Prior to 1701 the Stradivari workshop built cellos of large dimensions, in keeping with the standards of the time. Most surviving examples have, like this one, been reduced in size due to changes in musical style.
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A Brothers Amati Violin, Cremona, c. 1624
To fully appreciate the exquisite instrument shown here, it is instructive to go back to the dawn of the Amati violin-building tradition, believed to be sometime around 1525.
Read moreA Violin by Antonio Stradivari: ex-Vieuxtemps, 1710
The reemergence of a long unseen Stradivari violin of the most desirable form and in superb condition, as is the Viextemps instrument featured in this article, is a rare occurrence.
Read moreA Cello d’Amore by Leandro Bisiach, 1915
Leandro Bisiach was internationally recognized as one of the most influential violin makers and dealers of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Featured here is an unusual instrument he created in 1915, a “cello d’amore.”
Read moreTwo Violas by Zanetto and Peregrino, Early 16th Century
An air of mystery surrounds Zanetto and Peregrino, father-and-son makers from the very dawn of violin-family history whose surviving instruments are extremely rare today.
Read moreA J.B. Vuillaume Viola
The vast output from the Jean-Baptiste Vuillaume atelier is remarkable for its consistent quality. But Vuillaume violas as desirable as this one are rare.
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