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Diana Springall is an internationally renowned, British textile artist who has been committed to raising the profile of the Contemporary Art of Embroidery throughout her long career. Her work is found in many private and public collections worldwide. As well as creating art and teaching, Springall has held various appointments including chair of both the Embroiderers’ Guild and the Society of Designer Craftsmen. Throughout her career, Springall has been an ardent campaigner for the promotion of embroidery as a true art form. She has assembled The Diana Springall Collection, an extensive collection of contemporary pieces from various artists showcasing embroidery as fine art.

Early life
Diana Springall was born in Simla, India, on September 16th 1938, where her father, Gordon Alexander, was Under Secretary of State in the Indian Civil Service. Cared for by a governess and an ayah, Springall and her brother Brian Springall had little opportunity to mix with other children. With family time reserved for Sundays, the pair became well practiced at entertaining themselves. For Springall this included learning to paint and stitch. Because Springall’s mother, Stella Fuller, was a needlewoman, Springall was immersed in domestic embroidery. Her initial understanding of stitch in India was formative in shaping her character and her creativity.

Education
Diana Springall’s family left India for post-war Britain in 1947. Uncertain of further overseas postings, the siblings were sent to boarding school in Scotland. While there, they spent the school holidays in the embroidery-filled home of their great-aunt and grandfather. When, two years later, her parents settled in Kent, Springall attended the nearby Lillesden School in Hawkhurst where her art teacher, Nina Guppy, was inspirational in her choice of career.

After seven years at Lillesden, Springall received offers from all five of the art schools to which she applied. She chose to study the National Diploma in Design (NDD) in Painting at Goldsmiths College, University of London.

Springall received her NDD in 1960 and remained at Goldsmiths for a further year to take an Art Teachers’ Certificate, in order to earn a living. Prerequisite for this course was the practice of several crafts which included embroidery. Between 1954 and 1975, under the headship of Constance Howard (MBE), embroidery received equal qualification to painting, sculpture, and illustration at Goldsmiths College. It was a remarkable time for the Contemporary Art of Embroidery which saw the emergence of now well-known names: Professor Anne Morrell, Audrey Walker (MBE), Christine Risley and Eirian Short.

Springall received the Certificate of Embroidery by the City & Guilds of London Institute in 1963. She graduated in 1968 with a Diploma in History of Art and was awarded a personal accolade of Recognition status by the University of London.

Personal Life
In 1960, Diana Springall married Ernest Thomas Springall. They divorced in 1977.

David Daniel Auguste Piésold CBE Civil Engineer (1923 – 2008) was Springall’s partner for 30 years.

Diana Springall has 2 sons from her marriage; Richard Gordon Springall (born in 1965) and Lawrence Thomas Springall (born in 1969). She has five grandchildren, Alexander Springall (born in 1993), Hannah Springall (born in 1995), Matthew Springall (born in 1980), Felix Springall and Tom Springall (both born in 2011).

Career
After completing her education, Diana Springall started her artistic career creating work alongside being a full-time senior lecturer, a freelance tutor, and an external examiner. She published her first book, Canvas Embroidery in 1969 and has published four further books since then.

Springall’s major commissions include a Panel for the London office of Mobil North Sea (1988), a Carpet and Panel for the entrance of Dai Ichi Kango Bank, London (1989) and a Memorial Panel, Logica London, 1991.

In 1988, she was commissioned to create a twelve-panel wall hanging for the University of Sheffield Library, by the Convocation of the University. In 2021, Diana Springall was consulted with regards to the conservation of this piece.

Today, Springall largely works to commission. Her work featured numerous times in the Embroidery Magazine.

As well as continued work and curation of her collection, she is also an author, guest speaker and was involved in a BBC series on Embroidery, in 1980, as a consultant and part presenter. She mentors several emerging artists and was a mentor for the prestigious Hand and Lock Embroidery Award in 2021.

Artistic legacy
Diana Springall’s commitment to embroidery as true art is reflected in her body of work, her prominent leadership roles, her writing, and the on-going curation of her collection.

As Chair of the Embroiderers’ Guild, she was instrumental in establishing embroidery as a form of artistic expression rather than something simply functional. Her influence has made a substantial contribution to embroidery’s recognition as fine art.

Springall brought her painter’s eye to the teaching of and writing about embroidery, emphasising the critical importance of a consistent approach to creating art whether it be painting or embroidery.

The Diana Springall Collection
Diana Springall started acquiring artworks for her collection in 1964 with a piece by Goldsmiths’ student Suzanne Armitt.

Her collection features textiles from the mid-1960s to the present and illustrates the breadth of the world of stitch.

This collection stems from wanting to create a teaching collection so that her students could see and handle the real work.

In line with her endeavour to share the value of embroidery as an artform, Springall is rigorous with her selection of pieces, always buying direct from the artist to form a connection and thereby understand the context of the work. Springall’s keen eye to the artwork themselves means that her collection features work by emerging artists alongside those who are more established or well-known.

The Sunbury Gallery in Sunbury-on-Thames will become the custodian of the Diana Springall Collection. Plans to extend the current building are in place to accommodate this collection, which will be displayed and accessible on an ongoing basis. The Diana Springall Collection is visible online.