Notable Sales: Lorenzo & Tomaso Carcassi
The brothers Lorenzo and Tomaso Carcassi were probably pupils of G.B. Gabrielli, who was the leading violin maker in Florence in the mid-18th century. As was the case in England at that time, the predominant influence among the Florentine makers was Jacob Stainer. This was possibly due to the ascendancy of the Austrian Habsburgs as Grand Dukes of Tuscany. The instruments of the brothers Carcassi successfully combine a sometimes exaggerated but elegant Stainer-esque f-hole (see the 1771 example) with an attractive and usually golden Italianate varnish (see the viola, circa 1770).
Although the brothers occasionally worked individually, the majority of their work bears their joint label.
(fl Florence, c1750–1780)
The brothers Lorenzo and Tomaso Carcassi were probably pupils of G.B. Gabrielli, who was the leading violin maker in Florence in the mid-18th century. As was the case in England at that time, the predominant influence among the Florentine makers was Jacob Stainer. This was possibly due to the ascendancy of the Austrian Habsburgs as Grand Dukes of Tuscany. The instruments of the brothers Carcassi successfully combine a sometimes exaggerated but elegant Stainer-esque f-hole (see the 1771 example) with an attractive and usually golden Italianate varnish (see the viola, circa 1770).
Although the brothers occasionally worked individually, the majority... Read more
03 February 2023 - Dilworth, John
In our final article exploring the instruments of Norman Rosenberg, we discover some more diverse areas of the collection, offering particular insight into less well-documented but no less intriguing makers and schools. Bartolomeo Calvarola, one of only a handful of... Read more
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