Источник@

The achievements of Frances Macdonald (1873 – 1921) are less well known than those of her sister, Margaret. In part this is due to the loss of much of her work, destroyed by her husband, Herbert McNair, after her death, and in part to the fact that she left Glasgow in 1899. Nonetheless she produced some of the most powerful imagery of the Glasgow Style, and her late symbolist watercolours are moving meditations on the choices facing women.



Frances was born in England and had moved to Glasgow with her family by 1890. With her sister, she enrolled as a student at Glasgow School of Art where she met Mackintosh and McNair, and learned a range of artistic and technical skills in the graphic and decorative arts.



The sisters set up an independent studio in the city centre in the mid 1890s. Together they collaborated on metalwork, graphics, textile designs and book illustrations, exhibiting in London, Liverpool and Venice. Following her marriage in 1899 to Herbert McNair, she joined him in Liverpool where he was teaching at the School of Architecture and Applied Art. The couple designed the interiors of their home at 54 Oxford Street and exhibited a Writing Room at the International Exhibition of Modern Art, Turin. Macdonald also started teaching, and developed skills in jewellery, enamelwork and embroidery. The closure of the School in the early 1900s led to a gradual decline in both of their careers, compounded by the loss of the McNair family wealth through business failures. The couple returned to Glasgow around 1909. It was in the following years that Macdonald painted a moving series of symbolist watercolours addressing themes related to marriage and motherhood. She died in Glasgow in 1921.



@темы: Иллюстраторы

Комментарии
28.06.2008 в 15:21

В жизни всегда есть место пофигу...
Какая красота)). Цвета совершенно волшебные. Большушее спасибо за пост :)!
29.06.2008 в 10:34

Ага, очень нежные работы.:)