- MC/G/14
- Item
- 1914
Painted during their stay in Suffolk, when Mackintosh and Margaret Macdonald had left Glasgow.
Mackintosh, Charles Rennie
Painted during their stay in Suffolk, when Mackintosh and Margaret Macdonald had left Glasgow.
Mackintosh, Charles Rennie
Mackintosh, Charles Rennie
Mackintosh produced a number of very similar paintings of stylised bouquets of flowers at this time, c1918-20.
Mackintosh, Charles Rennie
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Bound in the November 1894 edition of 'The Magazine'. "It must have been something like this watercolour.... that evoked the 'critics from foreign parts' (as reported by Gleeson White in The Studio, pp88-9) to deduce 'the personality of the Misses MacDonald from their works' and see them as 'middle-ages sisters, flat footed, with projecting teeth and long past matrimony... gaunt, unlovely females'. Gleeson White who visited Glasgow to see the Mackintosh group was pleasantly surprised to meet two laughing comely girls scarce out of their teens." (MacLaren Young).
MacNair, Frances Macdonald
In 1896 McNair held his first one-man show, an exhibition of pastels at the Gutekunst Gallery, London. Twenty-one works, including this, were displayed in distinctive dark-stained wood frames. McNair had clearly drawn inspiration from Whistler’s exhibition installations, even down to the typesetting of the catalogue. The entry for this work explained, ‘The Fairy is guarding the Leaf of Love from the Witch of Evil who has robbed the Tree of Life of all its other leaves.’
MacNair, James Herbert