Vicky Richardson
Vicky Richardson is a writer, curator and consultant specialising in architecture and design. In 2014 she was nominated as one of Debrett’s 500, as one of 20 most influential people in British architecture; and in 2015 she was named a 'Woman of the Year', and received an Honorary Fellowship from the RIBA.
Her writing is published in magazines and newspapers including the Evening Standard, Dezeen and Icon; and she is a regular public speaker and convenor of events, including the symposium Rebuilding Aleppo: memory, loss and creation at the Freud Museum in June 2018, and The Successful Architect? at the Royal Academy in July 2018.
Richardson was Associate Director at the London School of Architecture from 2017-2018. During this crucial phase of the school's development, she established a public programme and curated the exhibition Idencity at the Roca London Gallery.
Richardson is best known for her work as Director of Architecture, Design and Fashion at the British Council, UK's international organisation for educational opportunities and cultural relations from 2010-2016. An important part of this role was to act as Commissioner of the British Pavilion at Venice Architecture Biennale. Exhibitions during this period included Villa Frankenstein curated by Muf architecture/art (2010); Venice Takeaway: Ideas to change British Architecture co-curated by Richardson and Vanessa Norwood (2012); A Clockwork Jerusalem curated by FAT and Crimson Architectural Historians (2014), and Home Economics, curated by Shumi Bose, Jack Self and Finn Williams (2016).
She studied architecture at the University of Westminster after a foundation in art at Central St Martins. She was Deputy Editor at the RIBA Journal before becoming Editor of leading design magazine Blueprint, from 2004 to 2010.
Richardson is a member of the Advisory panel of the V&A Dundee. She was previously Hon Treasurer of the Architectural Association, a Co-Director of the London Festival of Architecture and a member of the London Mayor’s Cultural Strategy Group, which advised on the British capital’s culture policy. She is regularly a member design juries including the RIBA Architecture Awards; the D&AD Awards and the Architect of the Year Awards.
She is a visiting critic at design and architecture schools, and writes about architecture and design for a variety of publications. While at the British Council she established the design blog, Back of the Envelope. Richardson's work on architecture, design and cities is widely published. Essays include Queen Caroline's Temple and the Origins of Experimental Design in Kensington Gardens, in the Serpentine Pavilion catalogue (2016) and Trade Show for Faye Toogood at London Design Festival (2017). Books include New Vernacular Architecture[1] (Laurence King, 2002) and In Defence of the Dome (ASI, 1999). In 2015 Richardson completed an MA in Early Modern History at King’s College London. Her dissertation focused on the English publication and censorship of Common Sense, the first pamphlet by Thomas Paine, in 1776.