Author: Billcliffe, Roger Title: Charles Rennie Mackintosh: The Complete Furniture. Furniture Drawings and Interior Design
Description: New York, Abrams in Association with Cameron & Hollis, 2010. 4th completely rev. ed. Hardcover. Black cloth boards with silver stamped spine lettering. Glossy black dust jacket with color-illustration and white lettering. 320 pp. 250+ color plates and 650 bw illustrations. "This new and completely revised fourth edition of Roger Billcliffe's ground-breaking catalogue raisonne of the furniture of Charles Rennie Mackintosh appears thirty years after the book's first publication and more than twenty years since it was last in print. The text has been updated throughout to take account of the numerous discoveries and developments in Mackintosh scholarship. Newly discovered pieces are described and illustrated, and many items that were previously shown in black and white appear in colour, so that there are now over 900 illustrations including over 250 in colour." "For Mackintosh, who saw architecture as the art that encompassed all the other visual arts, the design of furniture and interiors formed a vital part of his oeuvre. The exhibition rooms, interiors and even single pieces of furniture, which were so eagerly sought after by his European clients and colleagues, were designed with the same care as his major architectural commissions." "In a working life of only twenty-five years, Mackintosh designed over 300 pieces of furniture, a number that seems all the more impressive given that the majority were produced in the periods 1897-1905 and 1916-1918." "After an introduction in which Billcliffe perceptively analyses Mackintosh's career and scholarly interpretations of it, the book is arranged as a complete chronological catalogue of his work as a furniture designer. As well as the entries on individual designs and pieces, the catalogue includes essays on alllVlackintosh's major commissions for interiors and on his designs in general at specific periods of his career. Contemporary photographs are used extensively to show interiors (many of them now destroyed) as they were at the time of their completion. Pieces of furniture which cannot be traced are listed by reference to the job books that record the details of designs by Mackintosh or the firms of which he was a member." "This is the only comprehensive work on the furniture of the most important British designer and architect since Robert Adam. An impressive and stimulating work of scholarship, this book is essential reading for anyone with an interest in twentieth-century design, whether in historical, aesthetic or purely practical terms. It is the definitive work on a designer of world renown and influence."--Jacket Contents as follows: The Galsgow Art Club (1892-93) -- Alterations to the entrance hall and library at Craigie Hall, Glasgow (1893-94) -- Furniture for Friends (1894-96) -- Glasgow Herald Offices, Mitchell Street, Glasgow (1896) -- The Buchanan Street Tea Rooms, Glasgo (1896) -- Mucis Room at Craigie Hall, Glasgow (1897) -- Glasgow School of Art (1897) -- Dining room for H. Bruckmann, Munich (1898) -- Bedroom at Westdel, Queen's Place, Glasgow (1898) -- The Argyle Street Tea Rooms, Glasgow (1898-99) -- Office premises at 233 St Vincent Street, Glasgow (1898-99) -- Queen's Cross Church, Glasgow (1899) -- Glasgow School of Art (1899) -- 120 Main Street, Glasgo, and Dunglass Castle, Bowling (1900) -- The White Dining Room, Ingram Street Tea Rooms, Glasgow (1900) -- Room for the Eighth Exhibition of the Vienna Secession (1900) -- The Haus eines Kunstfreundes Competition (1901) -- Windyhill, Kilmacolm (1901) -- 14 (now 34) Kingsborough Gardens, Glasgow (1901-02) -- The International Exhibition of MOdern Decorative Art, Turin (1902) -- The Waerndorfer Music Salon, Vienna (1902) -- Exhibition Room, Architecture and Artistic Crafts of the New Style, Moscoq (1902-03) -- The Willow Tea Rooms, Glasgow (1903) -- The Hill House, Helensburgh (1903-04) -- Bedroom for the Dresdner Werkstatten Fur Handwerkskunst (1903-04) -- The Hill House, Helensburgh (1904) -- Hous'hill, Nitshill, Glasgow (1904) -- Chancel furniture for HOly Trinity CHurch, Bridge of Allan (1904) -- Dining room for A.S. Ball, Berlin (1905) -- The Board Room, Glasgow School of Art (1906) -- 6 Florentine Terrace, later 78 Southpark Avenue, Glasgow (1906) -- The Dutch Kitchen, Argyle Street Tea Rooms, Glasgow (1907) -- The Moss, Dumgoyne (1907) -- Alterations to the Lady Artists' Club, 5 Bylthswood Square, Glasgow (1908) -- The Oval Room and Ladies' Rest Room, Ingram Street Tea Rooms, Glasgow (1909-10) -- Interiors in the western half of the Glasgow School of Art (1909) -- The White Cockade Tea Room at the Glasgow Exhibition (1911) -- The Chinese Room, Ingram Street Tea Rooms, Glasgoq (1911) -- The Cloister Room, Ingram Street Tea Rooms, Glasgow (1911) -- Machintosh in Northampton and Glasgow (1915-20) -- 78 Derngate, Northampton (1916-17) -- Bedroom for W.J. Bassett-Lowke, 13 Kingswell Street, Northampton, and furniture for Bassett-Lowke's Friends (1916-17) -- Bedroom for Sidney Horstmann, Bath (1917) -- Furnitute and decorations at Candida Cottage, Roade, near Northhampton; for W.J. Bassett-Lowke; for F. Jones at The Drive, Northampton; and for W. Franklin (1918-19) -- New Stencil decorations in the hall, 78 Derngate, Northampton (1902). VG+/VG, exlibrary from art college, onbnly markings are ink stamps at top of textt block and andpapers. Appears unused, great shelf appeal with no marks or labels on dustjacket .
Keywords: European Decorative Arts, Furniture, Charles Rennie Mackintosh ; Mackintosh, Charles Rennie ; ; Furniture - European
Price: US$ 350.00 Seller: Kevin Mullen, Bookseller
- Book number: 202026
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