The most famous Glasgow Style designs were the interiors that Charles and Margaret worked together on for some of the buildings he designed and for Miss Cranston's Tea Rooms. The "Mackintosh Rose ...
Charles Rennie Mackintosh lived from 7 June 1868 to 10 December 1928. He was an architect, designer, and watercolourist who was strongly associated with the Arts and Crafts movement, and who became ...
The tea rooms were first opened by Miss Cranston in 1903 and were designed by Charles Rennie Mackintosh in collaboration with his wife, Margaret Macdonald. This commission resulted in one of the most ...
Please help us to protect Charles Rennie Mackintosh's legacy From January 2024, the National Trust for Scotland now proudly safeguards two architectural gems by Charles Rennie Mackintosh — the Hill ...
Mackintosh was well respected, above all on the Continent, for his innovation. He was a vocal critic of the dominant architectural style of his time, when buildings were frequently made to imitate the ...
Go behind the scenes with exceptional craftspeople, conservationists and curators as they painstakingly restore and reassemble one of Charles Rennie Mackintosh’s most important interiors. Stored in ...
Margaret Macdonald Mackintosh was, alongside her husband Charles Rennie Mackintosh, one of the key figures in the emergence of the ‘Glasgow Style’ in the 1890s. Born near Wolverhampton, she settled in ...
After 50 years of the Charles Rennie Mackintosh Society, the architect's buildings are still at risk The Charles Rennie Mackintosh Society was born of necessity. Four of his buildings stood in the ...
An extension on a house that was the architect Charles Rennie Mackintosh's final commission has been completed. The terraced property in Northampton, known as 78 Derngate, is the only home in ...