Henry Hottinger Collection
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Hottinger Collection - formed in New York by Henry Hottinger (b New York, 4 Feb 1885 - d. Stamford, CT, 19 March 1979).
Henry Hottinger was a founder and member of Wertheim & Co., a firm of Investment Bankers, who was also very much interested in Musical Instruments and subsequently he amassed the best-known collection of rare violins of the mid-20th century.
"He had an early interest in the violin, and bought his first Stradivari in 1935. His ambition after the war was to acquire one outstanding example of each of the old Cremonese masters, and in the case of Stradivari and Guarneri ‘del Gesù’, one example from each significant period of their production. An illustrated catalogue (R. Wurlitzer: The Henry Hottinger Collection, 1967)[1] was published following the collection's sale to Rembert Wurlitzer, Inc. (the most highly regarded string instrument dealership of its day). The instruments (about 30 violins in all) were subsequently dispersed all over the world." - CHARLES BEARE [2][3]
[edit] Quotes
"...... One of the great violin collectors of all time." - Cozio.com[4]
[edit] References
- Cozio.com
- The Henry Hottinger Collection - Rembert Wurlitzer, 1967
- "The Henry Hottinger Collection", The Strad, October, 1965.
- Capolavori di Antonio Stradivari, Charles Beare, Arnoldo Mondadori S.p.A., Milan, 1987.
- A Thousand Mornings of Music, Arnold Gingrich, Crown Publishers, New York, 1970.
- Antonius Stradivarius, Dirk J. Balfoort, The Continental Book Company, Stockholm, 1945.
- Berühmte Geigen und ihre Schicksale, P. J. Tonger, Köln, 1919.
- Die Geigen und Lautenmacher vom Mitteralter bis zur Gegenwart, Willibald Leo von Lütgendorff, Frankfurter Verlags-Anstalt, Frankfurt am Main, 1922.
- Italian Violin Makers, Karel Jalovec, Paul Hamlyn, London, 1964.
- Italian Violin-Makers, Karel Jalovec, Orbis, Prague, 1952.
- Italienische Geigenbauer (1957), Karel Jalovec, Artia, Prague, 1957.
- Loan Exhibition of Stringed Instruments and Bows Commemorating the 70th Birthday of Simone Fernando Sacconi, Schuler Verlagsgesellschaft, Stuttgart, 1966.
- Meisterwerke Italienischer Geigenbaukunst, Fridolin Hamma, Hamma & Co., 1932.
- The 'Secrets' of Stradivari, Simone F. Sacconi, Eric Blot Edizioni, Cremona, 2000.
- The Violin: Its physical and acoustic principles, Paolo Peterlongo, Paul Elek, London, 1979.
- Violin Iconography of Antonio Stradivari 1644-1737, Herbert K. Goodkind, Larchmont, New York, 1972.
- "Eighteenth-Centruy Connections Through Musical Instruments", Gary Sturm, Journal of The Violin Society of America, Vol. IX, No. 2, 1988.
- How Many Strads?, Ernest N. Doring, 1945.
- "Exhibition of Violins and Bows in the Smithsonian Collection", Gary Sturm, Journal of The Violin Society of America, Vol. V, No. 2, Spring, 1979.
- "Guided Tour of the Library of Congress Collection of Stringed Instruments", Robert Bein, Journal of The Violin Society of America, Volume XVII, No. 2, November 4-7, 1999.
- La Casa Nuziale: The Home of Antonio Stradivari, 1667-1680, Arnaldo Baruzzi, W. E. Hill & Sons, London, 1962.
- "Ne Plus Ultra", John Dilworth, The Strad, December, 1987.
- 36 Famous Italian Violins, Alex Wasinski, Herman Gordon, New York, 1975.
- Capolavori di Antonio Stradivari, Charles Beare, Arnoldo Mondadori S.p.A., Milan, 1987.
- Evelyn & Herbert Axelrod Stringed Instrument Collection, Herbert Axelrod, 2002.
- "Poster supplement", The Strad, September, 1987.
- Italian Violin-Makers, Karel Jalovec, Orbis, Prague, 1952.
- Beautiful Italian Violins, Karel Jalovec, Paul Hamlyn, London, 1963.
- Antonius Stradivarius, Cremona 1679, Ex-Hellier, Machold Rare Violins.
- The Miracle Makers, Bein & Fushi, Chicago, 1998.
- We Love Stradivari, NHK, 1988.
- "Antonio Stradivari 'Hellier' 1679", Roger Hargrave, The Strad, September, 1987.