Giovanni Battista Guadagnini

Giovanni Battista Guadagnini
Background information
Also known as G. B. Guadagnini
Giambattista Guadagnini
Born (1711-06-23)23 June 1711
Bilegno in Val Tidone, Italy
Died 18 September 1786(1786-09-18) (aged 75)
Turin, Italy
Occupation(s) Luthier, pedagogue
Years active 1729–1786

Giovanni Battista Guadagnini (or "G. B. Guadagnini"); (23 June 1711 – 18 September 1786) was an Italian luthier, regarded as one of the finest craftsmen of string instruments in history.[1] He is widely considered the third greatest maker after Antonio Stradivari and Giuseppe Guarneri "del Gesù".

Biography

Giovanni Battista Guadagnini, aka Johannes Baptista Guadagnini, was born while both Stradivari and Guarneri were at the zenith of their production years, roughly 40 minutes away from the City of Cremona on June 23, 1711 at Borgonovo Val Tidone of Piacenza.

Recent research has shed light as to the influence of both Casa Stradivari and Casa Guarneri of Cremona on the lines of symmetry of instruments by Guadagnini, hence J.B. Guadagnini was still a youth while his father Lorenzo, both in Bilegno and Piacenza, was a contributing maker of instruments for Stradivari's workshop, the leading violin shop in the first half of the 18th century.

Antonio Stradivari died at age 92 in 1737 while J.B. Guadagnini was 26 years old, and Bartolomeo Guarneri del Gesu at 46 in 1744 while Guadagnini was 33. Hence, a logical nexus could be made whereby the young J.B. Guadagnini may have learned the rudiments of the trade in Cremona as he used the internal form with linings and blocks set in the Cremonese style, a method of construction he would use for the rest of his life.

It was the normative use of trade in 18th-century Italy for a young person to start as an apprentice in a master's workshop around age m12, to be allowed to practice a given trade afterward. Guild shops, either in consortium or under one roof, were headed by a master who provided journeymen papers for successful apprentices. Trade guilds, providing career opportunities for skilled tradesmen including musical instrument makers, were a mercantile arrangement in Europe since medieval times, including in Italy. Guilds were a pre-capitalist industrial organization under ducal oversight which regulated trade practice, quality of articles produced, and pricing policies.

The fact that J.B. Guadagnini was a skilled luthier as well as violin maker possibly before his Piacenza period attests to thorough guild training and graduation from journeyman status. Likewise, the fact that violin makers in Piacenza and surrounding cities, including Gasparo Lorenzini, Joseph Nadotti and Felice Berreta, already called themselves “alumni” of the Guadagninis attests to formal guild status attained by Guadagnini's workshop. 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. Appreciation by both connoisseurs and musicians alike attest to the fact that J.B. Guadagnini may possibly be considered the last of the great master violin makers in the second half of the so-called "golden age," while Italy was under Bourbon rule.

J.B. Guadagnini died in Turin in 1786.

Performers with Guadagnini instruments

Violinists
Violinist Date & place of manufacture Instrument name Comments Reference
Mayumi Seiler c. 1740, Piacenza
Jascha Heifetz 1741, Piacenza ex-Heifetz Provenance - by Rembert Wurlitzer in 1946 and Dario D'Attili in 1991
Riccardo Brengola 1747, Piacenza "Contessa Crespi"
Goran Končar 1753, Milan
Michał Kowalkowski 1753 "Gucio"
Adolf Brodsky 1751, Milan ex-Brodsky
Amaury Coeytaux 1773
Roman Simovic 1752 on loan from Jonathan Moulds
Zakhar Bron 1757, Milan
Andrew Dawes 1770, Parma
Julia Fischer 1742
Felix Ayo 1744
David Halen 1753
Carl Flesch ex-Henri Vieuxtemps
Min-Jeong Koh c. 1767
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.[2] He now uses it for mainly his outdoor crossover performances.[3]
David Greed 1757 Owned by the Yorkshire Guadagini 1757 Syndicate.
Arthur Grumiaux ex-Grumiaux
Willy Hess 1740s
Marlene Hemmer 1784
Joseph Joachim 1767, Parma ex-Joachim
Ida Kavafian 1751
David Kim 1757 on loan from The Philadelphia Orchestra
Manfred Leverkus 1752 ex-Kneisel stolen in 2006
Mikhail Kopelman 1773
Jan Kubelik 1750 ex-Kubelik
Pekka Kuusisto 1752 on loan from the Finnish Cultural Foundation
Wayne Lin 1779, Turin
Tasmin Little 1757
Haldon Martinson 1750 Being used in the Boston Symphony Orchestra
Viktoria Mullova 1750
Ginette Neveu Purchased early spring, 1949. Involved in a plane crash later that year, in which Neveu died. Scroll later apparently appeared in Paris, having changed hands several times.
Linda Rosenthal 1772, Turin
Leon Sametini ex-Sametini
Mari Silje Samuelsen 1773, Turin On loan from ASAF (Anders Sveeas Charitable Foundation, Oslo).
Yvonne Smeulers 1785
Lara St. John 1779 Salabue called "the Resurrection" by St. John
Henri Temianka 1752 Built on the Petro Guarnerius model. [Certificate of Joseph Vedral, violinmaker, Holland, 28 September 1929]
Stephanie Sant’Ambrogio 1757
Lyndon Johnston Taylor 1777
Vanessa-Mae 1761 "Gizmo"
Henri Vieuxtemps ex-Henri Vieuxtemps
Henryk Wieniawski 1750 ex-Wieniawski
Eugène Ysaÿe 1774 ex-Eugène Ysaÿe
Sini-Maaria Simonen 1760 on loan from the Finnish Cultural Foundation
Bob Wills 1784 Described as 157 years old when bought in 1941 for $3,000.00, Wills later claimed in an interview that he gave it away "to a friend of mine in Tayxas" and bought another for $5,000.00. [4]
Jack Liebeck 1785 ex-Wilhelmj
Li Chuan Yun 1784 on loan from the Stradivari Society
Simone Porter 1745 on loan from The Mandell Collection of Southern California
Richard Deakin NK English chamber musician and soloist, currently teaching at RAM in London, was using one in 1980s and likely still is [5]
Violists
Cellists
Groups

Bibliography

References

  1. Ernest N. Doring. The Guadagnini Family of Violin Makers Lewis and Sons, Chicago, 1949. Reprint with new introduction by Stewart Pollins, Dover, 2012. ISBN 978048649796-9
  2. Wagner, Thomas (2008-02-14). "Violinist: Fall Fractures $1M Fiddle". The Associated Press. Associated Press. Retrieved 2008-02-15.
  3. David Garrett - livestream in NY, 8 June 2012. By David Garrett. YouTube. YouTube, 7 Apr. 2013. Web. 24 July 2013. <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Htp6OPCLrXc>.
  4. San Antonio Rose: The Life And Music Of Bob Wills. Charles R. Townsend. 1976. University of Illinois. p. 230. ISBN 0-252-00470-1
  5. http://www.ram.ac.uk/about-us/staff/richard-deakin
  6. Natalie Clein
  7. Aitchison Mnatzaganian cello makers, restorers and dealers
  8. Maxine Neuman's biography
  9. ASQ Instruments, Australian String Quartet, accessed 2017-02-12
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