
Catalogue
- Year
- 1901
- Medium
- Oak
- Dimensions
- 27 1/4 x 20 7/8" (69.2 x 53 cm)
- Collection
- Museum of Modern Art
Artist

Mackay Hugh Baillie Scott was a British architect and designer whose ornamental interiors and furniture designs epitomized the Arts and Crafts movement of the early twentieth century. Working primarily in domestic architecture, he rejected industrial standardization in favor of hand-crafted decoration, bespoke joinery, and integrated mural schemes that extended design across walls, ceilings, and furnishings as a unified whole. His aesthetic combined medieval revivalism with attenuated Art Nouveau forms, establishing a distinctive house style that influenced British and Continental design practice. Active from the 1890s until his death in 1945, he remains a significant figure in the transition from Victorian ornament to modernist restraint.
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More by Mackay Hugh Baillie Scott
Armchair designed for the Dresden Werkstätten Exhibition
1903 · Ebony veneer, inlaid pewter, ivory and mother of pearl
Side Table
1901 · Oak
Manxman Piano
1897 · Oak, ebony, ivory, mother-of-pearl, and copper
Work Cabinet
1895 · Mahogany, holly, pewter, bone, ebony, and mother-of-pearl; wrought iron and glass handles
Record
Verified by WattsOSSource
- Collection
- Museum of Modern Art
- Source
- moma
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified



