Go on this expedition to find out about Charles Rennie Mackintosh and “House for an Art Lover” and discover the detail and furnishings that make up this arts and crafts house.
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Charles Rennie Mackintosh
Charles Rennie Mackintosh is one of Scotland’s most celebrated designers and architects. He was responsible for a number of the most striking buildings in Glasgow and beyond in the early 20th century, including his world-famous Glasgow School of Art.
He also created watercolours, textiles and interior designs. His furniture design – especially his high-backed chairs – is particularly distinctive. Mackintosh’s artistic approach was forward thinking, representing a link between Art Nouveau and Modernism.
Charles Mackintosh by Gilbert, J. G.Original Source: Mackintosh
Architect, Artist, Designer
Mackintosh considered architecture to be the supreme discipline because of the way it combined all forms of the arts.
Cabinet designed for 14 Kingsborough Gardens, Glasgow, house of Mrs. Robert J. Rowat White (Designed and made in 1902) by Designed by Charles Rennie Mackintosh (Scottish, 1868 - 1928) made by Francis Smith and SonRoyal Ontario Museum
His work was conceived as complete units rather than individual components, combining modernity/tradition, masculinity/femininity, light/darkness and sensuality/chasteness.
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Glasgow School of Art
This is Mackintosh’s most famous building. His design was chosen in 1896, when he was still a junior architect, though building work was not completed until 1909, by which time he was firmly established.
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Margaret Macdonald Mackintosh
Charles Rennie Mackintosh’s wife Margaret was also an accomplished artist, specialising in design work. With her husband, she formed part of influential Glasgow collective The Four. She collaborated with him on several of his famous buildings.
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Furniture
Apart from his architecture, Mackintosh is most closely associated in many people’s minds with furniture. The Art and Crafts movement influenced his early work, while his later designs anticipated Art Deco, as in the striking geometry of this chair.
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House for an Art Lover
In 1901, Mackintosh with wife Margaret entered a competition to design a “House for an Art Lover”, set by a German design magazine. The competition brief was “a grand house in a thoroughly modern style”.
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The competition brief was “a grand house in a thoroughly modern style”. Their entry was disqualified because of late submission of some drawings, though the judges praised the design. The house was not built in Mackintosh’s lifetime. However, in the late 1980s/1990s, nearly a century after the original design, a team of architects led by Graham Roxburgh turned the plans into reality.
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Design
With only 14 original drawings, developing fully working architectural plans for the house was very challenging. A good deal of the project involved studying Mackintosh’s other work to understand the approaches, materials and techniques he would have employed.
Interpretation by Twig World
Interpretation
The plans included only rough approximations of artistic details throughout the house. This exterior carved stone panel was an elaboration of a small sketch, with similar Mackintosh carvings elsewhere used as references.
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Bellahouston Park
Graham Roxburgh decided upon the location for House for an Art Lover while jogging in Bellahouston Park, Glasgow. He came across the grounds of a burned-down 18th-century mansion and realised that they would be a perfect fit for Mackintosh’s plans.
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The House in Use
The House is open to the public and exists to stimulate interest in art, design and architecture. It hosts exhibitions and offers studios, scholarships and access to learning, as well as being a venue for weddings and other events.
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Main Hall
The grandness of the hall’s proportions paired with details such as the staircase and the central fireplace is reminiscent of the Scottish “baronial style” – a 19th-century architectural form inspired by imposing castle-like homes of the 16th and 17th centuries.
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But Mackintosh has combined this with other influences, such as Japanese architecture – notice the clear lines, stark contrasts and use of partitions (e.g. the lanterns and the gallery above the hall).
Entrance by Twig World
Entrance
Mackintosh loved to play with expectations of light and space. Visitors to the House would enter the double-height main hall by way of a low, narrow door set in a cramped entranceway.
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Metal Panels
The metal panels on the pillars would have been created by Margaret Macdonald Mackintosh. The ones shown here are made out of tin, although she often worked in copper or lead.
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Balcony
The first-floor balcony leads visitors’ eyes up through the double-height space. It was included in the original design, but additional clues or design references came from other Mackintosh balconies – in particular, one at Glasgow’s Queen’s Cross Church.
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The Dining Room
Charles Rennie Mackintosh’s approach to the house was to seamlessly blend art and architecture. The house provides its own decoration – it was designed to discourage further filling with paintings and ornaments.
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This represents a clear contrast with the typically dark and cluttered Victorian homes of the time. Such homes would usually have heavy plastered ceilings; in this room, Mackintosh uses a light barrel-vaulted ceiling which almost seems to disappear.
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Mackintosh Chairs
The dining table is surrounded by Mackintosh’s characteristic high-backed chairs. Visitors are often surprised to be told that they may sit on the chairs and touch any of the other objects – the House is not a museum but a living, functioning building.
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Gesso Panels
It would have been the intention for Margaret Macdonald Mackintosh to make these panels using her unique gesso technique. Gesso is made from layering a mixture of plaster, whitening agent and rabbit-skin glue, with the final layer being piped on like the icing on a cake.
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Story of the Rose
The exact details of the gesso panels was not clear from the Mackintoshes’ drawings. Artists working on House for an Art Lover decided on a story with a rose theme – an awakening of consciousness as a girl becomes a mature woman who meets her male equivalent.
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Oval Room
Often, large houses at the beginning of the 20th century had separate after-dinner rooms for men and women. Because of this, the Oval Room was designed to be a room for ladies.
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The oval was frequently used by Mackintosh to symbolise femininity – here, there are many oval details in the room. This is the only room of the house completed without a drawing of the interior. There were enough clues in other Mackintosh oval rooms for the architects to bring the room to life.
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Clean and Modern
Even more so than the Dining Room, the Oval Room was groundbreaking at the time. Its clean, geometric lines and airiness was very different from the traditional dark Victorian house.
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Ovals
Beyond the shape of the room itself, the oval can be seen in many details in the room, from the walls and the cabinet to the fireplace and the light.
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Gendered Rooms
The number of rooms for men in Victorian houses would greatly exceed those for women. Typically, men would have access to a library or study, a billiard room, a gentlemen’s room (for business) and a smoking room.
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Music Room
The spectacular music room is the centrepiece of the house. The large bay windows make the most of the south-facing view, letting in a lot of light and connecting the room to the parkland beyond.
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Some elements of this room – such as the beautiful piano, playable by guests – were clearly shown in the original plans.
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Other objects – such as the female forms on the fabric banners either side of the windows, suggested by little more smudges in the design – needed greater interpretation by the designers.
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Symbolism
Around the room, 4 of the recurring symbols in Mackintosh’s work can be seen: the rose, the tree, the bird and the seed/egg. Mackintosh frequently sought inspiration from nature in his motifs.
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The Bird
A dove appears above the piano in the Music Room. Mackintosh identified with the bird symbol: the competition entry for House for an Art Lover was submitted in the name “Der Vogel”, German for “The Bird”.
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Fireplace
Mackintosh produced 4 drawings of the Music Room. One shows 2 small roundels above the hearth. When the architectural team came to recreate these, studying of the drawings revealed the roundels were to be based on known works by Margaret Macdonald.