Charles Rennie Mackintosh
By (Author) Alan Crawford
Thames & Hudson Ltd
Thames & Hudson Ltd
1st July 1995
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Individual artists, art monographs
History of art
720.92
Paperback
216
Width 148mm, Height 209mm
460g
Charles Rennie Mackintosh's finest work dates from about a dozen intensely creative years around 1900. His buildings in Glasgow, and especially his craggy masterpiece the Glasgow School of Art, are more complex and playful than any other work in Britain at that time. His interiors, many of them designed in collaboration with his wife, Margaret Macdonald, are both spare and sensuous; a world of heightened aesthetic sensibility inside the Willow Tea Rooms or The Hill House. And his inventive imagination, which played constantly with the shape of curves and squares, produced designs for furniture which transformed ordinary chairs into pieces of abstract sculpture. Finally, in the 1920s he painted a series of watercolours which are as original as anything he had done before. Since his death, Mackintosh has been both lauded as a pioneer of the Modern Movement and as a master of Art Nouveau.
Alan Crawford is historian of the decorative arts and architecture, notably on the Arts and Crafts movement,