Glasgow School Essays

  • Glasgow 2014 M1

    1498 Words  | 3 Pages

    “Glasgow 2013 will help achieve a healthier, more vibrant city with its citizens enjoying and realising the benefits of sport and the wider, long term economic, social, cultural and environmental benefits that Glasgow 2014 can help to deliver.” This is the vision of the Glasgow 2014 Commonwealth Games, stated in the Glasgow 2014 Legacy Framework made in 2009. Since Glasgow were awarded the 20th Commonwealth Games in November 2007, to be held in Summer 2014, there has been a massive buzz around the

  • Charles Rennie Mackintosh and Scottish Architecture.

    1087 Words  | 3 Pages

    architecture. I will investigate his influences and how he affected architecture in Scotland over his lifetime. Born on 7th June 1868 in Glasgow, Mackintosh became interested in architecture as a profession from an early age, and, at the age of sixteen secured an apprenticeship with John Hutchison. In order to complete his apprenticeship, he enrolled in the Glasgow School of Art in 1884, where he met Margaret MacDonald, an artist and his future wife. Due to poor health, Mackintosh often spent weekends

  • Charles Rennie Mackintosh

    547 Words  | 2 Pages

    Charles Rennie Mackintosh. Charles Rennie Mackintosh was born in Glasgow on 7 June 1868. He trained as an architect in a local firm and studied art & design at evening classes at the Glasgow School of Art. For 20 years he worked as an architect/designer in Glasgow where all his best known work was created. Much of it is still there today. At art school Mackintosh and his friend and colleague Herbert MacNair met the artist sisters Margaret and Frances Macdonald. These four artists

  • Sir John A. Macdonald

    870 Words  | 2 Pages

    Sir John A. Macdonald Sir John A. Macdonald was born in Glasgow, Scotland, on January 10, 1815. His fathers name was Hugh Macdonald and his mothers name was Helen Shaw. His father had migrated to Glasgow from the town of Dornach. His father was a very pleasant and easy going guy and he alwasys wanted to make everyhting better but he usually made things worst. He was a man that had lots of friends, he would talk a lot and drink too. His mother came from Spey Vally. His mother was a very smart

  • How Soccer Explains the World

    2602 Words  | 6 Pages

    Franklin Foer the author of How Soccer Explains the World: An Unlikely Theory of Globalization is an important contributor of the small topic of the how soccer is related to the world. Foer from the New Republic who writes from time to time in the well known newspaper of the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal had traveled around the world especially the continent of Europe, Asia, North and South America. Going from the topic of why the Islam religion, Islamic law, and religious paramilitary

  • History and Significance of the Glasgow School of Art

    1340 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Glasgow School of Art was built by Charles Rennie Mackintosh from 1897 - 1909 in Glasgow, Scotland.  In 1897, Mackintosh won a competition for the design of the Glasgow Building.  However, it was a difficult piece of land to build on because of the very steep slope.  The front end is located on Renfrew Street while the backside stretched down the steep hill.  The Glasgow School of Art is constructed primarily out of wood, iron, and glass.  Inside, their are studios, a lecture theater, a library

  • Drumchapel Social Factors

    1488 Words  | 3 Pages

    Question: The divided city and public policy responses. Drumchapel is a working-class area located in the most north westerly suburb of Glasgow, known for its vast housing estate which was erected in the 1950s as a solution to overcrowding in Glasgow. With a population of around 13,000 people, most residents are of working age i.e. between 16 and 64 years old with 35.8% of those people claiming benefits. The percentage of ethnic minorities living in Drumchapel is low with 95% of residents being

  • The Life of Charles Rennie Mackintosh

    1136 Words  | 3 Pages

    Re7nnie Mackintosh was born on June 7, 1868. He was born and raised in Glasgow, Scotland. Mackintosh was the son of a police superintendent. Charles was an architect, artist, and designer in Scotland. He designed in the post impressionist movement. Mackintosh was considered to be a huge influence on European architecture in his time. Charles was the fourth child out of eleven children. Later in his life, he went to The Glasgow School of Art and met Margaret MacDonald his future wife. Later they became

  • Catholicism V. Rangers: Catholicism Vs. Protestantism

    2498 Words  | 5 Pages

    Catholicism vs. Protestantism Most European cities can boast of a professional football (soccer) club and a competitive rivalry with a neighboring team. However, Glasgow, Scotland is the home of one of the oldest and most heated rivalries in the world. Two of the most prestigious football clubs in Europe, Celtic and Rangers, both call Glasgow their home. The cross-town rivals first met on the pitch on February 28, 1888. At that point, "none of the 2,000 spectators at the game could have guessed that

  • James Watt

    1237 Words  | 3 Pages

    Watt met his first loss in 1753 when his mother unsuspectedly died. It was at this point that Watt decided to pursue his career and try and qualify himself to become a mathematical instrument maker. After James spoke to Professor Muirhead at the Glasgow University, he was introduced to several scientists who at the time encouraged him later to travel to London to further himself in instrument making. In 1755 he set out on horseback and arrived in London after either twelve days or two weeks. He

  • Women's Prostitution and the Criminal Justice System

    3507 Words  | 8 Pages

    concentrate on the issue of prostitution within the United Kingdom. There has been a marked rise in the incidence of street prostitution since the 1980s and a growth in the proportion of intravenous drug users involved in street prostitution. In Glasgow, police estimate that ar... ... middle of paper ... ...emale population in Cornton Vale Prison is represented by black or ethnic minorities, (HM Inspectorate of Prisons for Scotland 2001). One Area that could use further research was highlighted

  • Glasgow's Urban Problems and Solutions

    606 Words  | 2 Pages

    to produce steel, making Glasgow an ideal place for industry. On top of this, there is a very deep, large river (R. Clyde) running right into the heart of Glasgow and out the other side. This provoked heavy ship industry in the area, as well as train building and bridge construction. (eg. Kingston Bridge, built across the R. Clyde, 1970, and Clyde Tunnel 1963, which linked the two sides of Glasgow.) However, Glasgow soon began to face many problems. Glasgow relied heavily on the World

  • Leading Innovation At Kelvingrove (A), Case Study

    1896 Words  | 4 Pages

    Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum in Glasgow, Scotland; a Victorian era museum established in 1901 to express the pride, wealth, and cultural ambitions of the industrial city of Kelvingrove, was in need of change in the late 1980’s to be more relevant to modern audiences. Starting in 1990, when Mark O’Neil joined the Kelvingore Museum, Mark was tasked with bringing innovation to the entire museum by the then director Julian Spalding. After an initial start by O’Neil into implementing some of Spalding’s

  • Humor and Anger in the Poems of Tom Leonard

    1029 Words  | 3 Pages

    Humor and Anger in the Poems of Tom Leonard John Agard's poem develops a simple idea which is found in a familiar term. Half-caste as a term for mixed race is now rare. The term comes from India, where people are rigidly divided into groups (called castes) which are not allowed to mix, and where the lowest caste is considered untouchable. At the start of the poem John Agard uses the phrase, "Excuse me". He is trying to seem polite so that he can get into the conversation and then get his

  • The Morality of CCTV

    2277 Words  | 5 Pages

    the terrorist. In Glasgow, Scotland CCTV has been experimented with and has produced positive results. In the first year after the installation of the security cameras there were 3,156 fewer crimes and offenses than there were on average in the 2 years prior to the installation of CCTV.2 It should also be noted in this Glasgow study that 67% of those interviewed did not mind being observed by street cameras.2 But now we must question these figures. The same study in Glasgow noted that there was

  • David Livingstone

    615 Words  | 2 Pages

    he got too little pay for what he was doing. When he didn’t work, he would just stay at home to study, and in 1836 he entered Anderson's College in Glasgow. He was mainly interested in theology and medicine. In 1838 the London Missionary Society accepted him as a candidate, and two years later he received a medical degree from the University of Glasgow. The First War between Britain and China ruined his hopes of becoming a medical missionary to China, but the missionary society arranged a new placement

  • What Are The Literary Devices Used By Glasgow Sonnet Poem Analysis

    1159 Words  | 3 Pages

    Glasgow Sonnets Essay - Rachel Watt Glasgow Sonnet by Edwin Morgan is a realistic poem discussing poverty in Glasgow. Set in the mid 20th century in one of Glasgow's most poverty stricken neighbourhoods. A family live in lives in a derelict tenement which is crumbling around them. Morgan shows his empathy and anger at the situation the family are experiencing. Morgan uses personification, metaphors, alliteration, structure, irony, word choice to effectively describe the place which is the Glasgow

  • The Kelvingrove Bandstand And Amphitheatre

    1239 Words  | 3 Pages

    Conservation & Preservation of Historic Buildings BSV 09101 1.0 Introduction The Kelvingrove Bandstand and Amphitheatre is a Catergory B listed bandstand situated in Kelvingrove Park, Glasgow. Part of the Arts & Crafts movement in design style it is a rare example of a covered bandstand which faces an elliptical amphitheatre. It is the only instance of this style which remains in Scotland today. Operational from 1925 until 1999, the building closed due to its continued deterioration, security

  • Dance Studio Creative Writing

    1242 Words  | 3 Pages

    patter of the water droplets hitting the fibreglass roof as I pirouetted across the polished wooden floorboards, where I felt I was instantly home. The dance studio had become as much a sanctuary to me as the confined classrooms at the local high school. Ever since my mother had died and I had been forced to live with my father; I had simply thrown myself, body and soul into my work and my dancing; my sole reasons for life. As I spun around I shut off all feeling except the chill on my neck from

  • Thomas Graham Essay

    619 Words  | 2 Pages

    developed by a chemist by the name of Thomas Graham in the 19th century. December 21, 1805�September 16, 1869. Thomas Graham was born in December of 1805 in Glasgow, Scotland. His father was a workman who desired that his son enter the Church of Scotland. However, Graham became a student at the University of Glasgow in 1819, where he became interested in the field of chemistry. He left the university in 1826 and went off to be a professor of chemistry at several universities, two of