A Canadian writer and artist revered in Canada’s LGBTQ arts scene has been found dead after going missing in his native New Brunswick earlier this month.
Richard Vaughan’s body was found on Friday, 10 days after he was reported missing, Fredericton police said, adding that his death is not being treated as suspicious.
He was 55.
The author and video artist, who wrote under the name RM Vaughan, was born in Saint John, N.B, and had recently returned to his home province from Montreal to serve as writer-in-residence at his alma mater, the University of New Brunswick, for 2019-2020.
“He wanted to make everyone feel they were entitled to write, entitled to tell their story,” said Sue Sinclair, the director of creative writing at the University of New Brunswick’s English department, in an interview Saturday.
Vaughan’s works often touched on queer stories of coming-of-age and eroticism. He also had a taste for the supernatural and macabre, and was captivated by the world of the celebrity.
A contributor to a variety of publications and anthologies, Vaughan published the book of essays “Compared to Hitler” in 2013, featuring many of his takes on contemporary culture.
The editor and publisher of Momus, a publication of art criticism where Vaughan had been a contributing editor for several years while he was living in Berlin, explained the title came from the fact the author had had actually been compared to the Nazi dictator for a critique he’d once written.
“It told him about what he sort of already knew about the capacity in the Canadian art world for criticism,” Sky Goodden said in an interview on Saturday.
“I think it was for him, even as upsetting, astonishing as that was, it was also something he could hang his hat on.”
Police said Vaughan was last seen near his home in downtown Fredericton on Monday, Oct. 12, and he was reported missing the next day.
The news sparked a flurry of concern in literary circles, with many writers sharing posts urging people to keep an eye out for Vaughan.
Sinclair was among those who took part in a search for Vaughan last weekend that was organized by a UNB alumnus.
Vaughan’s bibliography also includes the poetry collections “A Selection of Dazzling Scarves,” “Invisible to Predators,” “Ruined Stars,” “Troubled” and “Ve1Xe”; the novels “Quilted Heart” and “Spells”; and the play “Camera, Woman” and “The Monster Trilogy.”
His writing also appeared in The Globe and Mail.
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Vaughan’s works often touched on queer stories of coming-of-age and eroticism. He also had a taste for the supernatural and macabre, and was captivated by the world of the celebrity.
A contributor to a variety of publications and anthologies, Vaughan published the book of essays Compared to Hitler in 2013 featuring many of his takes on contemporary culture.
In the 2015 non-fiction book Bright Eyed, Vaughan examined the health and historical context of his lifelong battle with insomnia.
Sinclair said when Vaughan arrived as the university’s writer-in-residence, people in the community there all seemed to know him for a different thing. Some knew him for his poetry, others for his fiction or his plays.
“People knew a lot of different literary Richard Vaughans,” Sinclair said.
“His work is often very funny in the midst of exploring some very dark and vulnerable places,”
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 24, 2020.
Appreciations for RM Vaughan
- Vivek Shraya: ‘RM consistently showed me kindness and generosity – a reminder of how vital kindness from strangers is’
- Alana Wilcox: ‘He wrote exquisitely in every genre, with panache and precision, and with impeccable professionalism’
- Bert Archer: ‘He was, like Derek McCormack and Kathy Acker and Gary Indiana, someone a small group thinks the world of’
- Andrew Gorham: ‘I asked him if he would be a columnist for [The Globe], He agreed, warning me he was nobody’s fool, and would say whatever the hell he wanted’