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Browsing Posts in Mackintosh

This morning I collected two guests by appointment and embarked on a tour of the principal sites designed by Charles Rennie Mackintosh

BACKGROUND ON MACKINTOSH

Mackintosh (1868-1928) was a designer and artist. His work ranged from jewellery to graphics, from wall decoration to exhibited paintings, from pottery vases to wood engraving. He designed all kinds of objects for domestic use: tables, chairs, cutlery and napkins, carpets, mirrors, curtain fabric and light fittings, beds, hat stands, wardrobes and clocks. He also designed complete buildings including foundations and structural steel, ventilation systems and plumbing. He painted landscapes and flowers. However, the heart of his achievement was the design of places to be inhabited, rooms and sequences of rooms, their form and light and material.

The ‘Glasgow Four’ comprised Mackintosh, Herbert MacNair and the sisters Margaret and Frances MacDonald. This group worked within the Glasgow School of Art around 1890-1910 and produced decorative works of furniture, architecture, panels, embroideries and graphic material.

The ‘Glasgow School’ centred around the Glasgow School of Art. This group of artists, including George Henry and E.H. Hornel were contemporary with  Mackintosh and  the Glasgow Four. Henry and Hornel were both members of the Glasgow School of Painters and often worked in collaboration. They were influenced by Japanese art and often used elements from this in paintings.

The ‘Glasgow Style’ spanned the era 1890-1920 and centred around the Glasgow School of Art and encompassed the Glasgow Four.

HOUSE FOR AN ART LOVER

House for an Art Lover, Glasgow

House for an Art Lover, Glasgow, Scotland

The design dates from 1901 when Mackintosh entered a competition set by a German design magazine which sought entries to design a ‘grand house in a thoroughly modern style’ and challenged architects to develop ideas which were fresh and innovative.

Mackintosh and his wife Margaret MacDonald worked on the submission which, unfortunately, was disqualified due to technical non-compliance with the rules. However, the designs were awarded a special prize in recognition of “their pronounced personal quality, their novel and austere form and the uniform configuration on interior and exterior.”

Construction commenced 1989 with completion 1996.

SCOTLAND STREET SCHOOL

Scotland Street School by Mackintosh

Scotland Street School by Mackintosh, Glasgow

Designed by Mackintosh between 1903 and 1906. This was his last public commission in Glasgow. Here, Mackintosh reversed tradition and gave the towers with conical roofs wall of glass with narrow stone mullions. Instead of spiral stairs he used straight flights which benefited from the light which streams into them. He played off the verticality of the towers against the horizontal nature of the rest of the building.

QUEENS CROSS CHURCH (THE MACKINTOSH CHURCH )

Mackintosh Church, Glasgow

Mackintosh Church, Glasgow, Scotland

 

Inside Mackintosh Church,Queen's Cross

Inside Mackintosh Church,Queen's Cross, Glasgow

Commissioned by the Free Church of Scotland in 1896, Foundation stone was laid 23rd June 1898 with completion and opening 10thSept 1899. The building was designed for a congregation of 820.

At the time Mackintosh was a trainee with the architecture firm of Honeyman and Keppie but was entrusted with the work. Construction of the church was contemporary with the first phase of the Glasgow School of Art (see below). The church design reveals a sophisticated handling of form, ornament and symbolic meaning.

RUCHILL CHURCH HALL

Ruchill Church Hall, Glasgow

Ruchill Church Hall, Glasgow, Scotland

Built as a mission in 1899 and pre-dates adjacent church which is not Mackintosh designed.

The Hall primarily consists of two halls and two committee rooms which are still in use as a community centre. Considered a well planned, minor work.

GLASGOW SCHOOL OF ART

Glasgow School of Art, Glasgow

Glasgow School of Art, Glasgow, Scotland

 

This building is acknowledged as Mackintosh’s masterpiece. Due to financial constraints, half was completed in 1899 with the western end finished exactly a decade later in 1909 when Mackintosh was 41 yrs of age. It has been called the most important building worldwide in that decade. The north façade exactly reflects the internal plan of the building resulting in a masterpiece of balanced asymmetry. The entrance is at the centre of the building. Particular features of note include:

Detail of window brackets, main entrance on the north façade.

Details of railings outside north façade.

The finial above the Director’s office on the north façade.

East façade entrance hall..

Museum

Mackintosh Room.

Rose motif in doors of studio 45.

Decorative tiles.

West façade and its door.

West corridor.

The periodical table in the library.

The library lights and internal windows.

The Loggia, ‘Hen Run’, Director’s Office and Boardroom

WILLOW TEA ROOMS, SAUCHIEHALL STREET.

Willow Tea Rooms, Sauchiehall Street

Willow Tea Rooms, Sauchiehall Street, Glasgow

 

Inside Willow Tea Rooms, Sauchiehall Street

Inside Willow Tea Rooms, Sauchiehall Street, Glasgow

A concept inspired by Catherine Cranston as a place where respectable ladies could venture out and socialize. A form of private club which offered facilities for dining, reading and writing, billiards and smoking.

Mackintosh designed the complete interiors at  Sauchiehall Street being work dating from 1903-4. The tea rooms offered the most complete public spaces of Mackintosh’s career.

HILLL HOUSE, HELENSBURGH

The Hill House, Helensburgh

The Hill House, Helensburgh, Scotland

A complete residential house commissioned by publisher Walter Blackie in 1902. Here Mackintosh designed not only the house and gardens but much of the furniture and interiors as well. Margaret MacDonald contributed fabric designs and a unique panel over the fireplace in the drawing room. Overall result is considered a daring design with an air of restrained elegance.

Finally, with a little time to spare. we paid a short visit to the heritage village of Luss on the banks of Loch Lomond

Luss, loch Lomond

Luss, Loch Lomond, Scotland

 

Overall, a productive day’s tour which benefited from reasonable weather.

 
Kirkstane House, 139-143 St Vincent Street

Kirkstane House, 139-143 St Vincent Street, Glasgow

 

This evening, I am posting information and images on selected examples of architecture in central Glasgow, mainly St. Vincent Street.
 
Image above shows  Kirkstane House at  139-143 St Vincent Street . Dates from 1991 by Leach Rhodes Walker. One building but with two facades being a hybrid of Mackintosh and Chicago styles.
 
Image below shows the Beacon which dates from 1998 by Reiach and Hall Architects. This is a low-energy, low-maintenance  building incorporates a displacement ventilation system which provides fresh warmed or cool air. The Wellington Street side comprises a block of red sandstone with metal feature windows while the St Vincent St elevation provides a variation  on the Chicago style.
 
The Beacon, St Vincent and Wellington Streets
The Beacon, St Vincent and Wellington Streets, Glasgow
 
Below is 48 St Vincent Street which dates from 1963, refurbished 1997 by Glass Murray Architects. Features include:
  • New vertical stack supported on steel structure and clad in brick.
  • New entrance with full-height structural grid in steel.
  • Lead and steel canopy over the extended 6th floor accommodation.
48 St Vincent Street, Glasgow

48 St Vincent Street, Glasgow, Scotland

 
Here is the Carlton George Hotel which dates from 1999, by Bradford Robertson. Relative youth is because the building filled a gap created by a fire. New structure is steel framed and clad in Castle Buff sandstone and De Lank polished red granite on the lower floors.
 
Carlton George Hotel, 44 West George Street

Carlton George Hotel, 44 West George Street, Glasgow

 
Image below shows 131 St Vincent Street which was redeveloped 1995 under Keppie Architects. Here there are two separate facades in the Chicago style, one from the 1930s, which share certain features such as the double -height plinth and heavy cornicing.
 
131 St Vincent Street, Glasgow

131 St Vincent Street, Glasgow, Scotland

People's Palace, Glasgow Green

People's Palace, Glasgow Green, Scotland

 
This evening, I am posting summary information on a selection of Glasgow’s leading visitor attractions.
 
Image at top shows the People’s Palace on Glasgow Green. Primarily covers a museum covering social history of this historic area close to the River Clyde and within walking distance of central Glasgow.
 
Image below shows Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum, located in the West end of Glasgow. One of the top such establishments in Europe.
 
Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum, Glasgow

Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum, Glasgow, Scotland

 
Pacific Quay and River Clyde. Stunning design and architecture. Close by is the Science Centre.
Pacific Quay and River Clyde, Glasgow
Pacific Quay and River Clyde, Glasgow, Scotland
 
For football ( soccer) enthusiasts visit the Scottish Football Museum. the Scottish Football Hall of Fame and tour the stadium.
Hampden Football Stadium, Glasgow
Hampden Football Stadium, Glasgow, Scotland
 
Charles Rennie Mackintosh’s House for an Art Lover, completed 1996 from drawings nearly a century earlier.
House for Art Lover, Glasgow

House for Art Lover, Glasgow, Scotland

 
Tall Ship  ‘Glenlee’ and the new Riverside Museum.
Tall Ship and Riverside Museum, Glasgow

Tall Ship and Riverside Museum, Glasgow, Scotland

 
The famous Willow Tea Rooms in Sauchiehall Street. More design by Charles Rennie Mackintosh.
 
Willow Tea Rooms, Glasgow

Willow Tea Rooms, Glasgow, Scotland

 
The foregoing should whet the appetite for visitor sites in Glasgow. There is much more depending on personal interests and tastes.