William Tassie

William Tassie (1777 26 October 1860) was a British gem engraver and cameo modeller of Scottish descent, who worked in London in the early 19th century. He took over the business of his uncle, James Tassie, after James's death in 1799.

William Tassie depicted in about 1833 in an image reduced from a wax medallion, probably by Jacob Hagbolt

On 28 January 1805, Tassie won the Boydell Shakespeare Gallery and its painting collection in a lottery held to pay off the debts of its owner, John Boydell. Tassie's three-guinea ticket won the top prize among the 22,000 sold. Boydell had died just before the drawing. His nephew Josiah Boydell offered to buy the gallery and its paintings back from Tassie for £10,000, but Tassie refused and auctioned the paintings at Christie's.[1] The painting collection and two reliefs by Anne Damer fetched a total of £6,181 18s. 6d.

Tassie died in 1860 and is buried in Brompton Cemetery, London.

References

  1. Friedman, 4, 87–90; Merchant, 70–75.

Bibliography

  • Friedman, Winifred H. Boydell's Shakespeare Gallery. New York: Garland Publishing Inc., 1976. ISBN 0-8240-1987-3.
  • Gray, John Miller. James and William Tassie: A Biographical and Critical Sketch, with a Catalog of Their Portraits. Edinburgh: Walter Greenoak Patterson, 1894.
  • Merchant, W. Moelwyn. Shakespeare and the Artist. London: Oxford University Press, 1959.
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