Model of the Glasgow School of Art (Version 8)
- MC/A/11/v8
- Part
- c1953
1/8": 1 foot scale Coloured balsa wood model of the Mackintosh Building on a wooden base. Made by former students of the Glasgow School of Art.
Model of the Glasgow School of Art (Version 8)
1/8": 1 foot scale Coloured balsa wood model of the Mackintosh Building on a wooden base. Made by former students of the Glasgow School of Art.
Model of the Glasgow School of Art (Version 7)
1/8": 1 foot scale Coloured balsa wood model of the Mackintosh Building on a wooden base. Made by former students of the Glasgow School of Art.
Model of the Glasgow School of Art (Version 6)
1/8": 1 foot scale Coloured balsa wood model of the Mackintosh Building on a wooden base. Made by former students of the Glasgow School of Art.
Model of the Glasgow School of Art (Version 5)
1/8": 1 foot scale Coloured balsa wood model of the Mackintosh Building on a wooden base. Made by former students of the Glasgow School of Art.
Model of the Glasgow School of Art (Version 3)
1/8": 1 foot scale Coloured balsa wood model of the Mackintosh Building on a wooden base. Made by former students of the Glasgow School of Art.
Model of the Glasgow School of Art (Version 2)
1/8": 1 foot scale Coloured balsa wood model of the Mackintosh Building on a wooden base. Made by former students of the Glasgow School of Art.
Model of the Glasgow School of Art (Version 14)
1/8": 1 foot scale Coloured balsa wood model of the Mackintosh Building on a wooden base. Made by former students of the Glasgow School of Art.
Model of the Glasgow School of Art (Version 13)
1/8": 1 foot scale Coloured balsa wood model of the Mackintosh Building on a wooden base. Made by former students of the Glasgow School of Art.
Model of the Glasgow School of Art (Version 12)
1/8": 1 foot scale Coloured balsa wood model of the Mackintosh Building on a wooden base. Made by former students of the Glasgow School of Art.
Model of the Glasgow School of Art (Version 11)
1/8": 1 foot scale Coloured balsa wood model of the Mackintosh Building on a wooden base. Made by former students of the Glasgow School of Art.
Model of the Glasgow School of Art (Version 10)
1/8": 1 foot scale Coloured balsa wood model of the Mackintosh Building on a wooden base. Made by former students of the Glasgow School of Art.
Model of the Glasgow School of Art (Version 1)
1/8": 1 foot scale Coloured balsa wood model of the Mackintosh Building on a wooden base. Made by former students of the Glasgow School of Art.
Meister Der Innen-Kunst - Title Page from Portfolio of Prints
An Art-Lover's house competition. Portfolio published 1902. In 1901 the Zeitschrift fur Innen-Dekoration of Darmstadt organised an international competition for the design of an Art Lover's House. The 1st prize was shared among 16 entrants, Baillie Scott recieved 2nd prize and 3rd prizes were also awarded. Mackintosh's entry was disqualified as his interior drawings were not finished in time for the competition deadline, but when they arrived he was awarded a special purchase prize of 600 marks by the publishers. The original drawings cannot now be traced, but in 1902 Alexander Koch published them as a portfolio in 'Meister Der Innenkunst' with an introduction by Herman Muthesius. A portfolio was presented by Mackintosh to the GSA and a 2nd set of prints, framed, is in the GSA collection.
Mackintosh, Charles Rennie
Mackintosh sketchbook (Page 5)
Part of Papers of Jessie Keppie, artist and student of The Glasgow School of Art, Scotland
Mackintosh, Charles Rennie
Mackintosh Building, The Glasgow School of Art
Line drawing showing the elevated rear (south) facade.
Cairns, George
Mackintosh Building, The Glasgow School of Art
Line drawing showing the elevated section of the east half of the building (viewed from the South-west).
Cairns, George
Mackintosh Building, The Glasgow School of Art
Line drawing showing an elevated, central section of the building, viewed from the South-east.
Cairns, George
Mackintosh Building, The Glasgow School of Art
Line drawing showing the central section of the building, viewed from the south, and highlighting the entrance hall.
Cairns, George
Mackintosh Building, The Glasgow School of Art
Line drawing showing section through the west half of the building including individual floor plans.
Cairns, George
Mackintosh Building, The Glasgow School of Art
Line drawing showing a section through the first floor corridor, west.
Cairns, George
Mackintosh Building, The Glasgow School of Art
Line drawing showing section through east staircase at second floor level.
Cairns, George
Mackintosh Building, The Glasgow School of Art
Line drawing showing boiler room insulation and foul air exhaust.
Cairns, George
Mackintosh Building, The Glasgow School of Art
Line drawing showing the elevated front facade and roof (central and east sections). Companion drawing NMC/1660B.
Cairns, George
Mackintosh Building, The Glasgow School of Art
Line drawing showing the elevated front facade and roof (west section). Companion drawing NMC/1660A.
Cairns, George
Mackintosh Building, The Glasgow School of Art
Line drawing showing the elevated back and east elevations.
Cairns, George
Mackintosh Building, The Glasgow School of Art
Line drawing showing an elevated, central section (including the Museum) with cut-away floors and roof.
Cairns, George
Mackintosh Building, The Glasgow School of Art
Line drawing showing a section through the centre of the building, viewed from the south, and highlighting the Coil Room.
Cairns, George
Mackintosh Building, The Glasgow School of Art
Line drawing showing section through east staircase at first floor level.
Cairns, George
Mackintosh Building, The Glasgow School of Art
Line drawing showing fresh air induction, heating and circulation.
Cairns, George
Mackintosh Building, The Glasgow School of Art
Line drawing showing the elevated section through the east half of the building including cut-away floors and roof.
Cairns, George
Mackintosh Building, The Glasgow School of Art
Line drawing showing elevated section through east half of the building including cut-away floors and roof.
Cairns, George
Mackintosh Building, The Glasgow School of Art
Line drawing showing elevated section through west half of the building, viewed from the South-east.
Cairns, George
Mackintosh Building, The Glasgow School of Art
Line drawing showing a section through the west staircase at second floor level.
Cairns, George
Mackintosh Building, The Glasgow School of Art
Line drawing showing a section through the west half of the building (including staircase) with cut-away floors and roof.
Cairns, George
Mackintosh Building, The Glasgow School of Art
Line drawing showing a section though the west half of the building, with cut-away floors of the library wing.
Cairns, George
Mackintosh Building, The Glasgow School of Art
Line drawing showing proposed reinstatement of warm air heating system.
Cairns, George
Architectural drawing of Hill House, Helensburgh. Scale 1:100.
Clarke, Paul
Architectural drawing of Hill House, Helensburgh. Scale 1:100.
Clarke, Paul
Architectural drawing of Hill House, Helensburgh. Scale 1:100.
Clarke, Paul
Hill House - Details of bay window
Architectural drawing of Hill House, Helensburgh. Scale 1:20.
Clarke, Paul
Hill House - Detail short section
Architectural drawing of Hill House, Helensburgh. Scale 1:20.
Clarke, Paul
Hill House - Detail section through stair
Architectural drawing of Hill House, Helensburgh. Scale 1:20.
Clarke, Paul
Hill House - Detail plan entrance/hallway
Architectural drawing of Hill House, Helensburgh. Scale 1:20.
Clarke, Paul
Hill House - Detail long section part
Architectural drawing of Hill House, Helensburgh. Scale 1:20.
Clarke, Paul
Design for Windyhill, Kilmacolm, perspective from south-west
Design for William Davidson. In the mid 1890s Mackintosh met William Davidson, a young Glasgow businessman, who commissioned him to design some furniture for his flat in Gladsmuir, his parents' house at Kilmacolm. About 1899 Davidson decided to build his own house, and Windyhill was the first of Mackintosh's private houses. It was completed in 1901 and still survives. Mackintosh designed the furniture for the hall, drawing room, schoolroom and principal bedroom, much of which survives in the GSA collection.
Mackintosh, Charles Rennie
Design for Windyhill, Kilmacolm, perspective from north-east
Design for William Davidson. In the mid 1890s Mackintosh met William Davidson, a young Glasgow businessman, who commissioned him to design some furniture for his flat in Gladsmuir, his parents' house at Kilmacolm. About 1899 Davidson decided to build his own house, and Windyhill was the first of Mackintosh's private houses. It was completed in 1901 and still survives. Mackintosh designed the furniture for the hall, drawing room, schoolroom and principal bedroom, much of which survives in the GSA collection.
Mackintosh, Charles Rennie
Design for The Hill House, Helensburgh, perspective from south-west
Design for Walter Blackie. 'When in 1902, Walter W Blackie, the publisher, decided to have a new house built on a site he had acquired overlooking the Firth of Clyde, he asked Talwin Morris, the art manager of his firm, for advice in the choice of an architect. Morris had no hesitation in recommending Mackintosh and when Blackie met him they found themselves very much in sympathy with each other. This happy relationship between clients and architect resulted in the largest and perhaps finest example of Mackintosh's executed domestic architecture.' (McLaren Young). The house survives in good condition and still containing much of the furniture which Mackintosh designed for it. The plan is similar to his design for Haus Eines Kunstfreundes, and the schemes for decoration and furnishings throughout the house were executed according to his designs.
Mackintosh, Charles Rennie
Design for the Grand Hall, Glasgow International Exhibition, 1901
The competition, held in 1898, was won by the Glasgow architect James Miller with a considerably more ornate design for a 'bit of Spanish baroque confectionery' (McLaren Young). Like Miller's, Mackintosh's design derives from James Sellars' for the 1888 Glasgow exhibition, but simplified. 'The dome, perhaps a prerequisite for Glasgow exhibitions, remained, but it was presented with severe geometricality, with an Art Nouveau lantern surmounted by a Chinese coolie hat.'
Mackintosh, Charles Rennie
Design for the Dug-Out, Willow Tea Rooms, Glasgow
Design for the staircase and vestibule, West Elevation, The Dug-Out, Willow Tea Rooms, Sauchiehall Street, Glasgow. Miss Cranston and her husband Major Cochrane commissioned Mackintosh to redesign the interiors of their home Hous'hill at Nitshill. Mackintosh designed several suites of furniture in 1904 and more pieces in 1909. Stripes are the dominant motif in the decorations, in the panels over the settle and between the doors where they are carried over the ceiling as in the guest bedroom at 78 Derngate. The lampshades are also similar to those used in this bedroom. (Roger Billcliffe). The lattice work recalls the hall at Derngate, but here it is used as an open screen rather than with solid or glazed panels. The only furniture that has been traced is the chair at the writing desk and the small table.
Mackintosh, Charles Rennie