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Charles
Rennie Mackintosh
(1868-1928)
Charles
Rennie Mackintosh was a scottish architect and designer, whose
chaste, functional style exerted a strong influence on 20th-century
architecture and interior design. Born June 7, 1868, in Glasgow,
the influential designer came from humble beginnings. His parents
were poor. The Mackintosh family was acquainted with Robbie
Burns, who sometimes read at the family dinner table. Although
his parents did not encourage his art, at the age of sixteen,
he began to apprentice at the Glasgow School of Art.
While
he trained at the Glasgow School of Art, Mackintosh rejected
over-decorated Victorian styles in favour of a spare simplicity
that featured geometric shapes and unadorned surfaces. In 1896,
Mackintosh won a competition to design the Glasgow School of
Art. Characteristic Mackintosh tall-backed chairs, Celtic motifs,
and angular lines are evident both inside and outside the buildings.
In the same decade, tearooms were the fad in Mackintosh's hometown,
and he designed many of these lounges with the famous Cranston
chain of tearooms.
Between
1899 and 1910 he designed several houses near Glasgow in this
style, but his fame rests primarily on his designs for the Glasgow
School of Art (1897-99), with its austere rectangular framework,
long, simple curves, and un-ornamented facade. His later addition
of a library (1907-09) was based entirely on straight lines
and right angles: Its horizontal beams alternate with vertical
pillars in a vigorous, rhythmic juxtaposition.
Mackintosh
married Margaret MacDonald, whom he met at Art School, and who
worked with him on many projects. Together, they designed the
Scottish Room for the Vienna Secession exhibition, making a
strong impact on the design community in Vienna. He said his
wife was the genius of the partnership, while he supplied "only
talent."
Mackintosh
was also an important interior and furniture designer. His furniture,
usually painted white with delicately colored stencils of stylized
flower patterns and occasional insets of amethyst glass, combines
attenuated straight lines with subtle curves. The designs, although
unmistakably Art Nouveau, avoided the excesses found in the
work of some Continential practitioners of the style. This appealed
to avant-garde designers such as the members of the Vienna Secession.
Mackintosh exhibited in 1900 at the Secessionist Exhibition
in Vienna, where his designs gained an international following.
His
work exerted an important influence on the growing 20th-century
trend toward simplification and functionalism. Mackintosh, all
but forgotten, died in London, December 10, 1928; decades later,
his work achieved a permanent place in the history of design.
In the late 1970s the Mackintosh House, his studio-home in Glasgow,
was reconstructed and opened as a museum.
Glasgow
School of Art
Charles
Rennie Mackintosh Society
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