Sisters Margaret and Frances Macdonald with Charles Rennie Mackintosh and J. Herbert MacNair were the progenitors of the Glasgow Style, an art movement that shaped trends in architecture and design in Britain and Europe, 1895-1905. The success of the movement was due to collaboration between the artists. The sisters worked together from the beginning of their careers, creating both fine art and decorative art. Their interaction with Mackintosh and MacNair began while all attended the Glasgow School of Art, and by 1895, patterns of collaboration were established. Frances' marriage to MacNair in 1899 and Margaret's to Mackintosh in 1900 resulted in closer working relationships within the couples. Scholars have focused on Mackintosh as one ...
This thesis explores the architectural practice of John Dick Peddie and Charles Kinnear from Peddie'...
Trails and Tails was a heritage project run by East Dunbartonshire Council. Built around community e...
© 1992 Myra ScottEdwardian England was projected in paintings by artists such as John Singer Sargent...
After a century of scholarship we are still intrigued, and somewhat perplexed, by Mackintosh's worki...
The present dissertation deals with the artistic collaboration of a married couple, Charles Rennie M...
This dissertation examines the designs of two of Scotland's most important architects, Charles Renni...
In July 1897, The Studio, a British journal devoted to the Arts and Crafts movement, published the f...
In the twentieth century, two designers stood out as radicals: Josef Hoffmann of Vienna and Charles ...
I have prepared three longitudinal, north facing sections to complement an existing, south-facing st...
Glasgow School of Art and Architecture is one of the two schools of architecture active today in Gla...
[Abstract] Glasgow was by tradition a classical city like its rival Edinburgh. In Glasgow Classicism...
This book is a celebration of Charles Rennie Mackintosh's glorious building which still draws visito...
Editorial for a co-edited special issue of the journal Visual Culture in Britain, published by Taylo...
This book explores the remarkable collaboration of one of the most prominent and successful female l...
This extended essay will explore the ways in which the architect Charles Rennie Mackintosh incorpora...
This thesis explores the architectural practice of John Dick Peddie and Charles Kinnear from Peddie'...
Trails and Tails was a heritage project run by East Dunbartonshire Council. Built around community e...
© 1992 Myra ScottEdwardian England was projected in paintings by artists such as John Singer Sargent...
After a century of scholarship we are still intrigued, and somewhat perplexed, by Mackintosh's worki...
The present dissertation deals with the artistic collaboration of a married couple, Charles Rennie M...
This dissertation examines the designs of two of Scotland's most important architects, Charles Renni...
In July 1897, The Studio, a British journal devoted to the Arts and Crafts movement, published the f...
In the twentieth century, two designers stood out as radicals: Josef Hoffmann of Vienna and Charles ...
I have prepared three longitudinal, north facing sections to complement an existing, south-facing st...
Glasgow School of Art and Architecture is one of the two schools of architecture active today in Gla...
[Abstract] Glasgow was by tradition a classical city like its rival Edinburgh. In Glasgow Classicism...
This book is a celebration of Charles Rennie Mackintosh's glorious building which still draws visito...
Editorial for a co-edited special issue of the journal Visual Culture in Britain, published by Taylo...
This book explores the remarkable collaboration of one of the most prominent and successful female l...
This extended essay will explore the ways in which the architect Charles Rennie Mackintosh incorpora...
This thesis explores the architectural practice of John Dick Peddie and Charles Kinnear from Peddie'...
Trails and Tails was a heritage project run by East Dunbartonshire Council. Built around community e...
© 1992 Myra ScottEdwardian England was projected in paintings by artists such as John Singer Sargent...