CHARLES RENNIE MACKINTOSH ARCHITECTURE MODELS
No British architect of his era left a more distinctive mark. Charles Rennie Mackintosh (1868–1928) developed a visual language entirely his own — one that drew on the Scottish vernacular, absorbed the sinuous energy of Art Nouveau, and arrived somewhere that neither movement could fully claim. His buildings are exercises in total design: the architecture, the interiors, the furniture and the decorative details conceived as a single, unified whole.
Our collection brings together four of his most significant works — the Glasgow School of Art, Hill House in Helensburgh, the Willow Tearooms on Sauchiehall Street, and the House for an Art Lover. Each model is cast in fine plaster and finished by hand, capturing the precision and the personality that makes Mackintosh's architecture so immediately recognisable: the strong vertical lines, the interplay of solid mass and delicate ornament, the sense that every surface has been considered.
These are models for people who know exactly why Mackintosh matters — and for those who are only just discovering him.