Cozio.com
E-mail:
Password:
Home
Instruments
Recently added
Stolen
Register
People
Luthiers
Bowmakers
Musicians
Owners
Market
Upcoming auctions
Auction results
Private sale prices
Library
Digital library
Iconography index
Bookstore
New books
Used books
Used magazines / journals
Auction catalogs
Digital documents
Forum
General discussions
Instruments
Luthiers
Instrument identification
Marketplace
About Us
FAQ
Register instrument
Report error
Contact
ShoppingCart
Advanced Search
Luthier / Bowmaker
Giovanni Battista Guadagnini (
b
1711;
d
1786) , b Bilegno, Piacenza (1738-49), Milan (1749-58), Cremona (1758-59), Parma (1759-71), Turin (1771-86)
Giovanni Battista Guadagnini, or 'J.B.' as he is more commonly known, worked over a period of forty-four years in five different towns and is considered the greatest violin maker of the mid- to late-18th century. On his early labels he claims to have been a pupil of his father,
Lorenzo
, but there is scant evidence to suggest that Lorenzo was a violin maker. Records show that Lorenzo was an innkeeper, but, interestingly,
Gaspare Lorenzini
also claimed to be his pupil. Whatever Giovanni Battista's training, his highly individual style produced results of the highest quality, and his instruments are highly regarded by soloists and chamber musicians.
Guadagnini's earliest instruments date from around 1740, when he and his father were both resident in Piacenza. These earlier instruments are characterised by pretty wood, often slab-cut, and beautiful red-orange varnish. The cello model that he developed during this period is about 4 cm shorter than Stradivari's Forma B, but the increased width and depth makes his cellos very successful. This model was almost certainly developed with the help of the cellist Carlo Ferrari, whose movements were closely followed by Guadagnini over the next few years.
In 1749 Guadagnini followed Ferrari to Milan, where his violins took on a striking appearance, with excellentq uality wood and a translucent red varnish.
There is some doubt as to whether Guadagnini actually lived in Cremona in 1758, but there are a dozen or so violins in existence that bear a label suggesting that they were made in that town. These few instruments show a strong resemblance to Guadagnini's Milanese violins, but the varnish is usually of a softer, golden-orange colour. The
'Briggs'
is one of the most celebrated of Guadagnini's Cremonese violins.
With his move to Parma in 1758/9, Guadagnini was again following in the footsteps of Ferrari, who was in the employ of the Duke of Bourbon. This is most probably the explanation for the monogram CSR ('Celsitude Serenisima Realis': 'His Serene Royal Highness) that appears on Guadagnini's labels in this period. The quality of the wood and varnish is generally less impressive than in his Milanese period.
Guadagnini moved to Turin in 1771. In 1773 Guadagnini met
Count Cozio di Salabue
, who became his patron, and for four years Guadagnini worked exclusively for the great connoisseur and collector. It was during this period that Cozio acquired the 'leftovers' of the Stradivari shop from
Paolo Stradivari
. Thus Guadagnini became acquainted with the work of the great master, and this had a significant impact on his working style. He adopted Stradivari's model and/holes and his varnish began once again to take on the red hue that he had used to such great effect in Milan.
From 1775 onwards we also see the insertion of the words Alumnus Antonii Stradivarii on his labels. This was not intended to suggest any actual working relationship, but was meant rather as a mark of respect for the great master.
(excerpted from
Four Centuries of Violin Makinga
by Tim Ingles.)
Applying your filter choices...
Type:
[All]
violin
viola
cello
double bass
small violin
Go to auction results:
Jump to:
Achner, Philip
Adam (Grand Adam), Jean
Adam, Jean
Adam, Jean Dominique
Aireton, Edmund
Albanesi, Sebastiano
Albani, Joseph
Albani, Matteo
Albani, Michael
Albani, Paolo
Alberti, Ferdinando
Aldric, Jean-François
Alletsee, Paulus
Alonso, Lorenzo
Altermatt, Charles Nicolas
Amaglioni, Aldebrande
Amati (Nicolo Marchioni), Dom Nicolo
Amati, Andrea
Amati, Antonio
Amati, Antonio & Girolamo
Amati, Girolamo
Amati, Girolamo (II)
Amati, Nicolò
Amici, Luigi
Anselmo, Pietro
Antoniazzi, Gaetano
Antoniazzi, Gregorio
Antoniazzi, Riccardo
Antoniazzi, Romeo
Arcangioli, Lorenzo
Bagatella, Antonio
Bagatella, Pietro
Bailly, Paul
Bairhoff, Giorgio
Bajoni, Luigi
Baldantoni, Giuseppe
Balestrieri, Tomaso
Ballarini, Santo
Banks, Benjamin
Banks, James & Henry
Bartolotti, Luigi
Becker & Son, Carl
Becker, Carl
Bellarosa, Vittorio
Bellone, Pietro Antonio
Bellosio, Anselmo
Bente, Matteo
Beretta, Felice
Bergonzi, Carlo
Bergonzi, Carlo & Michele Angelo
Bergonzi, Carlo (II)
Bergonzi, Michele Angelo
Bergonzi, Nicola
Bergonzi, Zosimo
Bernardel ('Père'), Auguste Sebastien Philippe
Bernardel, Gustave Adolphe
Betts, John
Bianchi, Giovanni
Bignami, Otello
Bimbi, Bartolomeo
Bisiach, Carlo
Bisiach, Giacomo & Leandro
Bisiach, Sr., Leandro
Blanchi, Alberto Aloysius
Blasich, Lodovico
Blasio, Raffaele
Blunt, Richard
Bodio, Giovanni Battista
Bofill, Salvator
Böllinger, Joseph
Boquay, Jacques
Borbon, Gaspar
Borelli, Andrea
Bosi, Floriano
Boullangier, Charles
Bovis, Francois
Brandini, Jacopo
Breazzano, Vincenzo
Brenzi, Antonio
Brown, William
Busan, Domenico
Bussetto, Giovanni Maria del
Calcagni, Bernardo
Calvarola, Bartolomeo
Camilli, Camillo
Candi, Cesare
Candi, Oreste
Capicchioni, Marino
Capicchioni, Marino & Mario
Cappa, Gioffredo
Carcassi, Lorenzo
Carcassi, Lorenzo & Tomaso
Carcassi, Tomaso
Carcassi, Vincenzo
Carletti, Natale
Carlucci, Giuseppe
Carter, John
Casarelli, Antonio
Casini, Antonio
Casini, Lapo
Caspan, Giovanni Pietro
Caspani, Giovanni Pietro
Castagneri, Andrea
Castellani, Bartolomeo
Castello, Paolo
Catenar, Enrico
Cateni, Pietro
Cati, Pietro Antonio
Cavaleri, Giuseppe
Cavaleri, Joannes Baptista
Cavallini, Oreste
Cavani, Giovanni
Celani, Emidio
Celoniati, Giovanni Francesco
Cerin, Marco Antonio
Ceruti, Enrico
Ceruti, Giovanni Battista
Ceruti, Giuseppe
Chanot I, Georges
Chanot II, Georges
Chanot, Georges Adolphe
Chardon, Andre
Chardon, Joseph Marie
Chiocchi, Gaetano
Christophe, Jean
Cimapane, Simone
Ciotti, Leone
Circapa, Tomaso
Clement, Jean Laurent
Comble, Ambroise de
Contino, Alfredo
Contreras, José
Corbucci, Domenico
Cordano, Jacopo
Costa, Felix Mori
Costa, Giovanni Battista
Cristofori, Bartolomeo
Cuypers, Johannes Bernardus
Cuypers, Johannes Franciscus
Cuypers, Johannes Theodorus
da Salò, Francesco Bertolotti
da Salò, Gasparo Bertolotti
dalla Costa, Pietro Antonio
Dall'aglio, Giuseppe
D'Ambrosio, Antonio
Danieli, Joannes
de Barbieri, Paolo
De Crollis, Domenico
De Crollis, Ferdinando
de Lorenzi, Giovanni Battista
de Maria, Joseph
de Rub, Angelo
de Rub, Augusto
De Vitor, Pietro Paolo
Deconet, Michele
Degani, Domenico
Degani, Eugenio
Degani, Giulio
del Coradel
Della Corte, Alfonso
Desiato, Giuseppe
Desideri, Pietro Paulo
Desideri, Raffaele
D'Espine, Alessandro
Dodd, Thomas
Dollenz, Giovanni
Dollenz, Giuseppe
Dominichino, Giuseppe
Duchaine I, Nicolas
Duchaine II, Nicolas
Duclos, Nicolas
Eberle, Tomaso
Emiliani, Francesco
Esposito, Raffaele
Eury, Francois
Eury, Jacob (Nicolas)
Fabris, Luigi
Facini, Fra Agostino
Facini, Fra Agostino
Fagnola, Annibale
Fagnola, Annibalotto
Farina, Erminio
Farotti, Celeste
Farotto, Celestino
Felipuci, Pier Lodovico
Fendt, Bernard Simon
Fendt, Jacob
Fent, Francois
Finolli, Giuseppe Antonio
Fiorini, Arrigo Tivoli
Fiorini, Giuseppe
Fiorini, Raffaele
Fleury, Benoit
Fontanelli, Giovanni Giuseppe
Forster, Jr., William
Forster, Simon Andrew
Forster, Sr., William
Fracassi, Arturo
Fratello, Filippo
Frébrunet, Jean-Baptiste
Gabrielli, Giovanni Battista
Gadda, Gaetano
Gadda, Gaetano & Mario
Gaffino, Joseph
Gagliano, Alessandro
Gagliano, Antonio
Gagliano, Antonio & Giovanni
Gagliano, Antonio (II)
Gagliano, Carlo
Gagliano, Ferdinando
Gagliano, Gaetano
Gagliano, Gennaro (Januarius)
Gagliano, Giovanni
Gagliano, Giuseppe & Antonio
Gagliano, Giuseppe (Joseph)
Gagliano, Nicola
Gagliano, Nicola (II)
Gagliano, Raffaele & Antonio
Gagliano, Vincenzo
Gaillard, Charles
Galeazzi, Adelino
Galeazzi, Eugenio
Galimberti, Luigi
Gand & Bernardel frères
Gand Frères
Gand, Charles Adolphe
Gand, Charles François
Garani, Aloysius Michael
Garimberti, Ferdinando
Garimberti, Ferdinando & Afro
Gatti, Giorgio
Gatto, Andrea
Geissenhof, Franz
Gemunder, August
Gemunder, George
Gennaro, Giacomo
Genova, Giovanni Battista
Genovese, Riccardo
Germain, Louis Joseph
Giamberini, Simone
Gibertini, Antonio
Gigli, Giulio Cesare
Giogis, Nicolaus
Giorgi, Nicolo
Gisalberti, Andreas
Gobetti, Francesco
Goffriller, Francesco
Goffriller, Matteo
Gragnani, Antonio
Gragnani, Filippo
Gragnani, Onorato
Grancino, Francesco
Grancino, Giovanni
Grancino, Giovanni & Francesco
Grancino, Giovanni Battista
Grancino, Paolo
Grosset, Pierre-Francois
Grulli, Pietro
Guadagnini, Antonio
Guadagnini, Carlo
Guadagnini, Felice
Guadagnini, Francesco
Guadagnini, Gaetano I
Guadagnini, Gaetano II
Guadagnini, Giovanni Battista
Guadagnini, Giuseppe
Guadagnini, Lorenzo
Guadagnini, Paolo
Guarneri del Gesù, Giuseppe
Guarneri, Andrea
Guarneri, Giuseppe (filius Andrea)
Guarneri, Pietro (of Mantua)
Guarneri, Pietro (of Venice)
Guerra, Evasio Emilio
Guidante, Giovanni Floreno
Guidanti, Floriano
Guillami 'filius', Juan
Guillami, Juan
Hardie, James
Hargrave, Roger
Heesom, Edward
Hel, Pierre Jean Henri
Hel, Pierre Joseph
Henry, Dominique
Henry, Joseph
Hill, Joseph
Hill, Lockey
Hill, William
Hofmans, Matthijs
Horil, Jacob
Husband, Richard
Indri, Antonio
Jacobs, Hendrick
Jorio, Vincenzo
Kaiser, Martin
Kennedy, Thomas
Kittel, Nikolaus
Kleynman, Cornelius
Kloz, Michael
Kloz, Sebastien
Kriner, August
Lafleur, Jaques
Lamy (père), Alfred Joseph
Landolfi, Carlo Ferdinando
Landolfi, Pietro Antonio
Lavazza, Antonio Maria
Lavazza, Santino
Lazzaretti, Francesco
Lecchi, Giuseppe B.
Leeb, Johann Georg
Lefèvre, Toussaint Nicolas Germain
Lemböck, Gabriel
Leonardo, Sebastiano Domenico
Leoni, Ferdinando
Leonpori, Giovanni Francesco
Lewis, Edward
Linarol, Ventura di Francesco
Longo, Mangno
Lorenzini, Gaspare
Lott, John Frederick
Lucci, Giuseppe
Luderer, Otto
Lupot, Francois (I)
Lupot, Francois (II)
Lupot, Nicolas
Maggini, Giovanni Paolo
Magri, Francesco
Maire, Nicolas Remy
Malvolti, Pietro Antonio
Mancini, Gaetano
Mantegazza, Antonio
Mantegazza, Carlo
Mantegazza, Francesco
Mantegazza, Pietro Giovanni
Marchetti, Abbondio
Marchetti, Edoardo
Marchetti, Enrico
Marchi, Giovanni Antonio
Marconcini, Giuseppe
Marconcini, Luigi Aloisio
Maria da Brescia, Giovanni
Maria, Zuan
Mariani, Antonio
Mariani, Fabio
Mariani, Lodovico
Maucotel, Charles Adolphe
Maurizi, Francesco
Mayr, Andreas Ferdinand
Meares, Richard
Meauchand, Joseph
Melegari Brothers
Melegari, Enrico Clodoveo
Mercolini, Pietro
Merighi, Antonio
Mezzadri, Alessandro
Micheli da Montichiaro, Zanetto
Micheli, Pellegrino di Zanetto De
Michetti, Plinio
Michiels, Aegidus
Mighetti, J. B.
Miremont, Claude Agustin
Molia, Angelo
Molinari, Giuseppe
Montagnana, Domenico
Morassi, Giovanni Battista
Nadotti, Joseph
Nemessanyi, Samuel
Nicolas, Antoine
Nicolas, Fourrier
Noiriel, Leopold
Norman, Barak
Novello, Pietro Valentino
Obici, Bartolomeo
Oddone, Carlo Giuseppe
Odoardi, Giuseppe
Ongarato, Zuanne
Ongaro, Ignazio
Ornati, Giuseppe
Ortega, Mariano
Ortega, Silverio
Pacherel, Pierre
Pajeot, Etienne
Pajeot, Louis-Simon
Pallota, Pietro
Pamphilon, Edward
Panormo, George
Panormo, Joseph
Panormo, Vincenzo & Joseph
Panormo, Vincenzo Trusiano
Parker, Daniel
Pasta, Bartolomeo
Pasta, Domenico
Pasta, Gaetano
Pazarini, Antonio
Peccatte, Charles
Peccatte, Dominique
Peccatte, Francois
Pedrazzini, Giuseppe
Pedrinelli, Antonio
Pelizon, Antonio
Pelizon, Carlo
Pelliciari, Roberto
Peluzzi, Giuseppe
Peresson, Sergio
Persois (Persoit), Jean Marie Pierre
Piattellini, Alvisio
Piattellini, Gasparo
Piccagliani, Armando
Pierray, Claude
Pique, Francois Louis
Pirot, Claude
Pistucci, Giovanni
Planis, August de
Platner, Alberto
Platner, Michele
Poggi, Ansaldo
Pollastri, Augusto
Pollastri, Gaetano
Pollusca, Antonio
Pommier, P.
Postacchini, Andrea
Postiglione, Vincenzo
Praga, Eugenio
Presbler, Francesco
Pressenda, Giovanni Francesco
Pryor, William
Rastelli, Ludovico
Rayman, Jacob
Renaudin, Leopold
Rinaldi, Gioffredo Benedetto
Rinaldi, Romano Marengo
Rivolta, Giacomo
Rocca, Enrico
Rocca, Giovanni Domenico
Rocca, Giuseppe
Rodiani, Giovita
Rogeri, Giovanni Battista
Rogeri, Pietro Giacomo
Rombouts, Pieter
Ronchini, Raffaele
Rose, John
Rossi, Domenico
Rossi, Giovanni
Rota, Giovanni
Roumen, Joannes Arnoldus
Ruggieri, Carlo
Ruggieri, Francesco
Ruggieri, Giacinto
Ruggieri, Giovanni Battista
Ruggieri, Vincenzo
Russo, Domenico
Sacconi, Simone Fernando
Saint Paul, Pierre
Salomon, Jean-Baptiste
Sannino, Vincenzo
Santagiuliana, Gaetano
Santagiuliana, Giacinto
Sartory, Eugène
Sawicki, Nicolaus
Scarampella, Giuseppe
Scarampella, Stefano
Schweitzer, Johann Baptist
Sciale, Giuseppe
Sderci, Iginio
Senchordi, Manuel
Senta, Fabrizio
Serafin, Giorgio
Serafin, Santo
Sgarabotto, Gaetano
Sgarabotto, Pietro
Sgarbi, Antonio
Sgarbi, Giuseppe
Sgarbi, Giuseppe & Antonio
Siani, Valentino
Siloni, Xavier
Silvestre & Maucotel
Silvestre, Hippolyte
Silvestre, Hippolyte Chretien
Silvestre, Pierre
Silvestre, Pierre & Hippolyte
Simon, Joseph Henry & Pierre
Simon, Pierre
Simonazzi, Amedeo
Soffritti, Ettore
Soliani, Angelo
Sorsana, Spirito
Stainer, Jakob
Stasser, Andrea
Stautinger, Mattheus Wenzeslaus
Storioni, Lorenzo
Stradivari, Antonio
Stradivari, Francesco
Stradivari, Francesco & Omobono
Stradivari, Omobono
Szepessy, Bela
Tanegia, Carlo Antonio
Tanningard, Giovanni Georgio
Tarasconi, Giuseppe
Tassini, Bartolomeo
Tavegia, Carlo Antonio
Tecchler, David
Termanini, Pietro
Testore, Carlo Antonio
Testore, Carlo Giuseppe
Testore, Giovanni
Testore, Paulo Antonio
Testore, Pietro Antonio
Thibout, Jacques Pierre
Thir, Johann Georg
Thompson, Charles & Samuel
Thompson, Peter
Tielke, Joachim
Tononi, Carlo
Tononi, Carlo Antonio
Tononi, Felice
Tononi, Giovanni
Tononi, Giovanni Baptista
Toppani, Angelo de
Tourte (Père), Nicolas Pierre
Tourte, François Xavier
Tourte, Nicolas Léonard
Tourte, Nicolas Léonard & François Xavier
Tourte, Xavier
Trapani, Raffaele
Ugar, Crescenzio
Ungarini, Antonio
Unknown
Urquhart, Thomas
Valenzano, Giovanni Maria
Valenzano, Petrus
Van Der Sijde, Willem
Vangelisti, Pier Lorenzo
Varagnolo, Ferruccio
Varotti, Giovanni
Vasallo, Giovanni
Venere, Vendelio
Ventapane, Lorenzo
Ventapane, Pasquale
Ventapane, Vincenzo
Ventura, Annibale
Verbeek, Gisbert
Vinaccia, Antonio
Vinaccia, Gaetano
Vinaccia, Gennaro
Vinaccia, Vincenzo
Voller (Voller Brothers), William, Alfred & Charles
Vuillaume (St. Cecile mark), Jean-Baptiste & Nicholas
Vuillaume, Jean Baptiste
Vuillaume, Nicolas Francois
Wamsley, Peter
Willems, Hendrick
Zanetto, Son of Peregrino
Zanoli, Giacomo
Zanoli, Giovanni Battista
Zanolli, Zanotus
Zanotti, Antonio
Zanotti, Giovanni Battista
Zanti, Alessandro
Zygmuntowicz, Samuel
Query:
All luthier's instruments
To see details about an instrument / bow, click on the instrument's ID number
Number of results:
638
Show
10
20
50
results on page
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
...
|
Next
ID
Type
Year
Name
994
violin
1740c
 
 
5324
violin
1740c
 
6536
violin
1740c
 
 
11390
violin
1740c
 
17357
violin
1740c
 
5139
double bass
1739-1789
 
 
 
5845
violin
1739-1789
 
6179
violin
1739-1789
6223
double bass
1739-1789
 
 
 
6664
violin
1739-1789
Seiler
 
 
 
6665
violin
1739-1789
Wells
 
 
9045
violin
1739-1789
 
 
 
11812
viola
1739-1789
 
 
666
cello
1740
 
 
 
992
violin
1740
 
 
993
violin
1740
Hill
 
 
 
2162
violin
1740
 
 
2765
violin
1740
 
 
 
4405
violin
1740
 
5859
violin
1740
 
 
Number of results:
638
Show
10
20
50
results on page
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
...
|
Next
Iconography of instrument (
indicates that photos or illustrations are viewable on-line)
Stolen
Certificates or other documentation describing instrument
For sale
Provenance of instrument (
indicates that the current owner or player is listed )
*
Indicates that because the date is unknown the entire span of the luthier's working years is given
Historical pricing information (
indicates that there is a price from the last 10 years )