323- ] English Literature
Alasdair Gray
Riddrie, Glasgow, Scotland
Died 29 December 2019
(aged 85)
Govan, Glasgow, Scotland
Occupation
Novelist artist playwright academic teacher poet muralist illustrator
Alma mater Glasgow School
of Art
Genre Science fiction dystopianism surrealism realism
Literary movement Postmodern
literature
Years active 1951–2019
Notable works Lanark
1982, Janine
Poor Things
The Book of Prefaces
Spouse Inge Sørensen
(m. 1961; sep. 1969)
Morag McAlpine
(m. 1991; died 2014)
Children 1
Website Official
website
Alasdair Gray Archive
Alasdair James Gray
(28 December 1934 – 29 December 2019) was a Scottish writer and artist. He
published novels, short stories, plays, poetry and translations, and wrote on
politics and the history of English and Scots literature. His works of fiction
combine realism, fantasy, and science fiction with the use of his own
typography and illustrations, and won several awards.
Utilising a postmodern writing style, Gray's works have been compared with those of Franz Kafka, George Orwell, Jorge Luis Borges and Italo Calvino; and often contain extensive footnotes explaining the works that influenced them. His books inspired many younger Scottish writers, including Irvine Welsh, Alan Warner, A. L. Kennedy, Janice Galloway, Chris Kelso and Iain Banks. His first novel, Lanark (1981), is considered a landmark of Scottish fiction; in a 2016 public poll by the BBC, it was named the third-best Scottish novel of all time. He was writer-in-residence at the University of Glasgow from 1977 to 1979 and a professor of Creative Writing from 2001 to 2003; simultaneously holding the latter position at the University of Strathclyde.
Gray studied at the
Glasgow School of Art from 1952 to 1957. As well as his book illustrations, he
painted portraits and murals, including at the Òran Mór venue and one at
Hillhead subway station. His artwork has been widely exhibited and is held in
several important collections. Before Lanark, he had written plays for radio
and television.
Gray was a Scottish
nationalist and a republican, and wrote in support of socialism and Scottish
independence. He popularised the epigram "Work as if you live in the early
days of a better nation" which was engraved in the Canongate Wall of the
Scottish Parliament Building in Edinburgh when it opened in 2004. He lived
almost all his life in Glasgow, married twice, and had one son. After his death
in 2019, The Guardian referred to him as "the father figure of the
renaissance in Scottish literature and art".
Early life
Gray's father,
Alexander, had been wounded in the First World War. He worked for many years in
a factory making boxes, often went hillwalking, and helped found the Scottish
Youth Hostels Association. Gray's mother was Amy (née Fleming), whose parents
had moved to Scotland from Lincolnshire because her father had been blacklisted
in England for trade union membership.[4] She worked in a clothing warehouse.
Alasdair Gray was born in Riddrie in north-east Glasgow on 28 December 1934;
his sister Mora was born two years later. During the Second World War, Gray was
evacuated to Auchterarder in Perthshire, and Stonehouse in Lanarkshire . From
1942 until 1945 the family lived in Wetherby in Yorkshire, where his father was
running a hostel for workers in ROF Thorp Arch, a munitions factory.
Gray frequently
visited the public library; he enjoyed the Winnie-the-Pooh stories, and comics
like The Beano and The Dandy. Later, Edgar Allan Poe became a powerful
influence on the young Gray. His family lived on a council estate in Riddrie,
and he attended Whitehill Secondary School, where he was made editor of the
school magazine and won prizes for Art and English. When he was eleven Gray
appeared on BBC children's radio reading from an adaptation of one of Aesop's
Fables, and he started writing short stories as a teenager. His mother died of
cancer when he was eighteen; in the same year he enrolled at Glasgow School of
Art. As an art student he began what later became his first novel, Lanark,
which originally carried the name Portrait of the Artist as a Young Scot. He
completed the first book in 1963; it was rejected by the Curtis Brown literary
agency. It was originally intended to be Gray's version of A Portrait of the
Artist as a Young Man.
In 1957 Gray graduated
from art school with a degree in Design and Mural Painting. That year he won a
Bellahouston Travelling scholarship, and intended to use it to paint and see
galleries in Spain. A severe asthma attack left him hospitalised in Gibraltar,
and he had his money stolen. From 1958–1962 Gray worked part-time as an art
teacher in Lanarkshire and Glasgow, and in 1959–1960 he studied teaching at
Jordanhill College.
Gray married Inge
Sørensen, a teen-aged nurse from Denmark, in 1961. They had a son, Andrew, in
1963, and separated in 1969. He had an eight-year relationship with Danish
jeweller Bethsy Gray. He was married to Morag Nimmo McAlpine Grayfrom 1991
until her death in 2014. He lived in Glasgow his entire adult life.
Visual art
After finishing art
school, Gray painted theatrical scenery for the Glasgow Pavilion and Citizens
Theatre, and worked as a freelance artist. His first mural was "Horrors of
War" for the Scottish-USSR Friendship Society in Glasgow. In 1964 the BBC
made a documentary film, Under the Helmet, about his career to date. Many of
his murals have been lost; surviving examples include one in the Ubiquitous
Chip restaurant in the West End of Glasgow, and another at Hillhead subway
station. His ceiling mural (in collaboration with Robert Salmon, Nichol
Wheatley and others for the auditorium of the Òran Mór theatre and music venue
on Byres Road is one of the largest works of art in Scotland and was painted
over several years. It shows Adam and Eve embracing against a night sky, with
modern people from Glasgow in the foreground.
In 1977–1978, Gray
worked for the People's Palace museum, as Glasgow's "artist
recorder", funded by a scheme set up by the Labour government. He produced
hundreds of drawings of the city, including portraits of politicians, people in
the arts, members of the general public and workplaces with workers. These are
now in the collection at Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum.
In 2003 Gray began
working with gallerist Sorcha Dallas who, over the next 14 years, helped to
develop interest in his visual practice, brokering sales to major collections
including the Arts Council of England, the Scottish National Galleries and the
Tate. His paintings and prints are also held in Glasgow Museums, the Victoria
and Albert Museum, the National Library of Scotland and the Hunterian Museum.
In 2014–2015 Dallas
devised the Alasdair Gray Season, a citywide celebration of Gray's visual work
to coincide with his 80th birthday. The main exhibition, Alasdair Gray: From
the Personal to the Universal, was held at the Kelvingrove Art Gallery and
Museum with over 15,000 attending.
His first solo London
exhibition took place in late 2017 at the Coningsby Gallery in Fitzrovia and
the Leyden Gallery in Spitalfields.
In 2023, Glasgow
Museums acquired Gray's 1964 mural Cowcaddens Streetscape in the Fifties, which
the artist described as "my best big oil painting", for display at
the Kelvingrove Gallery.
Gray said that he
found writing tiring, but that painting gave him energy. His visual art often
used local or personal details to encompass international or universal truths
and themes.
Writing
Gray's first plays
were broadcast on radio (Quiet People) and television (The Fall of Kelvin
Walker) in 1968. Between 1972 and 1974 he took part in a writing group
organised by Philip Hobsbaum, which included James Kelman, Tom Leonard, Liz
Lochhead, Aonghas MacNeacail and Jeff Torrington. In 1973, with the support of
Edwin Morgan, he received a grant from the Scottish Arts Council to allow him
to continue with Lanark. From 1977 to 1979 he was writer-in-residence at the
University of Glasgow.
Lanark, his first
novel, was published in 1981 to great acclaim, and became his best-known work.
The book tells two parallel stories. One, the first written, is a
Bildungsroman, a realist depiction of Duncan Thaw, a young artist growing up in
Glasgow in the 1950s. The other is a dystopia, where the character Lanark
visits Unthank, which is ruled by the Institute and the Council, opaque bodies
which exercise absolute power. Lanark enters politics believing he can change
Unthank for the better, but gets drunk and disgraces himself. Later, when he is
dying, his son Sandy tells him "The world is only improved by people who
do ordinary jobs and refuse to be bullied." There is an epilogue four
chapters before the end, with a list of the work's alleged plagiarisms, some
from non-existent works. The title page of Book Four, which was used as the
cover art on the paperback, was a reference to Leviathan by Thomas Hobbes.
Lanark has been
compared with Franz Kafka and Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell for its
atmosphere of bureaucratic threat, and with Jorge Luis Borges and Italo Calvino
for its fabulism. It revivified Scottish literature,[41] inspired a new
generation of Scottish writers, including Irvine Welsh, Alan Warner, A. L.
Kennedy, Janice Galloway and Iain Banks, and has been called "one of the
landmarks of 20th-century fiction", but it did not make Gray wealthy. His
2010 illustrated autobiography A Life in Pictures outlined the parts of Lanark
he based on his own experiences: his mother died when he was young, he went to
art school, suffered from chronic eczema and shyness, and found difficulty in
relationships with women. His first short-story collection, Unlikely Stories,
Mostly, won the Cheltenham Prize for Literature in 1983. It is a selection of
Gray's short fiction from 1951–1983.
Gray regarded 1982,
Janine, published in 1984, as his best work. Partly inspired by Hugh
MacDiarmid's A Drunk Man Looks at the Thistle, the stream-of-consciousness
narrative depicts Jock McLeish, a middle-aged Conservative security supervisor
who is dependent on alcohol, and describes how people and sectors of society
are controlled against their best interests, over a background of the
sadomasochistic sex fantasies that McLeish concocts to distract himself from
his misery. Anthony Burgess, who had called Gray "the most important
Scottish writer since Sir Walter Scott" on the strength of Lanark, found
1982, Janine "juvenile".
The Fall of Kelvin
Walker (1985) and McGrotty and Ludmilla (1990) were based on television scripts
Gray had written in the 1960s and 1970s, and describe the adventures of
Scottish protagonists in London. Something Leather (1990) explores female
sexuality; Gray regretted giving it its provocative title. He called it his
weakest book, and he excised the sexual fantasy material and retitled it
Glaswegians when he included it in his compendium Every Short Story 1951-2012.
Poor Things (1992)
discusses Scottish colonial history via a Frankenstein-like drama set in 19th-century
Glasgow. Godwin 'God' Baxter is a scientist who implants a suicide victim with
the brain of her own unborn child. It was Gray's most commercially successful
work and he enjoyed writing it. The London Review of Books considered it his
funniest novel, and a welcome return to form. It won a Whitbread Novel Award
and a Guardian Fiction Prize. It was later adapted into a film starring Emma
Stone, directed by Yorgos Lanthimos; the novel was adapted for the screen by
Tony McNamara.
A History Maker
(1994) is set in a 23rd-century matriarchal society in the area around St
Mary's Loch, and shows a utopia going wrong. The Book of Prefaces (2000) tells
the story of the development of the English language and of humanism, using a
selection of prefaces from books ranging from Cædmon to Wilfred Owen. Gray
selected the works, wrote extensive marginal notes, and translated some earlier
pieces into modern English.
Around 2000, Gray had
to apply to the Scottish Artists' Benevolent Association for financial support,
as he was struggling to survive on the income from his book sales. In 2001
Gray, Kelman and Leonard became joint professors of the Creative Writing
programme at Glasgow and Strathclyde Universities. Gray stood down from the
post in 2003, having disagreed with other staff about the direction the
programme should take.
"Glasgow is a
magnificent city," said McAlpin. "Why do we hardly ever notice
that?" "Because nobody imagines living here… think of Florence,
Paris, London, New York. Nobody visiting them for the first time is a stranger
because he's already visited them in paintings, novels, history books and
films. But if a city hasn't been used by an artist not even the inhabitants
live there imaginatively."
— Lanark (1981)
Gray's books are
mainly set in Glasgow and other parts of Scotland. His work helped strengthen
and deepen the development of the Glasgow literary scene away from gang
fiction, while also resisting neoliberal gentrification. Gray's work, particularly
Lanark, "put Scotland back on the literary map", and strongly
influenced Scottish fiction for decades. The frequent political themes in his
writing argue the importance of promoting ordinary human decency, protecting
the weak from the strong, and remembering the complexity of social issues. They
are treated in a playfully humorous and postmodern manner, and some stories,
especially Lanark, 1982, Janine, and Something Leather, depict sexual
frustration.
My stories try to
seduce the reader by disguising themselves as sensational entertainment, but
are propaganda for democratic welfare-state Socialism and an independent
Scottish parliament. My jacket designs and illustrations—especially the erotic
ones—are designed with the same high purpose.
— Contemporary
Novelists (1996)
Will Self has called
him "a creative polymath with an integrated politico-philosophic
vision" and "perhaps the greatest living [writer] in this archipelago
today". Gray described himself as "a fat, spectacled, balding,
increasingly old Glasgow pedestrian". In 2019 he won the inaugural Saltire
Society Lifetime Achievement Award for his contribution to Scottish literature.
His books are
self-illustrated using strong lines and high-impact graphics, a unique and
highly recognisable style influenced by his early exposure to William Blake and
Aubrey Beardsley, comics, Ladybird Books, and Harmsworth's Universal
Encyclopaedia , and which has been compared to that of Diego Rivera.
He published three
collections of poetry; like his fiction, his poems are sometimes-humorous
depictions of "big themes" like love, God and language. Stuart Kelly
described them as having "a dispassionate, confessional voice; technical
accomplishment utilised to convey meaning rather than for its own sake and a
hard-won sense of the complexity of the universe…. His poetic work, especially
when dealing with the relationship, or lack thereof, between the sexes, is
memorable and disconcerting in the way only good poetry is."
Political views
Gray was a Scottish
nationalist. He started voting for the Scottish National Party (SNP) in the
1970s, despairing about the erosion of the welfare state which had provided his
education. Gray believed that North Sea oil should be nationalised, and wrote
three pamphlets advocating Scottish independence from the United Kingdom,
noting at the beginning of Why Scots Should Rule Scotland (1992) that "by
Scots I mean everyone in Scotland who is eligible to vote." In 2014 he
wrote that "the UK electorate has no chance of voting for a party which
will do anything to seriously tax our enlarged millionaire class that controls
Westminster." In a 2012 essay, Gray expressed his disapproval of English
immigrants to Scotland who in his view only came to Scotland to advance their
careers in the arts.
He frequently used
the epigram "Work as if you live in the early days of a better
nation" in his books; by 1991, the phrase had become a slogan for Scottish
opposition to Thatcherism. The text was engraved in the Canongate Wall of the
Scottish Parliament Building in Edinburgh when it opened in 2004. It was
referred to by SNP politicians during the 2007 Scottish Parliament election
campaign, when they became a minority government for the first time.
In 2001, Gray was
narrowly defeated by Greg Hemphill when he stood as the candidate of the
Glasgow University Scottish Nationalist Association for the post of Rector of
the University of Glasgow. A longstanding supporter of the SNP and the Scottish
Socialist Party, Gray voted Liberal Democrat at the 2010 general election in an
effort to unseat Labour, who he regarded as "corrupted"; by the 2019
election he was voting Labour as a protest against the SNP for not being
radical enough.
Gray designed a
special front page for the Sunday Herald in May 2014 when it came out in favour
of a "Yes" vote in that year's independence referendum, the first and
only newspaper to do so. The newspaper described independence as "the chance
to alter course, to travel roads less taken, to define a destiny", and the
editor, Richard Walker, criticised the scare tactics of the "No" side
and stressed that independence was normal. Gray's design, and his and the
paper's support for independence, attracted widespread coverage at the time and
later. The cover consists of a large thistle surrounded by Scottish saltires.
Iain Macwhirter of the Herald wrote that it was "striking", and The
National said Gray's image had "galvanised the 'Yes' movement". The
Sunday Herald's website doubled its traffic, and the newspaper's sales rose by
31% after it supported "Yes". Despite Scotland narrowly voting
against independence, Gray felt the result was more favourable than a narrow
Yes win.
Later life
In 1990, he
co-founded the publishing company Dog and Bone Press with Chris Boyce and
Chris's wife, Angela.
In 2008, Gray's
former student and secretary Rodge Glass published a biography of him, called
Alasdair Gray: A Secretary's Biography. Gray was broadly approving of the work.
Glass sums up critics' main problems with Gray's writing as their discomfort
with his politics, and with his frequent tendency to pre-empt criticism in his
work. Glass's book won the Somerset Maugham Award in 2009.
In 2014 Gray's
autobiography Of Me & Others was released, and Kevin Cameron made a
feature-length film Alasdair Gray: A Life in Progress, including interviews
with Liz Lochhead and Gray's sister, Mora Rolley.
In August 2015 a
dramatisation of Lanark was performed at the Edinburgh International Festival.
was adapted by David Greig and directed by Graham Eatough. It had previously
been dramatised at the festival by the TAG Theatre Company in 1995
In June 2015 Gray was
seriously injured in a fall, after which he used a wheelchair. He continued to
write; the first two parts of his translation of Dante Alighieri's Divine
Comedy trilogy were published in 2018 and 2019.
Death and legacy
Alasdair Gray died at
Queen Elizabeth University Hospital in Glasgow on 29 December 2019, the day
after his 85th birthday, following a short illness. He left his body to science
and there was no funeral.
Nicola Sturgeon,
first minister of Scotland, remembered him as "one of the brightest intellectual
and creative lights Scotland has known in modern times." Tributes were
also paid by Jonathan Coe, Val McDermid, Ian Rankin, Ali Smith and Irvine
Welsh. The Guardian referred to him as "the father figure of the
renaissance in Scottish literature and art".
His personal and
literary archive, including manuscripts, typescripts, diaries and
correspondence, is held at the National Library of Scotland.
Sorcha Dallas was
responsible for packing and organising his items posthumously and establishing
the Alasdair Gray Archive in March 2020. The Archive is a free community
resource caring for Gray's studio and visual and literary materials. It
commissions new works, offers access and education opportunities as well as
partnering on projects and events. One such event is Gray Day, held annually on
25 February in celebration of Gray's life and works.
Selected writing
Main article:
Alasdair Gray bibliography
Novels
Lanark (1981), ISBN
978-1-84767-374-9
1982, Janine (1984),
ISBN 978-1-84767-444-9
The Fall of Kelvin
Walker (1985), ISBN 978-0-8076-1144-9
Something Leather
(1990), ISBN 978-0-330-31944-7
McGrotty and Ludmilla
(1990), ISBN 978-1-872536-00-2
Poor Things (1992),
ISBN 978-1-56478-307-3
A History Maker
(1994), ISBN 978-1-84195-576-6
Mavis Belfrage
(1996), ISBN 978-0-7475-3089-3
Old Men in Love
(2007), ISBN 978-0-7475-9353-9
Short stories
Unlikely Stories,
Mostly (1983), ISBN 978-1-84767-502-6
Lean Tales (1985)
(with James Kelman and Agnes Owens) (1995), ISBN 978-0-09-958541-1
Ten Tales Tall &
True (1993), ISBN 978-0-15-100090-6
The Ends of Our
Tethers: 13 Sorry Stories (2003), ISBN 978-1-84195-626-8
Every Short Story by
Alasdair Gray 1951-2012 (2012), ISBN 978-0-85786-562-5
Theatre
A Gray Play Book
(2009), ISBN 978-1-906307-91-2
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