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Henry Sass

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Henry Sass
Henry Sass[1]
Born1788
London
Died1844
EducationRoyal Academy
Occupationeducator
Known forfounding a school for artists

Henry Sass (24 April 1788 – 1844) was an English artist and teacher of painting, who founded an important art school, Sass's Academy (later "Cary's Academy"), in London, to provide training for those seeking to enter the Royal Academy. Many distinguished British painters received their early training here.[2] Sass was said to have had an enthusiasm for teaching art and Sir David Wilkie said he could have "taught a stone to draw".[3]

Life and work

Sass was born in London. His father who was also an artist belonged to an old Courland family from what is now Latvia. Sass's father and mother settled in London after their marriage and Henry's elder half-brother Richard Sass became a landscape painter and taught drawing to royalty.

Sass became a student at the Royal Academy and practised his art by copying paintings held at the British Institution. His early work which was exhibited in 1807 and 1808 at the Royal Academy included, "The Descent of Ulysses into Hell" which Sass also executed as an etching. However his later work was portraiture . In 1815 he married well to Mary, and her family, who were related to the Earls of Ripon. In 1815 he travelled to Italy and returned two years later.[2]

Despite publishing a book about his Italian trip[4] he was not making a living from his painting.

Sass decided to open the first school of drawing for artists who were intending to study at the Royal Academy' school. Sass established it in a house at No. 6 Charlotte Street, at the corner with Streatham Street, in Bloomsbury, London. Sass's pupils included Sir John Millais P.R.A., Charles West Cope K.A., William Powell Frith R.A., William Edward Frost R.A.[5] Sir Thomas Lawrence the President of the Royal Academy was amongst the school's supporters. Sass was said to have had an enthusiasm for teaching art and Sir David Wilie said he could have taught a "stone to draw".[3]

Sass's Academy is described in the novel "The Newcomes" as Thackeray was also a student at the school. Although the acadmy is only used as a basis and does not describe Sass or his school in particular.[6]

Sass was now well off and he and Mary entertained of the intelligensia included his own musical skills. Among his freinds were Sir Edwin Landseer, William Etty, and particularly J. M. W. Turner. Two years before his death Sass passed the directorship of the school to Francis Stephen Cary due to his failing mental health.[3] Sass died in 1844 have had nine children including their eldest surviving son, Henry William Sass who was an architect and Edwin Etty Sass who entered the medical profession.

References

  1. ^ Portraits of Henry sass (National Portrait gallery)
  2. ^ a b Lee, Sidney (Ed). Dictionary of national biography , volume 50 (1897), Sass, Henry, pp. 310-1.
  3. ^ a b c London higher: the establishment of higher education in London, Roderick Floud, p.282, 1998, accessed 15 August 2010
  4. ^ Henry Sass. A journey to Rome and Naples, performed in 1817 (London: Longman, Hurst, Reese, Orme & Brown, 1818)
  5. ^ P.R.A. = President of the Royal Academy; R.A. = Royal Academician.
  6. ^ Rowland McMaster. Thackeray's cultural frame of reference: allusion in The Newcomes (McGill-Queen's University Press, 1991) pp. 91-2.

Further reading

  • William Powell Frith. [My autobiography and reminiscences, volume 1] (New York: Harper & brothers, 1888), chapter 4 - "The School of Art".