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Michael Campbell
05-06-2004, 10:37 PM
Picked this up from the porch...



MIDDLETOWN -- Tage P. Frid, 88, of 303 Valley Rd., and formerly of Foster, a
master woodworker, a professor emeritus at Rhode Island School of Design,
and a former school-committee chairman, died Tuesday at Village House,
Newport.

A teacher and lecturer for 50 years, Mr. Frid had been a member of the
faculty of the School for American Craftsmen, first at Alfred University and
later at the Rochester Institute of Technology, before he became a professor
and the head of the woodworking and design program at RISD in 1962. He
retired from RISD, in the late 1980s, and was named a professor emeritus.

Still known as the "dean of American woodworking" at the time of his
retirement, he is best recalled as a teacher of aspiring furniture designers
and woodworkers.

His work was not limited to teaching, however, or even to woodworking. Mr.
Frid had served as a consultant to the Mystic Seaport Museum, the
International Mint and the former Rhode Island Hospital Trust bank, among
others; as a designer of mass-produced for the Howard Johnson's and Treadway
motel chains; and as an interior designer to clients including the Danish
government.

He had been a partner in Donovan and Frid, a design and woodworking firm
specializing in interiors and handmade furniture. He was a co-founder of
Shop One, in Rochester, N.Y., a shop owned and operated by craftsmen, and
ESPAN, a manufacturer of small desk accessories.

Examples of his woodworking have showcased in many publications, and added
to the permanent collections of the Smithsonian Institution, the Renwick
Gallery, the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, and the Museum of Art at the Rhode
Island School of Design.

His altars and crosses have been installed in many churches, among them, the
Church of St. John the Divine-Episcopal, in Wickford Village, North
Kingstown, and the Episcopal Church of Mitchell, S.D.

"When I've made it, I sell it," he said in a 1967 Sunday Journal interview.
"Usually, after a very short time, I can't stand living with it." This
philosophy drew the ire of his wife on at least one occasion, when during a
luncheon party, the movers arrived to take away the dining room set.

Mr. Frid also was the author of a three-volume set entitled Tage Frid
Teaches Woodworking, and had been a contributing editor, since 1975, to the
bimonthly trade journal Fine Woodworking.

His long and productive career drew him many awards. He was named a Fellow
of the American Crafts Council, for his distinguished achievement, in 1980,
and was the recipient of an honorary doctorate of fine arts from RISD, in
1984; the Governor's Award of the Rhode Island State Council on the Arts, in
1992; and in 2001, a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Furniture Society.

Mr. Frid completed his education as a journeyman in 1934, after a five-year
apprenticeship under master craftsman Gronlund Jensen. He went on to
graduate in 1940 from the Vedins School and to receive a degree in 1944 from
the Graduate School for Interior Design, both in Copenhagen.

He was the husband of Emma Jacobsen; they had been married for 57 years.
Born in Copenhagen, Denmark, the son of the late Albert Frid and Camilla
Mortensen, he had lived in Denmark and Iceland before immigrating to this
country in 1948.

Mr. Frid was a former member of the Foster School Committee, and had served
as the board's chairman for several years.

Besides his wife, he leaves a daughter, Ann Randall of Middletown; a son,
Peter Frid of Madbury, N.H.; and six grandsons.

A memorial service will be held at a later date. Burial will be private.

Mark Singer
05-07-2004, 12:05 AM
Oh,
I think he was the best! The most practicle and so knowlegeable. I wore my first Tage Frid book out and bought another. When I think of woodworking ,I owe much of what I know to him. He was The Master and his spirit lives in me each time I enter my shop. I strive to learn a small fraction of what he knew.... He has influenced so many....

Alan Turner
05-07-2004, 8:22 AM
Tage Frid's passing is a great loss to the functional arts. His books taught me much. This man was a gentleman in every sense of the word.
I was fortunate enough to attend a weekend WW seminar in about 1980 or so, at the Bucks County Community College. The featured guest was Mr. Frid, along with Ian Kirby, and Alphonse Mattia (and several other notables). I have the fondest memories of Mr. Frid. He was generous with his time and advice, and he had quite a sparkling sense of humor. That brief encounter has enriched my life. His skill as both a maker and teacher truly warrants his fine reputation. His death leaves a large void in our community of woodworkers.
Alan

Jim Becker
05-07-2004, 8:59 AM
A sad day, indeed. Although not everyone embraced his designs in their own work, there is a lot to learn from him that translates to any kind of work. He will be missed, but fortunately leaves a legacy of examples and writings that we can all benefit from.

Matt Woodworth
05-07-2004, 2:14 PM
I'm in the process of reading his books now and I really do feel a sense of loss now that he's gone. I've been thinking about it since yesterday. I can't ever remember caring about a celebrity death before. I've always been bothered that some deaths receive more attention than others. However, Tage is different for me. He will be missed.

I've read that he had been battling alzheimers for a while now and that it really was his time. Even knowing that, his passing is sad.