Philip Clissett (born 8 January 1817, Birtsmorton, Worcestershire, England; died 17 January 1913, Bosbury, Herefordshire) was a Victorian era country chairmaker who influenced and inspired the English Arts and Crafts Movement through various architects and designers. His chance meeting with James MacLaren has been described as "undoubtedly a seminal point in the subsequent development of the Arts and Crafts Movement",
The following is a list of more or less well-known people who are known to have had Clissett's ladderback chairs amongst the furnishings in their home: Dugald S. MacColl, Sidney Barnsley, Ernest Barnsley, Geoffrey Lupton, Norman Jewson, George Frampton, Emery Walker, Edward Burne-Jones, Philip Burne-Jones, Raymond Unwin, Wilson Bidwell (architect of Letchworth Town Hall, Cecil Hignett (probable; architect of the Spirella Building, Letchworth), Charles Canning Winmill (probable).
By the late 1890s, Clissett was well-known enough for his portrait, by Maxwell Balfour, to appear in a prestigious arts journal, The Quarto.
Clissett made chairs in the West Midlands tradition, turning the parts from fresh, unseasoned ash ( Fraxinus excelsior) with a pole lathe. Other parts were sawn and shaped with a drawknife while held in a shave horse. Seats were generally made from an elm board, or from woven rush. While rush-seated ladderback chairs are his most well-known output, he also made spindleback chairs which are often stamped with his initials. Clissett is often referred to as a bodger but this is incorrect as he made entire chairs rather than just turned parts.
Clissett's chairs are now widely collected, and can be found in various museums and collections, including:
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