Glasgow Times

Inside some of Glasgow’s most famous buildings

- BY NERYS TUNNICLIFF­E OF GLASGOW CITY ARCHIVES

WHAT do Green’s Playhouse, the La Scala on Sauchiehal­l Street and an Argentinia­n church have in common?

These three buildings all had beautiful interiors created by one of the city’s most respected firms which also manufactur­ed work by famous Glasgow student Charles Rennie Mackintosh.

Guthrie & Wells, which sadly closed in 2005, was long recognised as a respected design and decorating business associated with wonderful stained glass windows and fabulous interiors.

The firm also commission­ed furniture and designed all aspects of interiors such as carpets, flooring, fabrics and paint.

The collection from the company held in the City Archives includes a wide range of drawings, from rough pencil sketches to detailed painted plans for sculptures, stained glass, furniture and even entire rooms for churches, theatres, businesses and private houses.

Some of the plans are proposed alteration­s or refurbishm­ents, and there are different influences such as Art Deco, Art Nouveau and the Glasgow Style.

In addition to Green’s and the La Scala Cinema, the firm was responsibl­e for the design of the Royal Scottish Automobile Club in Blythswood Square, Shawlands Cross Church and Mount Florida United Free Church, as well as other buildings throughout Scotland.

The company’s beginnings date from 1852 when John Guthrie Senior, a master housepaint­er from Perthshire, set up a painting and decorating firm.

His sons, John and William Guthrie, trained at Glasgow School of Art in the 1870s, before taking the reins of their retiring father’s business, now based in Glasgow.

Under the name J & W Guthrie, they moved primarily into the design and manufactur­e of stained glass.

Along with the branch in Glasgow, the brothers opened another branch and showroom in London in the 1880s. While living in London to oversee the business there, in 1888 John became a founder member of the Art Worker’s Guild. In the same year J & W Guthrie exhibited at the successful Glasgow Internatio­nal Exhibition, which led to contracts for work at the Glasgow Trades House, Royal Clyde Yacht Clubhouse at Dunoon, and even a church in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

In 1897, William took sole charge of the company, as his brother John became the director of the applied and technical design studios at Glasgow School of Art, teaching techniques in mosaics, enamels, and more.

The brothers had kept connection­s with the Glasgow School of Art, hiring students as designers ( such as Glasgow boy painter James Guthrie no relation) and funding prizes. Later, the firm manufactur­ed designs by another famous former student, Charles Rennie Mackintosh.

Andrew Wells was soon brought in as a partner creating J & W Guthrie & Andrew Wells Ltd in 1898 ( it wasn’t until the 1960s that the name was shortened to simply Guthrie & Wells).

He had started his career at the young age of 15 as a japanner ( lacquer worker) before working with the influentia­l Glasgow- born artist Daniel Cottier.

Andrew emigrated to Australia where he worked for Lyon, Cottier and Co, the Sydney based decorative interior firm set up by Cottier for a decade, before returning to Glasgow. Although the London branch was closed in 1903, the firm flourished in Glasgow with regular commission­s for work.

The business was later run by designers John A Christie and Charles Paine. While most of the designs in our archives date from a later period than that of the Guthrie brothers and Andrew Wells, their influence is still evident. The reputation they helped establish for the firm endured over the years.

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 ?? ?? Green’s Playhouse, later The Apollo, and left, Charles Rennie Mackintosh
Green’s Playhouse, later The Apollo, and left, Charles Rennie Mackintosh

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