Charles
Rennie Mackintosh's finest work dates from about a dozen intensely
creative years around 1900. His buildings in Glasgow, and especially
his craggy masterpiece the Glasgow School of Art, are more complex
and playful than anything in Britain at that time. His interiors,
many of them designed in collaboration with his wife, Margaret Macdonald,
are both spare and sensuous, creating a world of heightened aesthetic
sensibility. Finally, during the 1920s, he painted a series of watercolors
which are as original as anything he had done before. Since his death,
Mackintosh has been lauded as a pioneer of the Modern Movement and
as a master of Art Nouveau. This book, with illustrations that include
specially prepared plans and sections, takes a clear-eyed view of
Mackintosh and his achievement, stripping away the myths to reveal
a designer of extraordinary sophistication and inventiveness.
"Remarkable
for its freshness, poignancy, imaginative understanding and wealth
of new research"
                      The New York Times Book Review
"Represents a significant new revision of the understanding of Mackintosh's
entire output."
                                                Studies in the Decorative Arts
"A concise and elegantly written study of the life and work of the
Glasgow architect."
  The New Yorker
ISBN
0-500-20283-4 · 167 illustrations
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