Windsor Armchair thumbnail 1
Not currently on display at the V&A

Windsor Armchair

1760-1770 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Windsor chairs are characterised by having turned legs and back-frames, which are dowelled into a solid wooden seat. Their name probably derives from the town of Windsor in Berkshire, which is situated on the river Thames and was ideally located as a distribution point for chairs made in the Thames Valley region, where many chairs of this type were made. Windsor chairs, however, were also produced in many other areas of Britain during the 18th and 19th centuries. The back and legs of this chair are made of yew, with an elm seat carved in a saddle shape. Better-quality 18th-century Windsor chairs often had cabriole (or S-shaped) front legs, as in this example. The back-splat is carved to resemble the tracery of a Gothic church window.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Yew and elm, carved and turned
Brief description
Windsor chair with Gothic tracery back and cabriole legs
Physical description
Windsor armchair with a back in the form of a pointed arch and three back splats pierced with gothic tracery. The arm-bow is plain and horizontal, and the under-arm supports are curved. The cabriole front legs are connected to the turned back legs with a bowed stretcher and two straight turned stretchers. Pad feet at front. There are four small round holes evenly-spaced on the underside of the seat.
Dimensions
  • Height: 100cm
  • Width: 58.5cm
  • Depth: 51cm
Measurements taken from the object 24/11/2016
Style
Credit line
Bequeathed by Mrs S. I. Woodley in memory of her husband, Colonel Woodley.
Object history
Bequeathed by Mrs S.I. Woodley of Seckford Hall, near Woodbridge in 1940.
The chair had been acquired by her late husband Colonel Woodley from a dealer in Bath.
No earlier provenance is known

It was on loan to Wakefield Museum & Art Gallery from 1956 to 1995
Summary
Windsor chairs are characterised by having turned legs and back-frames, which are dowelled into a solid wooden seat. Their name probably derives from the town of Windsor in Berkshire, which is situated on the river Thames and was ideally located as a distribution point for chairs made in the Thames Valley region, where many chairs of this type were made. Windsor chairs, however, were also produced in many other areas of Britain during the 18th and 19th centuries. The back and legs of this chair are made of yew, with an elm seat carved in a saddle shape. Better-quality 18th-century Windsor chairs often had cabriole (or S-shaped) front legs, as in this example. The back-splat is carved to resemble the tracery of a Gothic church window.
Associated objects
Bibliographic reference
The chair is illustrated in Edwards, Ralph, English Chairs, V&A Museum 1952, Plate 79. A similar is illustrated in Coleridge, Anthony, Chippendale Furniture, 1968 Plate 157. See Dictionary of
Collection
Accession number
W.12-1940

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Record createdDecember 15, 2007
Record URL
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