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Pietro Giovanni Guarneri of Mantua

The eldest son of Andrea, Pietro Guarneri started to work for his father around 1670. In the early 1680s he left Cremona and settled in Mantua, and is commonly known as ‘Peter of Mantua’ to distinguish him from his nephew, ‘Peter of Venice’. Interestingly, the move to Mantua was probably influenced more by his career as a talented viol and violin player than by his skills as a violin maker. His playing responsibilities at the Court in Mantua occupied much of his time and this explains why only a relatively small number of his instruments survive. The majority of his output consists of violins, with no known violas and only one cello.

Pietro inherited the basics of the Amati tradition from his father, but he was more meticulous than Andrea, and his instruments display an elegance that is rare in the Guarneri family. The decorated violin dated 1685 shows a level of craftsmanship to rival the Amatis – the perfect symmetry of the scroll and f-holes justify Pietro’s position as the finest craftsman of the family. His later work displays a more masculine approach, as can be seen in the striking wood and fuller arch of the circa 1715 violin.

Unfortunately, none of his children followed in their father’s footsteps, although Pietro’s influence can be seen in the instruments of the later Mantuan makers Balestrieri and Camilli.

Pietro Giovanni Guarneri of Mantua

(b Cremona, 1655; d Mantua, 1720)

The eldest son of Andrea, Pietro Guarneri started to work for his father around 1670. In the early 1680s he left Cremona and settled in Mantua, and is commonly known as ‘Peter of Mantua’ to distinguish him from his nephew, ‘Peter of Venice’. Interestingly, the move to Mantua was probably influenced more by his career as a talented viol and violin player than by his skills as a violin maker. His playing responsibilities at the Court in Mantua occupied much of his time and this explains why only a relatively small number of his instruments survive. The majority of his... Read more

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Articles

Part IV: Violin Making Outside Cremona

19 April 2021 - Dilworth, John

The Evolution of Violin Making from 16th-20th Century Part IV

The Violin Makers of Mantua

02 March 2020 - Dilworth, John

Mantua in the 18th century was a far cry from the glories of its Gonzaga heyday. The seat of the great patron of renaissance music and art Isabella d’Este, the home of Virgil, of the Cremonese-born Monteverdi and the site... Read more

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