Giovanni Battista Guadagnini | |
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Background information | |
Also known as | G. B. Guadagnini Giambattista Guadagnini |
Born | June 23, 1711 Bilegno in Val Tidone, Italy |
Died | September 18, 1786 Turin, Italy |
(aged 75)
Occupations | Luthier, pedagogue |
Years active | 1729–1786 |
Giovanni Battista Guadagnini (or G. B. Guadagnini; Giambattista Guadagnini); (June 23, 1711 – September 18, 1786) was an Emiliano luthier, regarded as one of the finest craftsmen of string instruments in history.
Contents |
Guadagnini was born in Bilegno in Val Tidone near Piacenza, now in Emilia-Romagna, Italy. He practiced his craft from about 1729 until his death, and his work is divided into four main periods corresponding to and named after, Piacenza, Milan, Parma and Turin, the four cities in Italy where he lived and worked. The instruments of the latter period, Turin, are generally considered to be his best work, and tend toward higher valuations.
Guadagnini's father, Lorenzo, his son, Giuseppe, and some other members of the Guadagnini family continued in the line of violin making through several generations.
He died in Turin in 1786.
Violinist | Date & place of manufacture | Instrument name | Comments | Reference | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Riccardo Brengola | 1747, Piacenza | "Contessa Crespi" | [1] | ||||||
Goran Končar | 1753, Milan | [2] | |||||||
Michał Kowalkowski | 1753 | "Gucio" | |||||||
Adolf Brodsky | 1751, Milan | ex-Brodsky | [3] | ||||||
Amaury Coeytaux | 1773 | [4] | |||||||
Roman Simovic | 1752 | on loan from Jonathan Moulds | [5] | ||||||
1752 | ex-Kneisel | Zakhar Bron | 1757, Milan | [6] | |||||
Andrew Dawes | 1770, Parma | [7] | |||||||
Julia Fischer | 1750 | [8] | |||||||
Felix Ayo | 1744 | [9] | |||||||
David Halen | 1753 | [10] | |||||||
Carl Flesch | ex-Henri Vieuxtemps | [11] | |||||||
David Garrett | 1772 | In December 2007, Garrett fell after a performance and smashed his Guadagnini, which he had purchased four years earlier for US$1 million.[1] | |||||||
David Greed | 1757 | Owned by the Yorkshire Guadagini 1757 Syndicate. | [12] | ||||||
Arthur Grumiaux | ex-Grumiaux | [13] | |||||||
Willy Hess | 1740s | [14] | |||||||
Joseph Joachim | 1767, Parma | ex-Joachim | [15] | ||||||
Ida Kavafian | 1751 | [16] | David Kim | 1757 | on loan from The Philadelphia Orchestra | [17] | |||
1752 | ex-Kneisel | ||||||||
Mikhail Kopelman | 1773 | [18] | |||||||
Jan Kubelik | 1750 | ex-Kubelik | [19] | ||||||
Pekka Kuusisto | 1752 | [20] | |||||||
Tasmin Little | 1757 | [21] | |||||||
Haldon Martinson | 1750 | Being used in the Boston Symphony Orchestra | [22] | ||||||
Viktoria Mullova | 1750 | [23] | |||||||
Linda Rosenthal | 1772, Turin | [24] | |||||||
Leon Sametini | ex-Sametini | [25] | |||||||
Yvonne Smeulers | 1785 | [26] | |||||||
Lara St. John | 1779 | Salabue | called "the Resurrection" by St. John | [27] | |||||
Stephanie Sant’Ambrogio | 1757 | [28] | |||||||
Lyndon Johnston Taylor | 1777 | [29] | |||||||
Vanessa-Mae | 1761 | "Gizmo" | [30] | ||||||
Henri Vieuxtemps | ex-Henri Vieuxtemps | [31] | |||||||
Henryk Wieniawski | 1750 | ex-Wieniawski | [32] | ||||||
Eugène Ysaÿe | 1754 | ex-Eugène Ysaÿe | [33] | ||||||
Sini-Maaria Simonen | 1760 | on loan from the Finnish Cultural Foundation | [34] | ||||||
Jack Liebeck | 1785 | ex-Wilhelmj | [35] |
This article is part of the Fiddle & Violin series. |
Basic physics of the violin |
Fiddlers |
History of the violin |
Luthiers |
Musical styles |
Making and maintenance |
Playing the violin |
Violin construction |
Violin family of instruments |
Violinists |