- NMC/0265/v3
- Part
- c1900s-1940s
*Not available / given
*Not available / given
*Not available / given
Artist book: 'Small drawings' (Page 1)
The Do It Yourself Guide to Urban Wildlife (Version 1)
One print from 'Abstract Language' (The Philadelphia Series) (Version 3)
Plaster sculpture.
Barr, James
This item was lost in the fire in The Mackintosh Building at The Glasgow School of Art on 23rd May 2014. Study of Catterline shoreline, looking northwards over the bay and showing the pier, boat shed, and salmon bothie, with 'the Watchie' building above.
Eardley, Joan Kathleen Harding
Half-length study of man wearing jacket (probably a Glasgow subject).
Eardley, Joan Kathleen Harding
Drawing of young man (probably from Lincolnshire).
Eardley, Joan Kathleen Harding
Unidentified Italian hill town. One of Eardley's paintings undertaken as part of her art school travelling scholarship.
Eardley, Joan Kathleen Harding
Study of an open market, Glasgow.
Eardley, Joan Kathleen Harding
Italian farm study.
Eardley, Joan Kathleen Harding
Study of seated male model (possibly from Glasgow School of Art life class).
Eardley, Joan Kathleen Harding
Blind Window, Certosa di Pavia
Painted on Mackintosh's tour of Italy in 1891 with Alexander 'Greek' Thomson travelling scholarship.
Mackintosh, Charles Rennie
Mackintosh's style here is the closest he came to that of Margaret and Frances Macdonald, but his figures are always more substantial and the subject matter less whimsical than theirs.
Mackintosh, Charles Rennie
Mackintosh, Charles Rennie
In July Mackintosh and Margaret Macdonald spent a holiday in Dorset re-visiting many of the place he had visited in 1895. 'In 'The Village' and 'The Downs' Mackintosh makes his first conscious moves towards his mature style of the Port Vendres period. He is obviously concerned with the pattern of the landscape, picking out features like the stepped hillside, the stone walls, paths and roofs of village houses. These ordinary motifs are given an eerie emphasis by being painted in an equally detailed manner whether they are in the foreground of the the distance... it was probably at this time... that he decided to concentrate more and more on painting. By 1923 he had decided to forsake architecture and design and devote the rest of his life to producing watercolours.' (Roger Billcliffe).
Mackintosh, Charles Rennie
Wall hanging designed for The Dug-Out, Willow Tea Rooms, Glasgow
This item was lost in the fire in The Mackintosh Building at The Glasgow School of Art on 23rd May 2014. The canvas relates to smaller watercolours in the Hunterian collection, formerly thought to be textile designs, and to their painted canvas, 'The Little Hills' by Margaret Macdonald. It is likely that they were intended for 'The Dug-Out', though it is not known whether they were ever installed there. Jessie Newbery recalled in 1933, that 'He (Mackintosh) and his wife spent the winter of 1914 painting two large decorations for Miss Cranston'. This would have been in Suffolk, after they had left Glasgow. Although The Dug-Out was not created till 1917-18 it is not unlikely that Miss Cranston was considering the project some years earlier. The canvas was found in the GSA in a single roll in 1981 and was cleaned and mounted on two stretchers.
Mackintosh, Charles Rennie
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