Important Americana: The Charles and Olenka Santore Collection

Important Americana: The Charles and Olenka Santore Collection

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 252. Very Rare Child's Black-Painted Sack-Back Windsor Armchair, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Circa 1770.

Very Rare Child's Black-Painted Sack-Back Windsor Armchair, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Circa 1770

No reserve

Auction Closed

January 20, 12:37 AM GMT

Estimate

5,000 - 8,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

Very Rare Child's Black-Painted Sack-Back Windsor Armchair

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Circa 1770


Retains a nineteenth century black paint over the original green paint. The underside of the chair inscribed in 1920 of P.B. Steadmans of California. Partial loss of handholds on each arm. 

Height 27¾ in. by Width 16⅝ in. by Depth 12 in.

Charles Santore, The Windsor Style in America: A Pictorial Study of the History and Regional Characteristics of the Most Popular Furniture Form of Eighteenth-Century America, 1730-1830, (Philadelphia, PA: Running Press, 1981), p. 163, no. 205.
"It has remarkably fine proportions. In addition, it is quite rare to find a Philadelphia sack-back of any size with the early cylindrical leg and ball foot. Notice the cylindrical turning of the arm supports just below the arm. Highchairs are sometimes found with this style of arm support: a hole is drilled through each cylinder, and, once the child is seated, a wooden rod would be inserted through the holes to prevent the child from falling (or climbing!) out of the chair. The arm supports of could easily have been used on a highchair, but as this is not a highchair, no holes have been drilled." - Charles Santore, 1981