| In 1902 Mackintosh received another significant commission when he was asked to design The Hill House in Helensburgh for Glasgow publisher Walter Blackie. Mackintosh designed not only the house and garden, which was completed in 1904, but also much of the furniture and all the interior fittings and decorative schemes. Margaret contributed fabric designs and a unique gesso overmantel. Today The Hill House is in the care of the National Trust for Scotland, and a visit is a must for anyone who wishes to see Mackintosh's domestic masterpiece. Kate Cranston, a local Glasgow businesswoman, came up with the idea for a series of 'art tearooms' and approached Mackintosh to assist the architect and designer George Walton on her new premises in Buchanan Street. The success of the tearoom forged a relationship between Cranston and Mackintosh, which was to last twenty years. Between 1897 and 1917 he designed or restyled rooms in all four of her Glasgow tearoom establishments. Today tea and light meals are still served in The Willow Tea Rooms in Sauchiehall Street. Scotland Street School (1904 - 1907) was one of Mackintosh's last commissions in Glasgow. The mature architect is in evidence here with the unexpected decoration and the extraordinary daring precision of masonry and glass as they fly up towards their conical slate hats. The principal interiors of 6 Florentine Terrace, home of the Mackintoshes from 1906 to 1914, have been meticulously reconstructed within the Hunterian Art Gallery at the University of Glasgow. | |
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