View from one of the Bell Towers, Temple Expliatori de la Sagrada Família

Scope and Content

This item was lost in the fire in The Mackintosh Building at The Glasgow School of Art on 23rd May 2014.

Administrative / Biographical History

Michael Thomas Jones, from Cumbernauld, was a visiting professor at The Glasgow School of Art. He is based and works in London.
The suite of photographs featuring Barcelona in our collection comes from a photo essay called "Modernista":
"Modernista is a photographic essay by Michael Thomas Jones, a graduate of The Glasgow School of Art. It is an exhibition that seeks to contextualise the late 19th century buildings of Gaudi and his fellow ‘modernista’ architects as being more than just bricks and mortar. Gaudi’s work, in particular, has been the subject of extensive photographic surveys in the past but almost all have sought to emphasise the defined architectural merit of his work. By contrast, Michael Jones has viewed some of Barcelona’s most significant architectural works in terms of ‘people and place’, looking beyond the well-established ‘coffee-table monographs’ and ‘picture postcard views’. He has engaged some of the unsung individuals who work or live within these architectural landmarks. Additionally, he has captured the way in which many of these building’s now sit somewhat incongruously with their near neighbours, as the city has grown and developed; whilst others have been adapted and modified to meet the changing landscape of the city and the needs of society today." (Peter Trowles, Mackintosh Curator, The Glasgow School of Art)

Acquisition Information

Gift of Architecture Design Scotland (formerly The Lighthouse).

Note

Michael Thomas Jones, from Cumbernauld, was a visiting professor at The Glasgow School of Art. He is based and works in London.
The suite of photographs featuring Barcelona in our collection comes from a photo essay called "Modernista":
"Modernista is a photographic essay by Michael Thomas Jones, a graduate of The Glasgow School of Art. It is an exhibition that seeks to contextualise the late 19th century buildings of Gaudi and his fellow ‘modernista’ architects as being more than just bricks and mortar. Gaudi’s work, in particular, has been the subject of extensive photographic surveys in the past but almost all have sought to emphasise the defined architectural merit of his work. By contrast, Michael Jones has viewed some of Barcelona’s most significant architectural works in terms of ‘people and place’, looking beyond the well-established ‘coffee-table monographs’ and ‘picture postcard views’. He has engaged some of the unsung individuals who work or live within these architectural landmarks. Additionally, he has captured the way in which many of these building’s now sit somewhat incongruously with their near neighbours, as the city has grown and developed; whilst others have been adapted and modified to meet the changing landscape of the city and the needs of society today." (Peter Trowles, Mackintosh Curator, The Glasgow School of Art)

Physical Characteristics and/or Technical Requirements

Dimensions: 890 x 1070 mm

Additional Information

Published

Geographical Names