Skip navigation

Gwen Ducker

It was difficult finding graphics work graduating in 1980, not least as studios and work places seemed male dominated and reluctant to employ females! Returning home, I did freelance work, some local part time jobs, and trained for and ran the 2nd London Marathon.

When a friend began a general printing business in 1983, I set up and ran a small in-house studio for 5 years creating design/artworks for this and then later specialising in on-the-roll labels. It changed hands and I left that and the graphics world, and have done small amounts of freelance work since. 

Working long hours in the studio probably contributed to prolapsed discs in my back which took 5 years recovery, and I worked in an art shop, then a small pottery in Leeds during that time. Then I worked for the Leeds Library HQ for 8 years (with books but not in a library). 

With 2 children then, juggling childcare, we decided to move to Bradley, a village near Skipton, where my 3 sisters and families and our parents lived, and because of the good schools nearby. We have lived there now for 26 years. 

Since then, I have worked with carers/cared for in their homes, as the activity coordinator in care homes ,and as a community older people’s mental health support worker for NHS for 13 years until retirement age (and getting as old as my clients haha!). 

I still volunteer with NHS, supporting a gardening group I helped set up 6/7 years ago. Lots of painting, U3A groups, walking and holidays from now on, I hope! One son lives in London and one is finishing a PHD at Newcastle Uni.

In 1983, in touch with Phil Robertson and still living at home in Cullingworth, we agreed to meet in Leeds with John Herbert from the Industrial Design course at Newcastle Poly. I was late, got lost, nearly went home (thinking I’d say I’d forgotten to go!) And arrived possibly 60/90 mins late (which I don’t remember Phil commentating on!) to find him waiting for me outside John’s flat. The others had gone on to their chosen pub ‘The Brick’, maybe the roughest pub I’d ever been in, where I changed my mind from thinking I was too dishevelled and scruffy, to now thinking I was overdressed! 

There I met John, his (now ex.) wife and twin brother Eric, and we all met again in ‘The Brown Cow’ in Bingley the next night.

By chance Eric and I ended up at ‘The Brown Cow’ again recently on our 40th Wedding Anniversary, on a walk with Eric’s best man and his wife; I don’t think we’d ever been back there. And definitely never to ‘The Brick’. If Eric was asked where he met his wife, people seem to have an interesting idea of what I might look like! 

Strangely and happily enough Phil has stayed in regular contact with me all these years. Good on him for arranging a Graphics reunion!


a sign in front of a crowd
+

Northumbria Open Days

Open Days are a great way for you to get a feel of the University, the city of Newcastle upon Tyne and the course(s) you are interested in.

Research at Northumbria
+

Research at Northumbria

Research is the life blood of a University and at Northumbria University we pride ourselves on research that makes a difference; research that has application and affects people's lives.

NU World
+

Explore NU World

Find out what life here is all about. From studying to socialising, term time to downtime, we’ve got it covered.


Latest News and Features

NIHR multiple and complex needs
Paramedics at work
Joint Institute of Clean Hydrogen
Volunteering builds inroads and supports communities. In this photo, UN Volunteers interview community members to assess basic health services in the rural areas of Rwanda. Copyright UNV, 2023
HICSA partners at the site
Jupiter with a spot visible at the south pole
Image of mother and baby
Imogen Russell sitting on a sofa
More events

Upcoming events

Commercialising Social Sciences for Impact
Northumbria University Carol Service
The Future of Evaluation in Health and Social Care Symposium
-

Back to top