Hunterian Museum Housed in large halls in
George Gilbert Scott's University buildings on Gilmorehill, the museum features extensive displays relating to William Hunter and his collections,
Roman Scotland (especially the
Antonine Wall), geology, ethnography, ancient Egypt, scientific instruments, coins and medals, and much more. The museum contains many donated collections, such as the Begg Collection of fossils donated by
James Livingstone Begg in the 1940s. The museum contains a high number of scientific instruments owned by or created by
Lord Kelvin and other 19th century instrument makers. In September 2016, the new Hunterian Collections and Study Centre, embracing the full range and activities of the museum and the art gallery, opened in the transformed
Kelvin Hall in Phase 1 of a partnership with
Glasgow City Council Glasgow Life and the
National Library of Scotland. , the Hunterian Museum, Glasgow University.
Zoology Museum Most of the
zoology collections, including those of William Hunter, are displayed in a separate museum within the Graham Kerr building, which also houses most of the university's zoological research and teaching. This is also open to the general public. The
insect collections are particularly important and extensive, and have been the subject of exhibitions of note in the 2010s.
Hunterian Art Gallery of Professor of Divinity
Robert Findlay (1721–1814). Hunterian Art Gallery. The Gallery is now housed in a modern, custom-built facility that is part of the extensive
Glasgow University Library complex, designed by
William Whitfield. This displays the university's extensive art collection, and features an outdoor sculpture garden. The
bas relief aluminium doors to the Hunterian Gallery were designed by sculptor
Eduardo Paolozzi. The gallery's collection includes a large number of the works of
James McNeill Whistler and the majority of the watercolours of
Charles Rennie Mackintosh. The Hunterian Art Gallery reopened in September 2012 after a refurbishment, with an exhibition dedicated to
Rembrandt,
Rembrandt and the Passion. The gallery has held three major Mackintosh exhibitions:
Architecture (2014),
Travel Sketches (2015) and
Unbuilt (2018), as well as two based on their Whistler collection
Watercolours (2013) and
Art and Legacy (2021).
The Mackintosh House The Mackintosh House is a modern concrete building, part of the gallery-library complex. It stands on the site of one of two rows of terraced houses which were once sections of Hillhead Street and Southpark Avenue, demolished in the 1960s to make room for the university's expansion across the residential crown of Gilmorehill. One of the buildings lost, 78 Southpark Avenue, was (between 1906 and 1914) the home of Glasgow
architect Charles Rennie Mackintosh (although Mackintosh himself did not design it) and his wife, the artist,
Margaret Macdonald Mackintosh. The university rebuilt the form of the house (using modern materials) approximately 100 metres from the site of the original. Due to its displacement, the former front door is now located in the façade of the gallery, some distance above the ground over Hillhead Street.
The Mackintosh House comprises the principal interiors of the original house (including the dining room, studio-drawing room and bedroom), largely replicating the room layout of the old end-of-terrace building. It features the meticulously reassembled interiors from the Mackintoshes' home, including items of original furniture, fitments and decorations. The exhibits strikingly demonstrate Charles Rennie Mackintosh's concept of the room as a work of art. ==Other Hunterian museums==