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Charles Rennie Mackintosh was born at 70 Parson Street, Townhead, Glasgow. He is one of the city’s most loved sons with his work remaining a huge part of Glasgow’s architectural history.
AN exhibition celebrating Glasgow’s “greatest cultural icon” Charles Rennie Mackintosh opens today to celebrate the 150th anniversary of his birth. The show at Kelvingrove Art Gallery and ...
There is a connection to Charles Rennie Mackintosh too. On early designs, when the building was expanding to include a new tearoom and marble stairs, his notes appear on drawings by the firm he worked ...
At the “Designing the New: Charles Rennie Mackintosh and the Glasgow style” exhibit, you can see this work: Japan: Its Architecture, Art, and Art Manufactures, 1882.
The Charles Rennie Mackintosh Society was born of necessity. Four of his buildings stood in the way of the motorway that Glasgow Corporation planned to build in the 1970s.
The only surviving tea rooms designed by Charles Rennie Mackintosh, the Willow Tea Rooms were commissioned by local entrepreneur Catherine Cranston and opened on Sauchiehall Street in 1903.