Friday 24 August 2012

Art, Interiors, Charles Rennie MacKintosh, The Willow Tea Rooms





The Willow Tea Rooms, Glasgow
The Willow Tea Rooms are my choice for ‘Interiors’ because it really is the most fabulous interior you could possibly imagine, In December 1983, Anne Mulhern recreated the Room de Luxe in the original location and the Willow Tea Rooms were reborn. It is possible to sit in these rooms, surrounded by the décor designed and installed by Charles rennie Mackintosh over 100 years ago

Charles Rennie Mackintosh
(b. Glasgow, Scotland 1868; d. London, England 1928)
Charles Mackintosh was born in Glasgow, Scotland in 1868, he began an apprenticeship with John Hutchinson in 1884 and began attending evening classes at the Glasgow School of Art. In 1889 he became an architectural assistant with Honeyman & Keppie and enrolled at the Glasgow School of Art. In 1890 he won a travelling scholarship and toured Italy before settling down into practice.
While the Glasgow School of Art, Mackintosh developed a close relationship with Margaret MacDonald, her sister Frances Macdonald and is friend Herbert McNair. The were collectively known as "The Four". ‘The Four’ were at the forefront of the Glasgow based movements in Art and Design. They were part of the groups of artists known as ‘The Glasgow Boys’ and ‘The Glasgow Girls’. These people revolutionised concepts in art and design throughout Europe. During the late 19C & early 20C. They were recognised internationally and  exhibited posters, furnishings, and a variety of graphic designs in Glasgow, London, Vienna and Turin.
Mackintosh disregarded the architecture of Greece and Rome he believed in Scotland’s own heritage, he saw no need to ‘borrow’ classicism from ancient Rome or Greece. His buildings clearly demonstrate this belief. Mackintosh created buildings notable for the elegance and clarity of their spatial concepts, the skilful exploitation of natural and artificial lighting, and skillful detailing. He felt that each design should work as a whole to which each carefully contrived detail contributes. He did not design buildings as empty shells to be filled by others, he with the assistance of his contemporaries designed every detail of a project from the exterior roof tiles to the interior furniture. His wife, (he actually married Margaret Macdonald), her sister Frances Macdonald (who had married Herbert McNaitr) and several of their friends from the Glasgow based Arts and Crafts movement contributed much of the interior design for many of his projects.
In 1913 Mackintosh left the firm of Honeyman, Keppie & Mackintosh where he had been a partner since 1904. After unsuccessfully trying to establish his own practice, he dedicated his time to landscape painting.
The Willow Tea Rooms Commentary
The Willow Tea Rooms in Glasgow is one of the most famous Mackintosh projects. Although it is generally credited to him as a whole, many parts of the interior décor and most of the utensils, including the menu cards, table lined, china, cutlery and much more, was in fact designed by |Margaret and Frances Macdonald and some of their fellow artists from the Glasgow Arts and Crafts Movement. The Willow Tea Rooms were designed for Miss Cranston, they occupy a narrow infill slot on Sauchiehall Street (Scots word, which means alley of willows). The four story building facade sits carefully in its urban context. Its top cornice generally aligns with the four story buildings on each side. The pedestrian and most public levels are distinguished from the more private upper stories with an intermediate cornice, and large central windows of these first two floors contrast with smaller windows in the wall of the upper stories. In contrast, however, to the neighbouring masonry facades, dark and heavily detailed, the Tea Rooms are stuccoed white, and the small paned windows, iron standards and window braces, and ornamental tile inserts give it an elegance and lightness appropriate for its purpose.
The facade is a subtly crafted asymmetric composition. The first two floors have large central windows, although the door is placed to one far side. The second floor is bowed over the first, so the first floor window and door are slightly recessed. The upper two floors have larger windows in a smaller bow positioned above the door, repeating the motif of the second floor but also distinguishing the importance of the door and the circulation system behind it from the rooms.
The ground floor of the building extends back into the block, with a skylit mezzanine level overlooking the ground floor dining. Stairs lead up to rooms overlooking the street at the second, third and fourth floors, with the most important Room de Luxe behind the large bow window.  
"The Room de Luxe, being the most complete and best known of Mackintosh's tea room interiors, is on the first floor overlooking the street. Its white walls, silver painted high-backed chairs, crisp white tablecloths and blue willow-pattern crockery, soft grey carpet, chairs and settees covered in a rich purple, leaded mirror glass, enamels in pastel pinks and mauves, and the famous leaded-glass doorway, combine to create a glittering elegance, widely celebrated."
"Mackintosh and his small group of associates were  responsible for both the decorative scheme and the structure of the building, (Mackintosh taking full responsibility for the structure of the building) which occupies four storeys on a narrow site. The interior consists of various tea rooms, two major dining rooms, a dining gallery, and a timber-panelled billiards room on the top floor."
The Creator's Words, by Mackintosh………………..
"(The artist) must posses technical invention in order to create for himself suitable processes of expression - and above all he requires the aid of invention in order to transform the elements with which nature supplies him - and compose new images from them."


   

wickedlyinnocent wrote on Jun 3, '08
I like tea rooms very much and the design of these ones is lovely.. It's never too late for Art Sunday, thanks for bringing the Willow Tea Rooms to the Interiors week.

brendainmad wrote on Jun 3, '08
Beautiful designs. I'd love to have similar ones in my house or at least have tea at the Willow Tea Rooms.

fglenister wrote on Jun 3, '08
I am a decendant of the Mackintosh clan.....................

No comments:

Post a Comment