Family Card - Person Sheet
Family Card - Person Sheet
NameSir Wilfred (Wolfgang) CASS (CASSIRER) 110
Birth11 Nov 1924596
FatherHans CASSIRER (1896-)
Spouses
ChildrenMark
ChildrenNiki
Notes for Sir Wilfred (Wolfgang) CASS (CASSIRER)
Changed name to Cass in the same way as his brother599


For more on Cass see extract of article at http://genealogy.meta-studies.net/ZDocs/Webp/Cass_article.html which notes, inter alia,

“A German Jewish émigré whose family came to England in 1933, Cass is a scion of the distinguished Cassirer family, whose members include the famous art publisher Bruno Cassirer and the philosopher Ernest Cassirer. Recently, Cass was delighted to discover that a great-uncle “way back” had owned a sculpture park in Wilhelmine, in Germany, but his own father was a hard-nosed businessman who ran a paper-works and had “no interest in art whatsoever”. In 1942 Cass enlisted in the Royal Engineers, and after the war worked mostly in electronics, devising circuits for televisions. Later he had a huge success as a management consultant, sorting out companies as diverse as men's clothiers Moss Bros and art suppliers Reeves. Through his involvement with the latter, Cass came to know Henry Moore, who was interested in learning about watercolour, and it was this encounter that stimulated Cass' fascination with artistic creation.” 597


The following is an account of Wolfgang Cassirer - now Wilfred Cass:

To see this story with its related links on the Guardian Unlimited site, go to http://www.guardian.co.uk

Small man, big art, even bigger park
A unique spot for British sculpture has been carved out in Sussex. And this weekend its owner, Wilfred Cass, celebrated his 80th birthday
Maev Kennedy, arts and heritage correspondent

Monday November 15 2004
The Guardian


Wilfred Cass is a small man who loves big art, the bigger the better.

This weekend he celebrated his 80th birthday by mortgaging his home, to add another five acres and a vast indoor sculpture gallery to a unique sculpture park.

"Big hole, isn't it?" he said, rubbing his hands in glee and dancing on the edge of the precipice.

He relishes monumental British sculpture, the kind which costs a fortune to make, move, or buy. At present he has 62 pieces, worth £3.7m, in his front garden.

In the 10 years since he and Jeanette, his wife, created Sculpture at Goodwood, on land carved out of a wooded corner of the Goodwood estate in West Sussex, more than 100 major pieces of sculpture have been commissioned - and mostly sold.

"What he has done is very good for English sculpture," said Sir Anthony Caro, who celebrated his own 80th birthday earlier this year. "He's giving us a place to show, and people a chance to see them, instead of pieces just going straight into store. I get on very well with him: we've met each other's match."

His own Goodwood Steps was the only piece so enormous it had to go by the roadside, outside the gates: the risk of somebody stealing 50 tons of welded steel, 20ft high, was remote.

The artists are an inventory of late 20th century British sculpture, studded with Turner nominees and winners: Langlands and Bell, Turner shortlisted for this year, David Mach, Bill Pye, Tony Cragg (who gets the first one-man exhibition of 12 massive new pieces in the space), Richard Long, Andy Goldsworthy, Rachel Whiteread, and Eduardo Paolozzi.

In most fine art circles the simple question "how much?" will provoke a hiss of distaste and an answer as squirmy as when trying to find out the true price of a fitted kitchen.

Visitors to Sculpture at Goodwood, however, are given a handsheet - with prices. They range from £0.5m for a murderously spectacular mobile by Lynn Chadwick, which the artist only saw as a model before his death last year, down to £4,000 for a cast iron bollard in the shape of a penis, by Sir Antony Gormley.

Everything down to the elaborate gates (Wendy Ramshaw, £40,000) is for sale. Marc Quinn's The Overwhelming World of Desire, a 20ft steel orchid currently looking like a giraffe in a window box outside Tate Britain, has just been sold, for £200,000, to a towering City corporate headquarters.

Cass commissions the pieces, pays for the materials, and, when they are sold, shares the price between the artist and the sculpture trust charity - to make more pieces. "Wilf Cass funds ideas, that's what's brilliant about him," said the Irish sculptor Eilis O'Connell, whose Carapace (stainless steel and cable, 10ft tall, £80,000) cuddled into a hollow below the trees, is one of Cass's favourites. "Unless you get a commission, the sort of stuff I do is so expensive to make that it's really hard to get beyond the idea. I'm never that optimistic that my work will sell, but he is."

Cass came to England as a boy, when his German Jewish family got out just before the war, and spent a lifetime in art materials and formal dress hire. "The business back ground and approach are crucial," said his first curator, Anne Elliot. "It's very unusual in the arts. He's a very creative thinker, but he's very demanding; he thinks fast and he moves fast, and woe betide anyone who can't keep up."

Despite the mortgage, he has bought himself a birthday present: Hugo, a grasshopper-green telescopic forklift truck, which can lift a six ton sculpture or an entire forest tree.

Copyright Guardian Newspapers Limited
Last Modified 24 Dec 2012Created 21 Mar 2024 by Jim Falk