MacNair, James Herbert

Key Information

Type of entity

Person

Authorized form of name

MacNair, James Herbert

Parallel form(s) of name

  • MacNair, Herbert

Standardized form(s) of name according to other rules

Other form(s) of name

  • McNair, Herbert

Identifiers for corporate bodies

Description area

Dates of existence

1868-1955

History

Scottish-born Herbert McNair was a highly individual designer and talented teacher. He made an important contribution in the early 1890s to the development of Mackintosh’s creative imagination, and his paintings and furniture designs were among some of the most most individual of the Glasgow Style of the 1890s. The promise of his early career was not fulfilled however, largely because of external factors, and no work after 1911 is known.
McNair trained as an architect with Honeyman and Keppie, Glasgow from 1888 to 1895, where he met Mackintosh. He subsequently set up an independent studio as an artist and designer in the city centre – he never practised architecture. McNair had early success with a one-man show of his pastels in London in 1898 and his appointment that year as a lecturer at the School of Architecture and Applied Art, University College, Liverpool. Frances Macdonald and he married the following year, and their only child, Sylvan, was born in 1900. The couple exhibited work in Vienna (1900), Turin (1902) and Dresden (1903), as well as regularly exhibiting watercolours in Liverpool and London in the early 1900s. Difficulties arose with the closure of the School in 1905. McNair and a colleague set up an alternative school but this experiment was short-lived. Combined with these setbacks, the family wealth had been dissipated through poor business management. McNair and his family returned to Glasgow in straitened circumstances. A final but unsuccessful attempt to re-establish a career appears to have been made with an exhibition of the McNairs’ work at the Baillie Gallery, London. No work by McNair after that date is known. Following Frances Macdonald’s death in 1921, he destroyed much of her work, and subsequently lived in Argyllshire where he died in 1955.
Other examples of his work are held by the Hunterian Art Gallery, University of Glasgow, and the Walker Art Gallery, National Museums Liverpool. There is little published information currently available, except for an early article by Roger Billcliffe in the Walker Art Gallery Annual Bulletin, 1970-1. An exhibition of the McNairs’ work was held at the Hunterian Art Gallery, University of Glasgow, in the summer of 2006, subsequently touring to the Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool from January to April 2007.

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Related entity

Mackintosh, Charles Rennie (1868-1928)

Identifier of the related entity

P1

Category of the relationship

family

Dates of the relationship

Description of relationship

In-law

Related entity

Mackintosh, Margaret Macdonald (1864-1933)

Identifier of the related entity

P2

Category of the relationship

family

Dates of the relationship

Description of relationship

In-law

Related entity

Morris, Talwin (1865 - 1911)

Identifier of the related entity

P902

Category of the relationship

associative

Type of relationship

Morris, Talwin

is the friend of

MacNair, James Herbert

Dates of the relationship

Description of relationship

Related entity

MacNair, Frances Macdonald (1874-1921)

Identifier of the related entity

P5

Category of the relationship

family

Type of relationship

MacNair, Frances Macdonald

is the spouse of

MacNair, James Herbert

Dates of the relationship

Description of relationship

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Authority record identifier

P3

Institution identifier

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  • Clipboard

  • Export

  • EAC

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