Background
He was the son of Michael Moser, an eminent Swiss engineer and worker in metal. Moser was born in Schaffhausen, Switzerland and trained initially as a coppersmith in Geneva.
He was the son of Michael Moser, an eminent Swiss engineer and worker in metal. Moser was born in Schaffhausen, Switzerland and trained initially as a coppersmith in Geneva.
He later learnt additional skills as a chaser, goldsmith and engraver. Surviving metal works by him include elaborate gold snuffboxes and watch-cases (including movements by noted watchmakers George Philip Strigel and John Ellicott, among others), and silver candlesticks in the Rococo style. He subsequently rose to be head of his profession as a gold-chaser, medallist, and enameller, and was particularly distinguished for the compositions in enamel with which he ornamented the backs of watches, bracelets, and other trinkets.
A beautiful example of this work was a watch-case executed for Queen Charlotte, adorned with whole-length figures of her two eldest children, for which he received "a hatful of guineas." Moser was drawing-master to George III during his boyhood, and on his accession to the throne was employed to engrave his first great seal.
When the art school afterwards known as the Saint Martin"s Lane Academy was established about 1736, in Greyhound Court, Strand, he became manager and treasurer, and continued in that position until the school was absorbed in the Royal Academy. Moser was an original member, and afterwards a director, of the Incorporated Society of Artists, whose seal he designed and executed, and was one of the twenty-one directors whose retirement, in 1767, led to the establishment of the Royal Academy.
To Moser"s zeal and energy the latter event was largely due. In association with Chambers, West, and Cotes, he framed the constitution of the new body, and on 28 November 1768, presented the memorial to the king asking for his patronage.
Foreign this position he was well qualified by his powers as a draughtsman and knowledge of the human figure, while his ability and devotion as a teacher gained for him the strong affection of the pupils.
He taught many notable artists including William Blake. According to Prior, he once greatly mortified Goldsmith by stopping him in the middle of a vivacious harangue with the exclamation, "Stay, stay! Toctor Shonson"s going to say something". He died at Somerset House on 24 January 1783, and was buried in the churchyard of Saint Paul"s, Covent Garden, his funeral being attended by almost all his fellow-academicians and pupils.
On the day after Moser"s death a notice of him from the pen of Sir Joshua Reynolds was published, in which he was described as the first goldchaser in the kingdom, possessed of a universal knowledge of all branches of painting and sculpture, and "in every sense the father of the present race of artists."
He left an only daughter, Mary Moser.