Scotland: Day 4
Today was my second full day in Glasgow and now that I've become an ace navigating the City Center and Merchant City neighborhoods, it was small beans making a beeline for my first appointment of the day at one of architect, designer and Art Nouveau godhead Charles Rennie Mackintosh's Glasgow School of Art.

My guide, Juliet Fellows-Smith, was chipper and able, and as she's been giving these tours for some time now, wildly knowledgeable. We started out front of the building to examine the exterior, understand the symbolism the ironwork and decorative filigree comes freighted with (flowers man, lots of flowers) and to see the point that divides the two phases of construction. As the Glasgow School of Art grew in the late 19th century it became necessary to expand. Mackintosh was a lowly draftsman in an architecture firm, and though his plan for the building won out, tight funds made it necessary to design and build the school in two spurts separated by eight years: from 1897-1899 and then 1907-1909.

Here are three buildings (with that brutalist tower glimpsed in back) that are to go in favor of the new Steven Holl building. The Victorian building at the end of the block is home to the Vic, a rather grungy student union and music venue that has birthed a number of Glasgow bands like Franz Ferdinand.

Mackintosh designed everything at the Glasgow School of Art including the font you see everywhere. I love it here on the main door to the building.

The vents in the main gallery space in the Glasgow School of Art are hidden in these Japanese lantern-inspired boxes. The massive fan is downstairs and was shipped over at the turn of the century from where it was made in Boston. The cool air was chilled by blocks of ice and the hot air heated by a coal burner.
The library space is probably the most impressive in the school, and the best expression of the total work of art he strove to make. The lighting fixtures were some of the first in Glasgow designed for electric bulbs, the tapering wooden columns evoke a Scottish forest, and the totality of his design is still staggering today. Also impressive in the school is the ease with which various styles abut one another. A hallway will feel wonderfully medieval, a bank of windows perfectly Art Nouveau, and the back facade of rough cast stone a harbinger of the chunky brutalism that so many love to mock.

This hutch is simply too beautiful. The row of photos above charts famous alumnus and administrators at the Glasgow School of Art. Mackintosh (who attended as an architecture student) leads the pack.

There is a little gallery of Mackintosh's furniture at the GSA. They have the largest collection in the world at over 200 pieces, but only a fraction of that are on display.
To steady myself I headed off for lunch. I'd considered the Willows Tea Room on Sauchiehall Road (one of the many in town for which Mackintosh did the interior), but Juliet told me that none of what's there is original stuff and that his private homes and museums are better bets. Instead I stopped into the Center for Contemporary Arts for a spell, leafed through a first edition of an old volume of Auden at an antiquarian book store, and then found a basement level tea room called the Butterfly and the Pig on Bath Street.


That's Ross Hunter on the left, me in the center, and Jim Hamilton on the right in front of the bar and club Hummingbird they designed.
We started at Tinderbox, the espresso joint and cafe where I'd eaten yesterday. The first Tinderbox they did was in the West End up on Byres Street, though after visiting that one, and liking it, I think I prefer the newer one on Ingram Street.

From there it was up and over the City Center to a club called Hummingbird and then to their recently-done interior of the Blythswood Hotel on Blythswood Square. We had a pint there, talked Glasgow and design and generally shot the breeze.

A quick snap of the counter at Tinderbox on Byres Street.
I had a fine steak frites at the restaurant Red Onion on West Campbell Street, which I topped off with an affogato and a Highland Park 12 whisky.

On my walk home tonight I passed the All Saints clothing store on Buchanan Street. Hung in the many windows are scores upon scores of vintage sewing machines which form a kind of porous industrial curtain. The best retail design I've seen yet in Scotland.
Then I took a much-needed walk back through the City Center to my hotel. Can bed be far off?
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There's no place like home!
Dear Hugh, Thank you for the wonderful observations on your recent trip to the Merchant City. I am an American living abroad and attended a wonderful lecture on Art Nouveau at the Glasgow Heritage Trust on Bell St., Glasgow given by a profesional curator from Barcelona. Their network is called Reseau Network and their website is www.artnouveau-net.eu. Wonderful further information on cities that have this heritage. Are you from the USA? Ann baci.art@gmail.com
Apologies! I see the author of this is Aaron, not Hugh!
Hi Ann, Yes, I am from the States and thanks for the note about learning more about the Art Nouveau heritage of Glasgow!
I enjoyed this article a lot. Just a question regarding your interest in the window display of retailer All Saints: Although it is rather interesting, what is it to you personally, that you feel makes this the best seen retail design in Scotland? I'm just a little intrigued, as I'm currently in my 3rd year at the Glasgow School of Art studying Interior Design. If you don't happen to know who is responsible for the interior, I can help you out there. Brinkworth Interiors - London based Interior Design company. They've done some pretty swell examples of fine retail and dining spaces. www.brinkworth.co.uk
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