The Sir Misha Black Awards

The Sir Misha Black Awards commemorate the life of renowned architect, designer, and Professor Sir Misha Black, whose work played an important role in the development of design in Britain. They are given to individuals and institutions, to honour them in their role within design education.

There are two awards – the Sir Misha Black Medal for Distinguished Services to Design Education which is awarded to design educators from anywhere in the world, and the Sir Misha Black Award for Innovation in Design Education, which is given to UK-based educational institutions, organisations or individuals.

Established by five founding bodies, the Design and Industries Association, the Royal College of Art (RCA), the Faculty of Royal Designers for Industry (RDI) at the RSA, the Royal Academy of Engineering, and the College of Medallists. The awards are the only ones anywhere in the world that recognise design education.

The ceremony to present the Medal began life as a biennial event but has since become an annual date recognised within the design world calendar. Nominations for the awards are welcomed from anyone with knowledge and appreciation of the value of design education. Nomination forms can be found on the Sir Misha Black Awards website.[3]

The Sir Misha Black Medal

The Sir Misha Black Medal, first awarded in 1978, was created to honour individuals across the globe who, throughout their career, have made a significant contribution to design education. The Sir Misha Black Medal is awarded collaboratively by Britain’s leading design organisations. Recipients of The Sir Misha Black Medal are automatically enrolled in the College of Medallists.

The Sir Misha Black Award

The Sir Misha Black Award for Innovation in design education, first awarded in 2001, was created to honour the exceptional work of a teacher, team, department, or course within educational establishments in the UK for innovation in design education. The award exists to acknowledge the collective excellence and leadership in design education within the United Kingdom that has long been held in high regard internationally, but has received little formal recognition.

The Awards Committee

The committee comprises leading industry design educators and representatives of renowned associations. The current committee as of April 2014 includes:

Mary V. Mullin (Chairman) – The Design and Industries Association, Professor Sir Christopher Frayling – College of Medallists, Joe Kerr MSc – The Royal College of Art, Prof. Malcolm Garrett RDI, FISTD – The Faculty of Royal Designers for Industry, Professor James Randle RDI, FREng – The Royal Academy of Engineering

Recipients of the Sir Misha Black Medal

Year Name Country
2014 Prof. Michael Twyman UK
2013 Prof. Santiago Aránguiz Sánchez Chile
2012 Prof. Ezio Manzini Italy
2011 Prof. Kumar Vyas India
2009 Judy Frater India/USA
2008 Prof. Gonzalo Tassier Mexico
2007 Alison Chitty RDI UK
2006 Prof. Geoffrey Kirk RDI UK
2005 Prof. David Kelley USA
2004 Elaine Ostroff USA
2003 Sir Christopher Frayling UK
2002 Dr Santiago Calatrava Spain
2001 Yuri Soloviev Russia
2000 Robert Gooden UK
1999 Ettore Sottsass Italy
1998 William Walsh Ireland
1997 Dr. Alexander Moulton RDI UK
1995 Kenji Ekuan Japan
1993 Arthur Pulos USA
1993 Dr. Marianne Straub RDI Switzerland
1991 David Pye UK
1988 Peter Reyner Banham UK
1986 Frank Height UK
1985 Ashoke Chatterjee India
1982 Max Bill Switzerland
1980 Serge Ivan Chermayeff USA
1978 Sir William Coldstream UK

Recipients of The Sir Misha Black Award

2014 National Art&Design Saturday Club – The Sorrell Foundation
2012 Manchester School of Art – Manchester Metropolitan University
2011 Creative Research into Sound Arts Practice (CRiSAP) – London College of Communication
2009 Prof. Anthony Dunne – Royal College of Art
2007 Department of Industrial Design – Coventry University School of Art & Design
2006 Design Against Crime Research Centre – Central St Martins School of Art
2004 Jane McCann – University of Derby
2003 Prof. Adrian Forty
2002 Prof. Ken Wallace – Cambridge University
2001 Prof. Roger Coleman and Dr Paul Ewing – Royal College of Art / Imperial College, London