Amati > Makers Archive > Jacob Stainer

Jacob Stainer

Highest auction price

£205,250

Auction price history
Type Details Sold Price
Violin Included in a 1981 exhibition Jacobus Stainer and the 18th Century Master Violins by J. Francais Fri 1st March 2024 £84,403
Violin 35.2 cm Absam, 1655 c. [Lit.] Fri 1st April 2011 £69,908
Violin 35.4 cm Absam, 1659, 'The King', carved lion's head [Lit. & Provenance] Tue 1st March 2011 £205,250
Violin 35.3 cm Absam, 1650 c. Mon 1st October 2007 £46,100
Violin 35.5 cm Absam, 1670 [Probably by] Wed 1st November 2006 £38,400
Violin 35.3 cm Absam, 1660 c. Wed 1st November 2006 £48,000
Violin 35.4 cm Absam, 1665 c. Sun 1st October 2006 £42,046
Violin 35.2 cm Absam, 1655 c. Mon 1st May 2006 £82,895
Violin 35.3 cm Austria, 17th C. (completely unassembled) [Attributed to] Wed 1st February 2006 £9,000
Violin Absam, 1660 c. Sun 1st May 2005 £62,400
Violin 1690 c. Mon 1st November 2004 £34,655
Violin Absam, 1660 c. [Probably by] Mon 1st March 2004 £19,200
Violin 1662 Fri 1st November 2002 £35,850
Violin 1658 Sun 1st November 1998 £34,500
Viola 40.3 cm 1674 Sat 1st March 1997 £36,700
Violin 1660 c. Wed 1st November 1989 £14,300
Violin 1668 Tue 1st November 1988 £71,500
Violin 1677 Sat 1st June 1985 £18,480
Violin 16-- Sun 1st March 1981 £5,325
Biographies

John Dilworth

STAINER, Jacob Born circa. 1617, died 1683 Absam, Innsbruck Austria The greatest Germanic maker and one of the most influential luthiers of all. For much of the eighteenth century his reputation outstripped the Cremonese throughout Europe and his designs were copied wholesale. The entire Tyrolean German school of violin making and the core activity in the towns of Mittenwald, Markneukirchen, Klingenthal, and Schönbach (now Luby) was based on replicating his work. The Stainer model also became dominant throughout Italy, France, the Netherlands, and England in the eighteenth century and was the pattern for makers like Tecchler, Serafin, Pietro Guarneri, Rombouts, and Wamsley. Only in the mid nineteenth century did Stradivari’s innovative work have an appreciable effect on this tradition. The origins of Stainer’s career remain mysterious. The son of a salt-miner, he was apprenticed between 1630 and 1644 to Daniel Hertz, an organ builder in Innsbruck, and to a joiner, Hans Grafinger, in his village of Absam. Most sources accept as fact that he travelled widely in this early period, from Salzburg to Venice and Rome, but there is no hard evidence to support this. Nor is there any documentary support for the notion that he worked for Nicolò Amati in Cremona. However one violin of c.1645 is recorded with an authentic-looking manuscript label attached to the top block stating ‘Jacob Stainer/ fecit Cremona 16..’. Stainer does not appear in the lists of Amati’s apprentices in Cremona. In 1644 Stainer made and presented an instrument to the Salzburg court orchestra, the first recorded commission of many that followed to courts all over the region. By 1656 he had bought a house in Absam which is still preserved and commemorated with a plaque stating: ‘In diesem House lebte einer Kunst Jakob Stainer Der Vater der deutschen Geige Geboren zu Absam 14 Juli 1621 hier Verstorben 1683’. An appointment as luthier to Ferdinand Charles, Archduke of Austria, followed in 1658. The archduke died in 1662 but in 1669 Stainer was made an ‘Imperial Servant’ to Leopold I. In this same year he was arrested as a suspected Lutheran and from that date on he seems to have deteriorated mentally under pressure from the established Catholic Church. Stainer was by any standards an exceptional man. He was the only maker to stand on equal terms with the Cremonese in terms of attention to detail and finish and to apply the very highest levels of craftsmanship to a sophisticated design. His work does incorporate several vital features of the Cremonese school, using morticed linings, separate internal top block with the neck fixed by a nail, and even a system of internal register points not dissimilar to the single central puncture mark observable in the backs of Amati instruments. Instruments typically have a medium full arch, with a deep recurve at the perimeter (not unlike Nicolò Amati’s work) but a slightly squarer cross-section and a more sudden transition from the convex shape across the centre of the arch to the concavity of the edges. The soundholes are also Amatisé, but with emphasised wings, generally curling further round into the circular finials, and prominent curved nicks in the centre of the arm. The scrolls are well finished and finely balanced, but the first turn of the volute is wider and the last continues further around the eye than in the Cremonese tradition. The pegbox has a pronounced swan-necked curve and deeply drawn throat and is broad across the chin. Several instruments dating from after 1665 have very beautiful and stylised lion heads replacing the scroll itself. His varnish is very similar to the early Cremonese: pale golden-amber tints that are soft clear and tender. Other mannerisms include the use of maple purfling, a vellum strip covering the centre joint of the back, and a characteristic graduation of the plates: both front and back following a similar plan. Violins are in two similar models, one slightly reduced in width, although smaller ‘ ’ or child’s sizes are known. Fronts invariably of fine alpine spruce, frequently with cross-grain ‘hazel-figure’. Lion heads of pearwood, backs of maple (quarter and slab-sawn), and sometimes the jointed backs have one side reversed in the same manner as Amatis to show the flame running in one direction across the seam. Stainer appears to have been the first violin maker to make substantial use of ‘bird’s eye’ maple, a timber that may have been imported from North America in this period. The distinctive spotted figure is seen as a characteristic of Stainer’s and was taken up by many of his imitators. (It is not found in classical Cremonese work.) Some violas and very few cellos, but several fine viols extant. In letters from a commission of 1678 Stainer states that his viol is in the form of the ‘Englishman’s viol’; almost certainly a reference to William Young, the violist to the Archduke Ferdinand who died in Innsbruck in 1662. It is assumed that Stainer took his pattern from an English instrument, although no surviving Stainer viol appears to follow any such form. Labels prior to 1650 are not sufficiently authenticated, but it is plausible that they were in manuscript (see the ‘Cremona’ label cited above). From c.1650 the labels were printed in Cremonese style and form rather than in the gothic typeface used by other German and Austrian makers. The first three date digits are pre-printed. After c.1667 he reverted to manuscript labels, with ‘m-pia’ added: an abbreviation of the Latin ‘manu-propria’ (‘made by my own hand’) commonly used by artists and craftsmen. Jacobus Stainer in Absom / propè Oenipontum fecit 165.. Iacobus Stainer in Absam / propè Oenipontum fecit 165.. From c.1665: Jacobus Stainer in Absam / prope OEnipontum 1666 Manuscript labels from c.1667: Jacobus Stainer in Absom / propè Oenipontum m-pia 1669

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