Charles Rennie Mackintosh

About Charles Rennie Mackintosh

Mackintosh died holding a pencil. By then, December 1928, throat cancer had taken his voice, and he had spent his final months in a London clinic unable to speak or eat. He was sixty years old. The Times noted his significance to modernism. Glasgow, the city that had largely ignored him for two decades, would take considerably longer to notice.

He was the fourth of eleven children, seven of whom survived infancy. His father was a police superintendent. The boy was probably dyslexic, struggled badly at school, and used sketchbooks to manage what appear to have been emotional difficulties. He had a contracted sinew in one foot that gave him a limp, and childhood rheumatic fever left one side of his face permanently drooped. None of this stopped him drawing.

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Still Life with Carnations - Fine Art Print - PosterStill Life with Carnations - Fine Art Print - Lifestyle
Still Life with Carnations - Fine Art Print

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Sale priceFrom £37.00
Bouleternère - Charles Rennie Mackintosh - PosterBouleternère - Charles Rennie Mackintosh - Lifestyle
Bouleternère - Charles Rennie Mackintosh

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Still Life of Anemones - Charles Rennie Mackintosh - Poster
Fairies - Charles Rennie Mackintosh - PosterFairies - Charles Rennie Mackintosh - Lifestyle
Fairies - Charles Rennie Mackintosh

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Jasmine (Botanical Study) - Fine Art Print - PosterJasmine (Botanical Study) - Fine Art Print - Lifestyle
Jasmine (Botanical Study) - Fine Art Print

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Mimosa, Amélie-les-Bains (January 1924) - Fine Art Print - PosterMimosa, Amélie-les-Bains (January 1924) - Fine Art Print - Framed Print Black
Mimosa, Amélie-les-Bains (January 1924) - Fine Art Print

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Sale priceFrom £28.00
Venetian Palace, Blackshore on the Blyth - Fine Art Print - PosterVenetian Palace, Blackshore on the Blyth - Fine Art Print - Lifestyle
Venetian Palace, Blackshore on the Blyth - Fine Art Print

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Sale priceFrom £19.60 Regular price£28.00
Music Room Interior Design - Charles Rennie Mackintosh - PosterMusic Room Interior Design - Charles Rennie Mackintosh - Lifestyle
Music Room Interior Design - Charles Rennie Mackintosh

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White Tulips - Charles Rennie Mackintosh - PosterWhite Tulips - Charles Rennie Mackintosh - Lifestyle
White Tulips - Charles Rennie Mackintosh

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Sale priceFrom £37.00
Cintra, June 1908 - Charles Rennie Mackintosh - PosterCintra, June 1908 - Charles Rennie Mackintosh - Lifestyle
Cintra, June 1908 - Charles Rennie Mackintosh

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Sale priceFrom £28.00
Cover Design for 'Meister der Innenkunst' - Charles Rennie Mackintosh - PosterCover Design for 'Meister der Innenkunst' - Charles Rennie Mackintosh - Lifestyle
Charles Rennie Mackintosh

Charles Rennie Mackintosh

Mackintosh died holding a pencil. By then, December 1928, throat cancer had taken his voice, and he had spent his final months in a London clinic unable to speak or eat. He was sixty years old. The Times noted his significance to modernism. Glasgow, the city that had largely ignored him for two decades, would take considerably longer to notice. He was the fourth of eleven children, seven of whom survived infancy. His father was a police superintendent. The boy was probably dyslexic, struggled badly at school, and used sketchbooks to manage what appear to have been emotional difficulties. He had a contracted sinew in one foot that gave him a limp, and childhood rheumatic fever left one side of his face permanently drooped. None of this stopped him drawing. He enrolled at Glasgow School of Art at fifteen, studying part-time while apprenticed to the architect John Hutchinson. In 1889 he joined Honeyman and Keppie, where he would remain for nearly two decades. He met Margaret Macdonald in 1892. Together with her sister Frances and Herbert McNair, they formed a group that became known as The Four. Mackintosh and Margaret married in 1900. He acknowledged publicly that Margaret had genius where he had only talent. His greatest commission was the Glasgow School of Art building itself, won in competition in 1897. The library wing, completed in 1909, is considered one of the finest interiors of the twentieth century. He designed all four tea rooms for the entrepreneur Catherine Cranston, going so far as to specify the waitresses' dresses and order the flowers. In Vienna, at the eighth Secessionist Exhibition in 1900, his work was received with an enthusiasm Glasgow never matched. His style fell from favour. He drank. He was asked to leave his firm. In 1914 he and Margaret moved to Walberswick in Suffolk, where he was briefly arrested as a suspected German spy because of his Vienna correspondence and unusual manner. He was released without charge but effectively driven from the village. In 1923, they moved to Port Vendres in the south of France. The light and landscape revived him. He painted watercolours of the surrounding hills and harbour with an obsessive attention to geological detail, completing around forty before returning to London for the last time.