Corral Sutherland
1936 – 2018
Corral Sutherland,
who has died just ten days after her 82nd birthday, is remembered by
friends and family around the world, particularly in her birthplace of
Montrose, Scotland and in Kibworth, Leicestershire, her home for the past fifty
years.
Corral Findlay was
the first of her family to go to University, studying at Edinburgh College of
Art in the 1950s where, legendarily, her life model was Sean Connery. Sadly
none of her drawings of the ginger haired milkman in a posing pouch had
survived her mother’s tidying up by the time she had met and married Ian
Sutherland and set up home in Aberdeen.
With their two kids,
Kev and Jude, the family moved to Leicestershire, living first in Evington then
settling for the long term in Kibworth. (All four of the family, by the way,
share an apparent dislike for their given names. Ian’s name was officially
John, Jude was Judith, Kev was Kevin, and Corral’s name on all the paperwork is
Catherine. Her middle name Corral is an old family surname. For 82 years nobody
has known her as anything else.)
Having put her art
college training to good use as a graphic artist, while simultaneously raising
the two kids, Corral’s work as an illustrator would be familiar to the aficionados
of such tomes as the Wolsey knitwear catalogue, and her draughtswomanship
captured the details of machine parts and shoe patterns long before computer
aided design was dreamt of.
Corral’s design work
included the original packaging for a product made by Invicta Plastics of Oadby
in 1971, which children of the day will remember fondly, the knuckle-shattering
hi-tech conkers they called Clackers. Legend tells that the original working
title for this toy, when Corral designed its first wrapping, was Knackers. And
that sentence won’t make the Montrose Review.
Many friends and
relatives will be familiar with Corral’s home made Christmas cards, a tradition
that began with her solo card in 1957, continued with Corral and Ian’s first
joint effort in 1958, and appeared in an unbroken run until her last card in
December 2018. Long before everyone had a home printer, Corral’s family cards
were printed with letterpress, litho and latterly laser copier to universal
acclaim, her final card being the 12 Days Of Christmas which she finished
drawing in her care home bed at The Knoll in Kibworth in October.
In Kibworth, Corral
and Ian made the Golf Club the centre of their social life. As well as her
calligraphy and cartoons gracing the posters for every event from the Whist
Drive to the Donkey Derby, Corral was a star player, and became a very popular
Lady Captain.
Having seen her kids
progress successfully through Kibworth High School, Corral became a School
Governor, eventually sitting on the board for 23 years. And as if she wasn’t
busy enough, she got involved with the Kibworth Chronicle from its inception in
1978, and participated in the production of almost every issue for the next
forty years.
Corral’s designs of
mastheads, adverts, and incidental illustrations adorn nearly every Kibworth
Chronicle in the archives, and she remains one of its longest serving
contributors.
In recent years she
took to passing on her skills in a series of art classes, and has exhibited her
work, including watercolours of many of the denizens of Kibworth and the
county, regularly. Were there room enough to mention Corral & Ian’s
legendary Hogmanay parties, her participation in the local choir, her many art
commissions, her dancing, her international travels, and much more, then it
would be included here. Suffice it to say she kept enviably busy, long after
she got first notice of breast cancer at the time of her 80th
birthday, and was spreading joy continuously even after she had to move into
the care home in the latter half of 2018.
She leaves two
children, two grandchildren Shona & Kirsty, and hundreds of friends and
relatives with nothing but fond memories of a talented artist with a mission to
make people happy.
Corral Sutherland
(nee Catherine Corral Findlay), born Montrose Dec 20 1936, died Kibworth Dec 30
2018.
I was lucky enough to meet Corral and Ian when her cousin Bobbie took me with her to visit Scotland and England. The first year we had dinner with them at a lovely hotel in Montrose. Sadly the next year Ian was gone, but we stayed with Corral and enjoyed her delightful hospitality and did so many enjoyable things. Her home and garden were lovely and it will be a highlight of my life to have met her and spent time with her. A real lady with lots of talents and charming hostess.
ReplyDeleteMy heartfelt condolences to Corral's family. I met Corral over 30 years ago through helping with the Kibworth Chronicle, so shared time and stories with both her and Ian. Not being into golf, the chats were on other pastimes! A lovely lady with a wicked sense of humour & sharp critic if her high standards were not followed by others.She will be greatly missed. ��
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