Chair thumbnail 1
Chair thumbnail 2
+2
images
Not currently on display at the V&A

Chair

ca. 1705-1715 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

In the late 17th century caned chairs became extremely popular not only among the aristocracy and gentry, but also among merchants and tradesmen, as they were much cheaper than upholstered chairs. From the 1680s onwards enormous quantities were made in London, for export as well as for home consumption. But relatively few now survive. Most were probably discarded rather than repaired as soon as the frames or caning were damaged.

This chair, which has been repaired, was made with more care than most, for the back uprights are formed from wood with a natural bend at the angle between the back legs and the chair-back. Exceptionally, its early history is known, for a label on the companion chair (Museum no. W.57-1952) records that they were bought at a sale of the 2nd Viscount Windsor's household furniture in Newcastle. So the chairs may have been made for his father the 1st Viscount Windsor (died 1738), probably after his marriage in 1703.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Carved, moulded and turned walnut, joined by mortise-and-tenon joints, partly pegged; with caned back and seat
Brief description
Chair, turned and carved walnut, with caned seat and back; England (probably London), ca. 1705-1715
Physical description
Design
A tall, slender chair of carved, moulded and turned walnut, with caned back and seat. The high, raked back has a moulded, arched cresting, carved and pierced with an interlaced foliate band around the top and scrolling foliage at each end, and with interlaced C-scrolls - possibly a cypher - under the arch. This composition is echoed in the arched front stretcher that spans the out-turned front legs, but with flowerheads in place of the scrolling foliage, with spiral scrolls under the top of the arch, and with no interlaced C-scrolls (though there may originally have been some feature below the spiral scrolls, now missing). Beneath the top cresting the moulded frame to the caned back has a double-arched top rail and a bottom rail of similar double-arched form. This rail is raised high above the flat, slightly canted seat, with moulded edges. The front legs, turned out at 45 degrees to the frame, each comprise a short turned section immediately beneath the seat, a convex 'knee' at the junction with the front stretcher, and a stretched C-scroll below this, raised on a small round (but perhaps not turned) foot. The back legs, partly turned, are steeply raked, with a further kick-back at the bottom - to counteract the weight of a person leaning against the raked back. They are joined to each other and to the front legs by turned stretchers (the back stretcher higher than the side stretchers). The side stretchers are spanned, near the front, by a carved and pierced cross-stretcher, with a turned finial supported on a central platform; the pierced mouldings that flank this platform echo in their horizontal form the upright arches in the back.

The large gap between the seat and the bottom rail of the back suggests that this chair was intended to be used with a cushion.

Construction
The chair is made of walnut throughout, with mortise-and-tenon joints, some of them pegged. Unusually, the back uprights appear to have been taken deliberately from wood that bent in its growth, so that the grain is almost straight in both the raked chair-back and the inversely raked back legs. While this avoids the weakness of using wood with the grain running at an angle to the member, the branch itself was probably not very strong if it grew bent.

The back-frame is made with the back stretcher, back seat rail and bottom rail of the chair-back all tenoned to the back uprights - with bare-faced tenons on the chair-back rail, fully cut tenons on the two lower parts, which are both(?) pegged (the stretcher's pegs are visible; at the seat rail the evidence is concealed by a repair). The uprights are then tenoned (without pegs) to the top rail. The side seat rails are tenoned and pegged to the back uprights, and tenoned (without pegs) to the front seat rail. The front legs, to which the front stretcher is joined by bare-faced tenons, are then tenoned to the front seat rail (intersecting the side-rail tenons). The carved cross-stretcher, with the turned finial dowelled into it, is joined by bare-faced tenons to the turned side stretchers, which are tenoned and through-pegged to the front legs and the back uprights.

Caning
The back and seat are both caned in a conventional six-way pattern, in both cases replaced. Originally, the seat must have been caned with the chair assembled, since the back and side seat rails are separately joined to the back uprights. The back, however, could have been caned before it was joined to the seat, stretchers and front legs (with just the framing rails of the back, the back seat rail and the back stretcher in place).

Makers' marks
The stamp 'IK', impressed on the three elements with most carving (the front stretcher and the top and bottom rails of the chair-back), is probably the mark of the carver. The second stamp, ‘PI’, which appears twice on the back of the top rail, could be the mark of the caner.

Condition
The frame has been coated in a stained varnish (possibly oil-based). On some parts the varnish appears to have been rubbed down, leaving a polished and generally paler surface. This could have been done at the same time as the varnishing or in a later campaign.

Both back uprights have been reinforced with modern steel straps (ca. 15 x 3.5 cm), screwed to their back face behind the seat (from the bottom of the square section up to ca. 2.5 cm below the bottom of the chair-back). Curiously, there is no visible damage in the uprights at this point, but they may have begun to show signs of weakness, caused by the natural bend in the wood out of which they are made.

On the front stretcher the left and right inside edges of the arch show signs of disturbance - saw cuts (whereas the original shape is chiselled) and new black stain on an unpolished surface - which may indicate that a feature originally in place here has been removed (perhaps after being damaged). Similar evidence appears on the companion chair, W.57-1952. Whether the missing feature replicated the entwined C-scrolls in the top rail is uncertain, since the composition of the two elements is not identical.

The back seat rail is a replacement, and so, probably is the cross-stretcher (between the two side stretchers). So the whole frame must have been dismantled and re-joined.
Dimensions
  • Height: 141cm
  • Maximum, at front feet width: 48cm
  • At front of seat width: 44.8cm
  • Maximum, at feet depth: 55cm
  • Of seat depth: 37.5cm
  • Height: 47.5cm (to top of seat front seat rail)
Measured 5 December 2006
Marks and inscriptions
  • IK (Stamped three times, on back face of top and bottom rails of chair-back, and on back face of front stretcher (i.e. on three elements that are carved, not just turned or moulded))
  • PI (Stamped twice on back face of top rail of chair-back)
Credit line
Bequeathed by Dr C. J. N. Longridge
Object history
Possibly made for Thomas, 1st Viscount Windsor (c. 1670-1738); probably his son Herbert, 2nd Viscount Windsor (d. 1758); George Forster of Barcus Close, County Durham; Thomas Rippon[?]. Then untraced until bequeathed to the V&A by Dr C. J. N. Longridge, 1952.

A matching, but broader, armchair, probably made as part of the same set, was formerly in the collection of Frank Green, and was published in a two-part article about his collection in 1922 ('Treasurer's House – I. York: the residence of Mr. Frank Green', Country Life, 29 July 1922, pp. 114–21 (p. 120, fig. 10)). This is no longer in the collection of the Treasurer's House in York.

Notes from R.P. 52/3059

20 October 1952 Gift form
lists as "2 chairs… walnut cane backs and seats…English late 17th Century….W.57 and A"

15/9/52 letter Mrs Longridge to V & A
offers as a gift two chairs which belonged to her deceased husband's family "for many years". She notes that the "backs of both are in the original cane, and the seat of one, but the back of one… is a little damaged".

27/10/52 letter Edwards to Mrs Longridge
accepts "the two fine late Stuart chairs".

23/1/53 letter Mrs Longridge
explains that her husband was a descendant of Michael Longridge of Newburn-upon-Tyne, in the reign of Charles II. She thinks that the chairs belonged to the Hawks family, and came into the Longridge family through her late husband's paternal grandmother, Mrs James Atkinson Longridge, who was a descendant of William Hawks of Gateshead-on-Tyne.

Much correspondence on file with Newcastle-Upon-Tyne and Durham City libraries attempting to establish the identity of Lord Windsor and the location of Barcus Close.

An unsigned, undated typed report concludes that "Lord Windsor" is the 2nd Viscount Windsor, Herbert Windsor, who married Alice Clavering in 1735. Both were connected to a long forgotten, now defunct "Barcus Close" Colliery. The house from which the chairs came has not been identified. It is speculated that the date of acquisition on the chair label (1785) might be a mistake for 1758, which was the date of the 2nd Viscount Windsor's death, "and the sale of his effects at Newcastle-Upon-Tyne is not unlikely?"

The report concludes: "though there is no actual evidence, the style of the chair is consistent with the view that it may have been acquired by the 1st Viscount Windsor about 1699, when he was raised to the peerage, or at his marriage in 1703". Stylistically, the chairs date from slightly later than 1703.
Summary
In the late 17th century caned chairs became extremely popular not only among the aristocracy and gentry, but also among merchants and tradesmen, as they were much cheaper than upholstered chairs. From the 1680s onwards enormous quantities were made in London, for export as well as for home consumption. But relatively few now survive. Most were probably discarded rather than repaired as soon as the frames or caning were damaged.

This chair, which has been repaired, was made with more care than most, for the back uprights are formed from wood with a natural bend at the angle between the back legs and the chair-back. Exceptionally, its early history is known, for a label on the companion chair (Museum no. W.57-1952) records that they were bought at a sale of the 2nd Viscount Windsor's household furniture in Newcastle. So the chairs may have been made for his father the 1st Viscount Windsor (died 1738), probably after his marriage in 1703.
Associated object
W.57-1952 (Set)
Bibliographic reference
Lucy Wood, 'The international "English chair", in Michael Snodin and Nigel Llewellin (ed.), Baroque 1620--1800: Style in the Age of Magnificence, exh. cat., Victoria and Albert Museum (V&A Publishing, 2009), pp. 118--19, pl. 2.57; and p. 329, cat. no. 9
Collection
Accession number
W.57A-1952

About this object record

Explore the Collections contains over a million catalogue records, and over half a million images. It is a working database that includes information compiled over the life of the museum. Some of our records may contain offensive and discriminatory language, or reflect outdated ideas, practice and analysis. We are committed to addressing these issues, and to review and update our records accordingly.

You can write to us to suggest improvements to the record.

Suggest feedback

Record createdSeptember 1, 2006
Record URL
Download as: JSONIIIF Manifest