Mary Mullin is the former Chairman of the Sir Misha Black Awards Committee. She joined the Committee in 1993 and served as Chairman from 2003 until she stepped down in March 2024. In that time she oversaw the introduction of the Award for Innovation in Design Education in 1998, and more recently the move to the Awards’ current home under the auspices of the Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851.
Mary is Trustee of the Robin and Lucienne Day Foundation, Trustee of INSPIRE Trust, and Regional Adviser to the World Design Organisation. She served as Secretary General of the International Council of Graphic Design (ICOGRADA now ICO-D) for fourteen years, and as a founding Trustee for the ICOGRADA Foundation.
Her contribution to the promotion of design and education is extensive. Positions held include being the first woman elected to the Board of ICSID, serving as Vice President and developing its Interdesign Programme of events across Ireland and continental Europe. She remains a Founder Member of the Crafts Council of Ireland, has been a consultant for UNIDO, and was National Chairman of the DIA. She was Founding Director of the National Centre of Culture and Arts in Dublin (now the Museum of Modern Art) and worked in the Kilkenny Design Workshops in Ireland.
She ran her own consultancy practice in design and special event management in London from 1981 to 1998. Clients included the ‘Boilerhouse’ at the V&A, the precursor of the Design Museum; Science Museum; Design Research Unit and other leading design practices and commercial clients.
Mary Mullin is an Hon. Fellow of the RCA, the University of the Arts in Bournemouth, the International Society of Typographic Design, and Honorary Life Fellow of the RSA. In 2017 she was awarded the RSA Bi-Centenary Medal “for encouraging and promoting design across education and industry”. In 2018, with Sir Christopher Frayling, she co-edited ‘Fitness For What Purpose’, a book documenting the 40 year history of the Sir Misha Black Awards.
The Sir Misha Black Awards Committee, in honouring Mary Mullin, recognises her thirty years of dedication to the Awards Committee, promoting and endorsing on an International stage the principles initially championed by Sir Misha Black in his work, over 40 years ago, at both the Royal College of Art and Imperial College London.