Culture minister
praises firefighters for quick response, although 'iconic and unique' library
is destroyed
Kevin McKenna and Tess Reidy
The Observer, Saturday 24 May 2014 / http://www.theguardian.com/education/2014/may/25/glasgow-school-art-fire-restore
What could not be saved, however, was the school's "iconic and unique" library. Broadcaster Muriel Gray, the art school's chairwoman, last night said the destruction of the Mackintosh library was "an enormous blow and we are understandably devastated".
The people of Glasgow and the wider arts community can
breathe easy again: the city's celebrated and revered Charles Rennie Mackintosh
building, home of the Glasgow School of Art, has been saved. As flames engulfed
the building throughout Friday afternoon there were genuine fears that much of
the structure, completed in 1909, had been destroyed, together with much of its
contents.
On Saturday afternoon, Professor Tom
Inns , director of the
school of art, said he was in a much happier frame of mind than he had been the
previous evening: "This morning we are much more optimistic that the
building can be saved. The fire and rescue services have told us that 90% of
the building remains viable and that a lot of the students' work and contents
have been saved."
What could not be saved, however, was the
school's "iconic and unique" library. Broadcaster Muriel Gray, the
art school's chairwoman, last night said the destruction of the Mackintosh
library was "an enormous blow and we are understandably devastated".
Both Inns and Fiona Hyslop, Scotland 's
culture minister, paid tribute to firefighters. "They were on the scene
within four minutes," said Inns. "If it hadn't been for their efforts
and expertise, we would have lost the building."
Hyslop said: "Scotland 's fire
and rescue services have saved the building because they made heroic and brave
early decisions when they got there."
On Friday afternoon, the busy streets below
the art school had come to a standstill as workers and shoppers watched the
conflagration in some distress. Most believed they were witnessing the demise
of their beloved "Mac" building as flames and thick black smoke
enveloped it.
The essence of Glasgow is on display in this, Mackintosh's
masterpiece. It sits atop the highest of the hills that help define the city
centre and each day it beckons its citizens to pop up and say hello. You simply
could not pass this building without feeling the urge to wander in. It was
little wonder that Glaswegians wept on the streets below as the building that
encases their spirit burned before them.
Niamh Anderson, a fourth-year architecture
student from Derry in Northern
Ireland , ventured out on Saturday morning to
make her own assessment of the damage. Her relief was palpable. "It's
become part of my life and now part of my identity," she said. "I
cried all day when I saw it burn. The Mackintosh building is the reason I am
here. I was considering several cities in which to study but as soon as I saw
the light streaming down that big wooden staircase I was captured."
Alison Watt, one of the UK 's finest
painters and the youngest artist to be offered a solo exhibition at the
Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, studied at the school. She also spoke
of her distress at witnessing the fire: "I realised that even 25 years
after leaving Glasgow School of Art, the building and the idea of it continues
to have a significant place in my heart.
The elation that greeted the optimistic
prognosis for the building may yet be tempered, when an assessment is completed
of damage to the Mackintosh library, which is in the west wing, where the blaze
took hold. It is described as the masterpiece within the masterpiece and houses
thousands of rare manuscripts and first editions. However, Inns was bullish
about its prospects, no matter what damage it may have sustained. "We have
huge ambitions for that," he said.
Early speculation about a water sprinkler
system either not working or yet to be installed was brushed away by a
spokesman for the school, who said: "There has never been a sprinkler
system here because of the risk of water damage to fragile artefacts if it were
activated in error."
John McAslan, the architect who restored
Mackintosh's last major commission, at 78 Derngate in Northampton , said: "To do this properly
will probably take three to five years. Fire damage requires stabilising and
that's a painful process. This is a piece of forensic repair that needs to be
done beautifully."
The extent to which the building and its
contents and interior design can be fully restored may be determined by a 3D
digital map of the school, which will be crucial in the restoration work.
Yet in the final analysis, it is the
intangible elements of this special building that will determine what has been
lost and what can truly be recovered. Only those who have worked there and who
work there still can be the judges of that when they step through those big
black doors and into the light streaming down from wooden stairs.
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