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A hybrid Clissett armchair (probable)

31/3/2015

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Picture
Last year I posted details of two high chairs, both stamped with Philip Clissett's initials. These two chairs, though very different from one another, were both hybrids of Philip's ladderback and spindleback styles (see posts of 14/8/2014 and 22/11/2014. Their existence should alert us to the possibility of adult-sized chairs displaying similar hybridisation of styles.

Thanks to Steve Smith of the Worcestershire Museum at Hartlebury, and the chair's owner Mr Byron Teague, we now have this example, a spindleback armchair in Philip's four-spindle style, but with the legs, arms and arm supports of his famous ladderback.  To be specific, it has the finials, arm support turnings, wider flatter arms, and plain front feet typical of the ladderback. Like the ladderback, the front mortices of the arms are pinned from the inside.

Unfortunately, the chair is not stamped with Philip's initials, so how can we be certain that he made it? We do need to be very cautious (see below).

The first bit of evidence is the provenance. Nothing on paper, but the chair has descended through the owner's family, and was reputedly bought from Clissett in about 1880. The owner's ancestor is known to have lived very close to Bosbury.

Secondly, thanks to careful examination by Steve, and a stack of photographs taken by him, I can confirm that the chair bears Clissett's typical workshop marks.

It seems reasonable, based on this evidence, to accept this hybrid as almost certainly made by Philip Clissett. This mixing of styles is previously unknown, and we should be alert for other possibilities - such as this next  chair...

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While this chair looks pretty much like Philip's standard four-spindle chair, it does have a hybrid feature. The lower part of the arm support turning is identical to the taper and lower turning of the famous Clissett ladderback. The chair is also unusual in having two slats below the spindles, instead of three dowels. As far as I know, it is unstamped, so it's not possible to attribute it to Clissett without examination (which would still only provide tentative evidence).

Unfortunately, I haven't been able to track this chair down. I know it was sold in late 2008 at Ludlow Antiques Market. (I'm grateful to Brightwells Auctioneers of Leominster for allowing me to use the photograph, and to Stella Oakes for information about its sale.) If anyone knows of the whereabouts of this chair, please let me know.

Attributing unstamped chairs to Philip Clissett is not a very safe business. Recently, I examined a set of side chairs that looked exactly like Philip's more upmarket model. But the workshop scribe marks were made using a different system, and simply did not look like Clissett's work. It's possible, though, that they were still Clissett-family chairs but, without a maker's mark, we have no way of attributing them. I've seen quite a few unmarked chairs that looked like Philip's, and they've never had the right workshop marks. So the safest rule is, if it's not got Philip Clissett's initials (or pretty good provenance) then it could well be by another maker.


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A rare William Cole armchair

3/3/2015

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Many thanks are due to Peter Bradburn for responding to my recent call for chairs by William Cole. Previously, I had never seen an armchair by Cole (Philip Clissett's brother-in-law, and son-in-law to John Warrender). Now, we have a magnificent example (photograph supplied by Peter Bradburn) - stamped with Cole's initials on the top of each back leg.

While the  chair looks exactly, at first glance, like one of Philip Clissett's armchairs, further examination shows a few stylistic and constructional differences. The underarm turning follows a similar general pattern to Clissett's work on spindlebacks, but differs considerably in detail. The mortising of the front arm support into the arm is always blind on Clissett's chairs, but on this example is a through mortice, though pegged in the usual way.

This chair is now on the Relatives' Chairs page, so it can be seen in the context of other William Cole chairs.

If you have a chair stamped WC that might be by William Cole, please get in touch.



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