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  2. Charles Rennie Mackintosh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Rennie_Mackintosh

    Charles Rennie Mackintosh (7 June 1868 – 10 December 1928) was a Scottish architect, designer, water colourist and artist. His artistic approach had much in common with European Symbolism . His work, alongside that of his wife Margaret Macdonald , was influential on European design movements such as Art Nouveau and Secessionism and praised by ...

  3. Willow Tearooms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Willow_Tearooms

    The Willow Tearooms are tearooms at 217 Sauchiehall Street, Glasgow, Scotland, designed by internationally renowned architect Charles Rennie Mackintosh, which opened for business in October 1903. They quickly gained enormous popularity, and are the most famous of the many Glasgow tearooms that opened in the late 19th and early 20th century.

  4. List of chairs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_chairs

    Mackintosh chairs Charles Rennie Mackintosh Chair (1917) Massage chair, has electromechanical devices to massage the occupant. Another kind of massage chair is one used by a therapist on which the client sits in an inverted position with the back facing the massage therapist. There is a headrest like that of the common massage table for the face.

  5. Catherine Cranston - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catherine_Cranston

    Poster design by Charles Rennie Mackintosh. In 1878 Miss Kate Cranston opened her first tearoom, the Crown Luncheon Room, on Argyle Street, Glasgow . [ 6 ] She set high standards of service, food quality and cleanliness, and her innovation lay in seeing the social need for something more than a restaurant or a simple "tea shop", and in putting ...

  6. Art Nouveau furniture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Art_Nouveau_furniture

    These architects included Charles Rennie Mackintosh, Antoni Gaudí, Victor Horta, Hector Guimard and Henry Van de Velde. After 1900, particularly in the furniture designed for the Vienna Secession and the German Jugendstil , the forms became simpler, more functional and more geometric, and some could be produced on assembly lines.

  7. Philip Clissett - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_Clissett

    They particularly influenced Ernest Gimson who, in 1890, spent six weeks with Clissett learning to make ladderback chairs. [4] [5] Clissett's chairs were popular with the Arts and Crafts cognoscenti, and were used by Charles Rennie Mackintosh in early commissions, and by the architectural team of Richard Barry Parker and Raymond Unwin.

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