions throughout the 1970s. In 1971 he was awarded a Scottish Arts Council residency at Sussex University and in 1974 he was commissioned by Angus Ogilvy of the Stirling Gallery to produce a set of Scottish Historical Playing Cards to much acclaim. In 1978 Ruari Maclean, in his role as typographic adviser to HMSO, commissioned Willie to design an unissued set of Scottish devolution stamps and a year later a pictorial aerogramme commemorating the Open at St Andrews. During the years leading up to Glasgow’s tenure as European City of Culture in 1990, Willie benefited from the patronage of Tessa Jackson, then head of Visual Arts & Architecture for the event. Through her, Willie was commissioned to make a 100ft mural for Scotrail’s Exhibition Centre Station depicting Clydeside landmarks that still stands today.

He was a successful commercial graphic artist and stain glass designer, collaborating with the glass painter John K Clark on sets of windows in the parish churches of Kippen, St Mary’s Kirkintilloch and Milton of Campsie. Of the many book jackets featuring his work perhaps the best known are the 1983 edition of Monica Clough’s ‘Field of Thistles’ and more recently Liz Lochhead’s ‘The Colour of Black and White’ in 2003. Lochhead, a former Scots Makar, formed a strong personal bond with Willie and included two poems inspired by him and his work in her 2016 collection ‘Fugitive Colours’. She went on to describe his paintings as ‘deep saturations of pure colour’. Never an artist to be restricted by medium, his linocuts have been interpreted by the Dovecot Studios in both gun-tufted rug and tapestry.

He was the first artist to be elected an associate of the Royal Scottish Academy under the new category of printmaker in 1987, and elected full academician in 2005 when the associate rank was discontinued. In 1999 the University of Stirling bestowed an honorary doctorate for services to art in Scotland.

His work is held in the collection of the V & A, the Fleming Collection and the University of Stirling Art Gallery. Thanks to a grant from the National Fund for Acquisitions the Lillie Art Gallery added sixty of Willie’s lino cuts to their permanent collection in 2017. A retrospective exhibition was held in the Auld Kirk Museum, in his home town of Kirkintilloch, in 2005 to mark his 75th year.

Martin Hopkinson, the former Keeper of Prints at the University of Glasgow’s Hunterian Art Gallery, on learning of Rodger’s death wrote “his art was transformative for Scottish printmaking”.

Politician as a Small Child

£1,650
Original artwork
About Willie Rodger RSA (1930-2018)

Born in Kirkintilloch, Willie won a place at Glasgow School of Art where he studied in the commercial art department from 1948 until 1953. The School’s head Douglas Percy Bliss was an early proponent of Edward Bawden’s work and the young Willie became an enthusiastic disciple. From the beginning he chose relief printing - wood and lino cuts - as his principal medium, rising to become the recognised master of his craft in Scotland over the ensuing decades.

He exhibited widely and regularly in the 1950s and 60s and was a member of the Glasgow Group alongside Ian McCulloch, Jack Knox and James Morrison in the 1970s. As with many artists of his generation he entered art education, spending two decades as principal teacher of art at Clydebank High School until his retirement in 1987.

He continued to practice throughout his teaching career, enjoying many high-profile public commissions throughout the 1970s. In 1971 he was awarded a Scottish Arts Council residency at Sussex University and in 1974 he was commissioned by Angus Ogilvy of the Stirling Gallery to produce a set of Scottish Historical Playing Cards to much acclaim. In 1978 Ruari Maclean, in his role as typographic adviser to HMSO, commissioned Willie to design an unissued set of Scottish devolution stamps and a year later a pictorial aerogramme commemorating the Open at St Andrews. During the years leading up to Glasgow’s tenure as European City of Culture in 1990, Willie benefited from the patronage of Tessa Jackson, then head of Visual Arts & Architecture for the event. Through her, Willie was commissioned to make a 100ft mural for Scotrail’s Exhibition Centre Station depicting Clydeside landmarks that still stands today.

He was a successful commercial graphic artist and stain glass designer, collaborating with the glass painter John K Clark on sets of windows in the parish churches of Kippen, St Mary’s Kirkintilloch and Milton of Campsie. Of the many book jackets featuring his work perhaps the best known are the 1983 edition of Monica Clough’s ‘Field of Thistles’ and more recently Liz Lochhead’s ‘The Colour of Black and White’ in 2003. Lochhead, a former Scots Makar, formed a strong personal bond with Willie and included two poems inspired by him and his work in her 2016 collection ‘Fugitive Colours’. She went on to describe his paintings as ‘deep saturations of pure colour’. Never an artist to be restricted by medium, his linocuts have been interpreted by the Dovecot Studios in both gun-tufted rug and tapestry.

He was the first artist to be elected an associate of the Royal Scottish Academy under the new category of printmaker in 1987, and elected full academician in 2005 when the associate rank was discontinued. In 1999 the University of Stirling bestowed an honorary doctorate for services to art in Scotland.

His work is held in the collection of the V & A, the Fleming Collection and the University of Stirling Art Gallery. Thanks to a grant from the National Fund for Acquisitions the Lillie Art Gallery added sixty of Willie’s lino cuts to their permanent collection in 2017. A retrospective exhibition was held in the Auld Kirk Museum, in his home town of Kirkintilloch, in 2005 to mark his 75th year.

Martin Hopkinson, the former Keeper of Prints at the University of Glasgow’s Hunterian Art Gallery, on learning of Rodger’s death wrote “his art was transformative for Scottish printmaking”.