Theodora Salusbury | |
Birth Date: | 1875 5, df=y |
Birth Place: | Leicester, United Kingdom |
Nationality: | British |
Education: | The Slade School of Fine Art (and other art schools); Apprentice to Christopher Whall |
Field: | Stained Glass |
Movement: | Arts and crafts |
Theodora Salusbury (24 May 1875 – 22 September 1956) was an artist and craftswoman in the Arts & Crafts-style. After training with some of the best artists in the field, she worked as a stained glass artist at her studios in Cornwall and London. Salusbury's windows would be leaded up by Lowndes & Drury. Dating mostly from between the two World Wars, the windows were destined for nearly thirty churches in England and Wales, several of them in Leicestershire, Salusbury's home county.
The impact of Salusbury's windows comes through her use of colour and her representation of the figures she portrayed. Most of her work bears her signature, a peacock.