Amati > Makers Archive > Antonio Stradivari

Antonio Stradivari

Highest auction price

£9,808,000

Auction price history
Type Details Sold Price
Violin 35.7 cm Cremona, 1721 The 'Lady Blunt', with Provenance & Lit. Wed 1st June 2011 £9,808,000
Violin 35.5 cm Cremona, 1697 'The Molitor' Fri 1st October 2010 £2,253,181
Violin 35.7 cm Known as "The Baldiani" with Lit. & Provanence [Ascribed to] Wed 1st October 2008 £198,685
Violin 35.3 cm Cremona, 1700 c. "The Penny", with Provenance Tue 1st April 2008 £638,192
Violin 35.7 cm Cremona, 1729 'The Solomon, ex-Lambert' Sun 1st April 2007 £1,378,753
Violin 35.7 cm Cremona, 1720 c. Sun 1st October 2006 £771,794
Violin 35.5 cm Cremona, 1705 "The Hammer" Mon 1st May 2006 £1,883,204
Violin 1700-10 c. 'Sammons' Omobono, Provenance & Lit. Tue 1st November 2005 £211,308
Violin Cremona, 1699 'Lady Tennant' with Provenance & Lit. Fri 1st April 2005 £1,061,041
Violin 1716 Sat 1st November 2003 £767,200
Violin 1687 Thu 1st May 2003 £607,680
Violin 1726 Fri 1st November 2002 £608,750
Violin 1679 [Attributed to] Fri 1st November 2002 £254,500
Violin 1712 Thu 1st November 2001 £720,000
Violin 1680 (scroll replaced) Fri 1st June 2001 £278,500
Violin 1682 Thu 1st March 2001 £388,500
Violin 1700 'Taft' Mon 1st May 2000 £861,039
Cello 1692 Mon 1st March 1999 £551,500
Violin 1698 'Joachim' Sun 1st November 1998 £529,500
Violin 1727 'Kreutzer' Wed 1st April 1998 £947,500
Violin 1728 Sat 1st March 1997 £128,000
Violin 1728 'Stuart' Sun 1st October 1995 £139,000
Violin 1667 'Jenkins' Thu 1st June 1995 £375,500
Violin 1711 'Vogelweith' Wed 1st March 1995 £386,500
Cello (Back, ribs, scroll by "John Lott") Thu 1st December 1994 £297,756
Violin 1696 'Steinthal' Tue 1st November 1994 £309,500
Violin 1686 Mon 1st November 1993 £363,000
Cello 1690 c. 'Bonjour' Sun 1st March 1992 £605,000
Violin 1712 'Schreiber' Sun 1st March 1992 £352,000
Violin 1720 'Mendelsohn' Thu 1st November 1990 £902,000
Violin 1697 'Molitor' Wed 1st March 1989 £209,000
Violin 1710 'Fuchs' Wed 1st March 1989 £156,200
Cello 1698 c. 'Cholmndely' Wed 1st June 1988 £682,000
Violin 1729 'Innes' Wed 1st June 1988 £214,500
Violin 1700 c. (composite) Wed 1st June 1988 £38,500
Violin 1709 'Hall' Tue 1st March 1988 £444,333
Violin 1711 'Vogelweith' Sun 1st November 1987 £165,000
Violin 1692 'Falmouth' Mon 1st June 1987 £192,500
Violin 1734 'Kulenkampf' Wed 1st April 1987 £396,000
Violin 1690 'Stephens' Wed 1st April 1987 £154,000
Violin 1716 'Colossus' Wed 1st April 1987 £440,000
Cello 1695 'Bonnett' Sat 1st November 1986 £99,000
Violin 1717 'Piatti' Sat 1st March 1986 £170,500
Violin 1723 c. ' Falk' Mon 1st April 1985 £286,000
Violin 1686 'Rosenheim' Thu 1st November 1984 £165,000
Violin 1729-30 'Wechsberg' Thu 1st November 1984 £167,400
Violin 1720 (composite) Thu 1st November 1984 £29,160
Violin 1707 'Cathedrale' Thu 1st November 1984 £396,000
Violin 1690 'Auer' Mon 1st October 1984 £246,400
Violin 1712 'Hrimaly' Fri 1st June 1984 £122,222
Violin 1684 ['Hill' history] Fri 1st June 1984 £91,800
Cello 1690 c. 'Bonjour' Sun 1st April 1984 £275,000
Violin 1683 'Bucher' Sun 1st April 1984 £101,200
Violin 1702 'Lyall' Sun 1st January 1984 £102,667
Violin 1730 'Mackenzie' Wed 1st June 1983 £178,571
Cello 1684 ' Barjansky' Wed 1st June 1983 £192,500
Violin 1724 'Rawark' Wed 1st June 1983 £110,000
Violin 1668 [no History] Fri 1st April 1983 £58,300
Violin 26.7 cm 1720 Fri 1st April 1983 £16,500
Violin 1692 'Falmouth' Tue 1st June 1982 £102,600
Violin 1664 [Labeled] Mon 1st February 1982 £14,865
Violin 1695 Long Model Thu 1st May 1980 £68,200
Violin 1735 'Elman' Sat 1st March 1980 £97,778
Biographies

John Dilworth

STRADIVARI, Antonio Born circa. 1644, died 1737 Cremona Italy. The greatest of all violin makers. His origins, despite much earnest research, remain unclear. His first appearance in the Cremonese archives concerns his marriage to Francesca Ferraboschi in 1667 when he was living in the parish of S. Cecilia. He settled with his wife in the parish of S. Agata. In 1680 he moved to a house in Piazza S. Domenico, in close proximity to the homes and workshops of the Amati and Guarneri families. The opinion of most commentators has been that he was a pupil of Nicolò Amati, but no firm evidence exists for this apart from an early label which states ‘Antonius Stradiuarius Cremonensis Alumnus / Nicolaij Amati Faciebat 1666’. This establishes that Stradivari was born in Cremona as he would not otherwise have been allowed to use the term ‘Cremonensis’, but this label is the only example known which refers to Nicolò Amati. Census returns list the names of Amati’s students but Stradivari is not amongst them. It is possible that he was already living in Cremona at another address and therefore not resident in the Amati household (as most apprentices were) and escaped the notice of the census takers. However, his early work, while resembling that of Amati, has several strikingly original features. Present opinion speculates that Stradivari used the term ‘Alumnus Nicolaij Amati’ unofficially and was prevented from repeating it on subsequent labels. Recent research (Chiesa, Rosengard) suggests a strong link with the Rugeri family, and the notion that Stradivari and Francesco Rugeri were more closely connected than previously thought is supported by shared use of some constructional idiosyncrasies. Stradivari’s early work comprises a large number of instruments other than the violin family: viols, harps, guitars, and mandolins are all recorded (in terms of surviving instruments Stradivari was the most prolific guitar maker of the period). In the classical era, no other Cremonese makers are known to have made instruments other than violins, violas, and cellos, apart from the very occasional viol. This suggests that Stradivari had a different training to that of most of the known Cremonese masters. The theory that he was originally apprenticed to a cabinet maker or inlayer is frequently and seriously mooted. His work in this period is often highly decorated with intricate carving and inlay (though his guitars and mandolins, traditionally vehicles for flights of decorative and technically dazzling ornamentation, are relatively plain). Other than the Andrea Amati violins decorated by an artist with the armorial bearings of the French King Charles IX and a rare Nicolò Amati violin with inlaid decoration dated 1656 (known as the ‘King Louis XIV’/ ‘Youssopov’: Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington D.C.), the Cremonese standard hitherto was for plain but beautifully designed and executed work. There is an obvious pride in Antonio’s technical application of his woodworking skills. From the very first he was far more painstaking in the accuracy and finish of the interior structure than any of his predecessors and it is the purfling inlay which seems to deteriorate most noticeably in the work of the sons after Antonio’s death. Stradivari was far more original and experimental in his work than other makers in Cremona. His contemporaries rarely worked outside the established small or ‘Grand’ Amati patterns which had sufficed for over one hundred years. Interestingly the very first Stradivari violins are modelled loosely on the smaller of these forms which had largely fallen out of use in the previous fifty years. His first experiment was to lengthen the violin, producing a very elegant model known as the ‘long pattern’, extending the usual 35.4cm/14” body length to more than 36cm/14 3/16”. He concentrated on this form from c.1690 to 1700. His next step was more radical and influential in the long term. In 1698 his wife Francesca died and in 1699 he married Antonia Maria Zambelli. Whether or not these private events had a direct effect on his professional life, from c.1700 there was a dramatic change in his work. In what is known as his ‘golden period’ c.1700-1725 he produced his masterpieces of violin, viola, and cello design. His most significant step at the beginning of this period was to reduce the overall height of the arching and reshape the plates into a stronger flatly curved surface which delivered a more powerful and carrying tone than the sweet and silvery voice of the high-arched Amati or Stainer. He also introduced a richer and more intensely coloured varnish with deep red pigmentation. (Between 1680 and 1690 there had been evidence of some experimentation with the varnish which changes from the rich clear golden brown of the Amatis to the perfected recipe via adjustments to texture, intensity of colour, and thickness.) The resulting deep translucent orange red coating is now justly celebrated, with much research since going into its nature and composition. Research has also focused on the geometrical origin of his designs and the instruments’ unsurpassed acoustic properties. The bold and assertive appearance of his work from this period is enhanced by the black edging precisely applied to the chamfer of the scroll. His violins reached an apogee in 1715-1716 with the ‘Alard’ of 1715 and the remarkably preserved ‘Messie’ of 1716 (Ashmolean Museum, Oxford). From the ‘golden period’ also come the ‘Betts’ of 1704 (Library of Congress, Washington D.C.), the ‘Viotti’ of 1709 (Royal Academy of Music, London) and the ‘Lady Blunt’ of 1721 (private collection). From c.1723, with Antonio approaching 80 years of age, the workshop production cannot be said to have gone into decline exactly, but signs of age and inconsistency begin to appear. ‘Late period’ work is, however, highly valued for its tonal strength, as well their visual impact as these instruments were built to a sturdy model with slightly fuller arching. His sons Francesco, and to a lesser extent Omobono, played a large part in the production throughout the ‘golden’ and ‘late’ periods. In his will Antonio documented his desire that Francesco should be his heir and successor. From about 1725 Carlo Bergonzi also had a role in the workshop and in fact it was the Bergonzi family that occupied the Stradivari workshop after the death of Antonio and Francesco. By the beginning of the ‘golden period’ (c.1700) it is evident that Stradivari had complete confidence in his violin designs. Construction of plucked and other instruments fell away. His celebrated inlaid instruments, produced from c.1666 to 1721, had successfully caught the attention of aristocratic clients, including the Spanish royal court. With elegantly stylised flora and fauna chased around the ribs, double rows of purfling on front and back enclosing a band of alternating ivory dots and lozenges, and the inlaid floral pattern continued around the intricate surfaces of the scroll, the work is infinitely more sophisticated than the comparatively crude efforts of other 17th century violin makers to enhance the simple and beautiful form of the violin. Stradivari dominated the profession in Cremona, with remarkable effects upon his colleagues. Hieronymus Amati (II), scion of the founding dynasty of Cremonese lutherie, though quickly adapting to Stradivari’s new concept of arching, found himself swept aside and left Cremona in 1700. Vincenzo Rugeri, the son of Francesco, also started to work on the new principles but made little headway. Joseph Guarneri ‘filius Andreae’ found himself similarly isolated, with his brother Pietro moving away to Mantua and his eldest son departing for Venice. His younger son Giuseppe ‘del Gesù’ remained almost entirely inactive throughout the period 1700-1730 and only after the death of Stradivari in 1737 did he finally emerge as an innovator with even a new aesthetic in violin making. It seems that Stradivari’s domination was not merely in his wealth of clients, but in the exacting standards he maintained himself and somehow exerted on his fellow craftsmen. Guarneri del Gesù, Carlo Bergonzi, and his son Michael Angelo provided a brief late flowering of progressive and imaginative violin making in Cremona from 1737-1747. After this the two centuries of Cremonese supremacy in lutherie fell away, due also in no small part to the flood of cheaply made instruments being produced elsewhere. It took some time for Stradivari’s work to become widely known and imitated by other makers. In England, as in most centres of Europe, the Stainer model remained the first preference until very late in the eighteenth century, but Daniel Parker was perceptive enough to try the alternative Stradivari form as soon as it became known in England around the turn of the century. Elsewhere, an isolated maker, Ambroise de Comble of Tournay, also tentatively began working on the new model in the mid-eighteenth century, but it was generally not until c.1800 that Vincenzo Panormo in London, François-Louis Pique and Nicolas Lupot in Paris, and J. F. Pressenda in Turin became established and through them the Stradivari form and arching come to dominate violin making. Makers began to imitate his work in a close academic manner in an attempt to retrieve what might already have seemed a ‘lost art’. Stradivari made a limited number of violas (probably little more than eleven in total) and in some ways seems never to have quite mastered the instrument. Treating it as an enlarged violin, the flat arch and limited volume of the ‘golden period’ contralto instruments he is best known for, such as the ‘Archinto’ of 1696 (Royal Academy of Music, London) and the ‘McDonald’ of 1721, seem less than ideal when compared with the relatively crudely made but full arched Brescian models. The early ‘Mahler’ of 1672 and the magnificent ‘Medici’ tenor of 1690 (Instituto Cherubini, Florence) are rare exceptions to the contralto form otherwise used throughout his career. The enormous 47.6cm / 183/4” ‘Medici’ remains the only Stradivari in perfectly original condition with neck, fingerboard, and fittings intact. Cellos appear to have become increasingly important to Stradivari in later years. His first productions, such as the ‘Aylesford’ of 1696 (Nippon Music Foundation), are superbly proportioned but very large: a body length of more than 79cm/311/8”. In c.1709 Stradivari developed a cello model of reduced scale with a body length of 75.5cm/293/4”, which he referred to as the ‘Forma B’. This has since become essentially the standard model for the modern cello. The quality and consistency of his work on this pattern is quite astonishing. Masterpieces such as the ‘Gore-Booth’ of 1710, the ‘Davidov’ of 1712, and the ‘Batta’ of 1714 (private collections) are at the very pinnacle of his production. Nevertheless, experimentation continued with the ‘B Piccola’ model introduced in c.1727; a narrower version of the ‘Forma B’. The ‘De Munck’ of c.1730, an example of this new model, was the concert instrument of Emanuel Feuermann. Although Francesco’s contribution to this design should not be overlooked (the inscriptions on the surviving paper patterns seem to show his handwriting) the characteristic workmanship of the Stradivari shop is consistent and clear. Yet another cello model was introduced at roughly the same time, with the width of the earlier ‘Forma B’, but shortened substantially to 72.5cm/281/2”, and with lower ribs. A fine example of this is the ‘Saveuse’ of 1726 (private collection). A great deal of Stradivari’s workshop tools, patterns, and moulds still survive in the Museo Stradivariano in Cremona. These were purchased from Antonio’s youngest son Paolo by the collector Count Cozio di Salabue and are important for understanding Stradivari’s methods and procedures. It is quite apparent that three separate violin moulds were used throughout the ‘golden’ and ‘late’ periods: the ‘G’, ‘PG’, and ‘P’ moulds. This suggests a prolific output from the workshop involving parallel construction of batches of instruments by at least three pairs of hands simultaneously. From c.1700 both Francesco and his younger brother Omobono would have been present. A third son from Antonio’s second marriage to Antonia Zambelli, Gio Batta Martino (Born 1703) might also have made a contribution from c.1716 but he died in 1727 leaving no further trace. His position may have been taken over by Carlo Bergonzi, as Stradivari approached his 90th year in 1734, though he was still apparently in active control of his shop until his death aged 93. Antonius Stradiuarius Cremonensis Alumnus / Nicolaij Amati, Faciebat Anno 1666 Antonius Stradiuarius Cremonensis/ Faciebat Anno 1667 Antonius Stradivarius Cremonensis/ Faciebat Anno 1732 / de Anni 89 Antonius Stradivarius Cremonensis/ Faciebat Anno 1737 / D’Anni 93 Revisto e Corretto da me Antonio / Stradiuari in Cremona 1719 / e Fatto il coperchio. Sotto la Disciplina d’Antonio / Stradiuari F. in Cremona 1737 [Rosengard & Chiesa, Beare, Hills, Chiesa in Milnes (ed.)]

Sell your instrument with Amati

Get started by uploading photos of your instrument for our experts to review.