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Cassina Ds3

Recent Sales

DS3 Armchair by Charles Rennie Mackintosh for Cassina
By Cassina, Charles Rennie Mackintosh
Located in Dorchester, MA
Cassina from the mid-1970s through the late 1990s, the geometrically rigorous DS3 armchair chair comprises
Category

20th Century Italian Armchairs

Materials

Mother-of-Pearl, Papercord, Ash

DS1 Table & 4 DS3 Chairs Dining Set by Charles Rennie Mackintosh for Cassina
By Cassina, Charles Rennie Mackintosh
Located in Outremont, QC
DS1 oval drop leaf dining table & 4 ds3 dining chairs by Charles Rennie Mackintosh for Cassina, 70
Category

Vintage 1970s Arts and Crafts Dining Room Sets

Materials

Ash

One Charles Rennie Mackintosh DS3 Arm Chair
By Charles Rennie Mackintosh
Located in Brooklyn, NY
mother of pearl; twisted fiber seat; 1918 design reissued by Cassina in 1975; arm chair is currently out
Category

Late 20th Century Italian Chairs

Materials

Ash, Mother-of-Pearl

One Charles Rennie Mackintosh DS3 Arm Chair
One Charles Rennie Mackintosh DS3 Arm Chair
H 29.5 in W 19.3 in D 17.7 in
Set of Charles Rennie Mackintosh for Cassina DS-2 Table and Candida DS3 Chairs
By Cassina, Charles Rennie Mackintosh
Located in Pasadena, TX
Charles Rennie Mackintosh for Cassina DS2 dining table and DS3 cottage chairs. The DS2 table was
Category

Late 20th Century Italian Arts and Crafts Dining Room Sets

Materials

Ash

Dining Set, Model DS3 by Charles Rennie Mackintosh for Cassina
By Charles Rennie Mackintosh
Located in Chicago, IL
stamped manufacturer's mark to frame of each chair: [Cassina Charles Rennie Mackintosh].
Category

Late 20th Century Italian Dining Room Sets

Materials

Wood, Cane

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Charles Rennie Mackintosh for sale on 1stDibs

At the turn of the 20th century, the Scottish architect Charles Rennie Mackintosh created a singular, wholly original design style that was both lyrical and sleekly modern. Within his architectural schemes for schools, private homes and restaurants, Mackintosh — frequently working in collaboration with his wife, the artist Margaret Macdonald — invented an aesthetic that blends the organic flow of the Art Nouveau style and the honest simplicity of the English Arts & Crafts movement.

Mackintosh was born into a working-class Glasgow family, the fourth of the 11 children of a police clerk and his wife. At age 15, Mackintosh began to take night classes at the Glasgow School of Art — where he would study until 1894 — and the following year started an apprenticeship with local architect John Hutchison.

At the GSA, Mackintosh befriended Macdonald, her sister, Frances, and fellow architecture student Herbert McNair. Together they formed a graphic design team known as the Four, and were admired for their illustrations featuring sinuous botanical forms and sylph-like women. Around the same time, Mackintosh was hired by the architectural firm Honeyman and Keppie. where he drafted the company’s winning design for a new GSA building. The structure, with its brooding, asymmetrical facade punctuated by soaring studio windows, would be his architectural masterwork. By 1900, Mackintosh was designing houses and began the interiors for a group of Glasgow tea parlors in which he and Macdonald would produce some of the most alluring, lushly graphic decors of the era. Mackintosh’s work became widely influential on the continent, particularly among Josef Hoffmann, Koloman Moser and other members of the Vienna Secession movement.

His work on private homes and tearooms generated the furniture designs for which Mackintosh is best known today. These include the Hill House chair, with its latticed back; the Argyle Street Tea Room chair, which features an oval head rail with a cutout that resembles a bird in flight; and several others — all instantly recognizable for their stunning tall backs.

Mackintosh’s furniture works well in both traditional and modern interiors, though by virtue of both its familiarity and striking lines it tends to stand out. Because he was much more esteemed in Europe than in Britain, relatively few antique Mackintosh works survive, and those that have are museum pieces. Recently produced examples of his designs are widely available — notably, the Italian firm Cassina has been making fine Mackintosh pieces since the early 1970s. As you will see on 1stDibs, the furniture of Charles Rennie Mackintosh is ever intriguing and engaging. His work is a historical touchstone that would be welcome in the home of any modern design aficionado.