CHARLES RENNIE MacINTOSH Art Nouveau MOUNTED PRINT FRAME SIZE 10" x 8" PRINT SIZE 7" x 5" EXCELLENT NEW CONDITION
Margaret and Frances Macdonald and their Glasgow School of Art classmates Charles Rennie Mackintosh and Harold MacNair were Art Nouveau's Glasgow Four.
Celebrating the 150th anniversary of Charles Rennie Mackintosh’s birth (1868-1928), this is the first-ever exhibition in the United States to contextualize Mackintosh’s seminal work - architecture, design and art - in relation to the broader yet intimately connected circle of designers, architects, and craftspeople with which he shared sources, inspiration, ideas, motifs, and patrons.
EXCLUSIVE. Designed by Lisa Rose, one of the founders of Rennie and Rose, then woven in the USA on jacquard looms. Each design is created with love, spirit, care and attention to detail to compliment your home décor. Based on favorite subjects or architectural details of famous architects and certain to please. Charles Rennie MacIntosh was an innovative Scottish architect, designer, and artist who was influential in the design movements such as Art Nouveau and Sessionism. This popular ginkgo motif is inspired by one of his windows. Incredible weaving and depth of color from mills here in the USA. Table Runner 12.5" x 74″ Runner. Fabric 100% cotton. Spot clean or dry clean for best results. Product designed, woven and manufactured in the USA.
Click Images to Enlarge MSG 2 MSG 3 MSG 4 MSG 5 MSG 6 MSG 7 MSG 8 MSG 9 MSG 10 Scottish is inspired daily by actual Mackintosh stained glass. MSG 11 MSG 12 ...
An iconic design based on the work of the Glasgow artist Charles Rennie MacKintosh and his wife Mary MacDonald made from Sterling Silver. Beautiful Art Nouveau stylised flower with pink Mother of Pearl inset. Chain Length 18 inches Pendant 2.7 x 1.2 cms, Earrings 2.2 x 1 cms CHARLES RENNIE MACINTOSH (7 June 1868 – 10 December 1928) was a Scottish architect, designer, water colourist and artist. Most of his iconic buildings are found in his home city, Glasgow, Scotland, including the Glasgow School of Art, The Willow Tea Rooms, Queen's Cross Church and Hill House at Helensburgh. Along with his beloved wife Margaret MacDonald he produced many iconic designs in particular the stylised rose found on many gifts sold to-day. Part of the Celtic Revival movement in the 19th Century, his work influenced the Secessionist and Art Nouveau movement in Europe and the Arts and Craft movement in Britain and latterly the art Deco movement.
The figurehead of the Glasgow School movement, Charles Rennie Mackintosh is remembered for his prolific contributions to international Art Nouveau.
Art historical nods, prescient color palettes—it’s all represented in a new American exhibition on the Scottish talent
The Frist Art Museum presents Designing the New: Charles Rennie Mackintosh and the Glasgow Style from June 11 through September 12, 2021.
How to spend a weekend in Glasgow, with tips on what to see, do, eat and drink in a 48-hour itinerary for Scotland's city of culture.
The Mackintosh Trail in Roussillon,known in France as 'Le chemin de Mackintosh', was inaugurated in Port Vendres in June 2004...
Yellow Clover
These are botanical studies from Mackintosh's sketchbook. They are airy and lightly finished, somewhat stylized. I love the spare pencil lines and how leaves and blossoms overlap without obscuring each other. I found these at the The Hunterian Gallery at the University of Glasgow.
Charles Rennie Mackintosh was a Scottish post-impressionist artist that became one of the most exciting architects from the XX century and one of the world’s greatest designers. He was the fourth of 11 children, born in Glasgow on 7th July 1868. By the age of 16, he started to work at the Honeyman and Keppie […]
Charles Rennie Mackintosh and many of his contemporaries used a rose design that came to be known as the "Glasgow rose". It's a simplified rose design, which I discovered worked really well for these stained-glass style wire earrings, which are quite simple to make! You'll need: Thin silver-coloured wire Nail polish in a red or pink colour (I used Bordeaux by Essie) Earring wires A pair of jewellery pliers would be useful, but not essential, as, if the wire is thin enough, you can bend it with your fingers 1. Bend the wire into two rose shapes, each about 1.5cm across. Start at the middle with a triangle shape, and work outwards from this as shown in the diagram, until it forms a circle. Try to make sure there are lots of points where the wire touches, so that the segments that need filled with nail polish are small. Leave a length of wire to support the rose as it dries. 2. Load up the nail polish brush with plenty of polish, and hold it behind one of the open areas of the rose. It might take a few attempts to get the polish to cling. Leave each area to dry before doing the next. To support the rose as it dries, you could stick it in a blob of blu-tak. 3. When they are completely dry, bend the ends of the wires into loops, and attach to the earring wires! If the nail polish covers the wire at the front, you can try gently removing it with a cotton bud and nail polish remover.
Norbert Wolfs publication devotes entirely to the art nouveau and shows how this era influenced architecture, art and design.
The figurehead of the Glasgow School movement, Charles Rennie Mackintosh is remembered for his prolific contributions to international Art Nouveau.
"Fritillaria" 1915 watercolour and pencil Charles Rennie Mackintosh; (Scottish; 1868-1928) The drawings of wild flowers which Mackintosh produced in 1915 are probably the most elegant and delicate of all. Fritillaria is a flower with such obvious appeal for Mackintosh that it seems odd he had not drawn it before. The chequer-work on its petals is much like many of his decorative stencils, and he acknowledges his debt by repeating the dicing in the signature box. In Southern Britain, as an indigenous plant, Fritillary (Fritillaria meleagris) is a rarity of ancient damp pasture. However, it is commonly grown in gardens. source
Celebrating the grand designs - some built, some not - of architect Charles Rennie Mackintosh.
Sold by Create your own from scratch Shape: Classic Round Stickers Create custom stickers for every occasion! From special mailings and scrapbooking to kids’ activities and DIY projects, you’ll find these stickers are great for so many uses. Add your own designs, patterns, text, and pictures! Dimensions: Available in 2 sizes: Large: 3" diameter, 6 stickers per sheet Small: 1.5" diameter, 20 stickers per sheet Printed on white acid-free paper Vibrant full-color, full-bleed printing Scratch-resistant front, easy peel-and-stick back Available in a matte or glossy finish Choose between 7 different shapes
The Frist Art Museum presents Designing the New: Charles Rennie Mackintosh and the Glasgow Style from June 11 through September 12, 2021.
Charles Rennie Mackintosh Charles Rennie Mackintosh, architect, designer and artist is celebrated around the world as one of the most ...
Click Images to Enlarge MSG 2 MSG 3 MSG 4 MSG 5 MSG 6 MSG 7 MSG 8 MSG 9 MSG 10 Scottish is inspired daily by actual Mackintosh stained glass. MSG 11 MSG 12 ...