CHRISTIE'S TO OFFER A RANGE OF FINE MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS IN NOVEMBER FROM ITALIAN MASTERS TO CONTEMPORARY CLASSICS

  • NEW YORK, New York
  • /
  • November 07, 2012

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A GUITAR, G-50, THE EX-DOC WATSON KNOWN AS 'OL' HOSS', WARTRACE, TN, 1968, Estimate: $6,000-8,000
Christie's Images Ltd. 2012
A VIOLIN, PARMA, CIRCA 1760, GIOVANNI BAPTISTA GUADAGNINI, Estimate: $400,000 - 600,000
Christie's Images Ltd. 2012

New York - Christie's is pleased to announce the sale of Fine Musical Instruments on November 27.  The extensive sale will offer over 215 instruments ranging from a violin by Giovanni Battista Guadagnini, to a D-28 guitar by C.F. Martin and Company, and to more contemporary guitars, including ten guitars from the Dopyera Collection.

 

GUITARS

Commencing the auction, the sale offers a fine classical guitar from German born maker Hermann Hauser Sr., Reisbach, 1949, (estimate: $80,000-120,000); an Argentine classical guitar by Antonio Emilio Pascual Viudes, Buenos Aires, 1924 (estimate: $10,000-15,000); a Spanish classical guitar by José Ramirez, Madrid, 1905 (estimate: $5,000-8,000); and a Spanish classical guitar by Manuel De La Chica, Granada, 1966 (estimate: $5,000-8,000).

For the fretted guitar collector, the sale features a selection of over 30 American guitars from recognized makers such as Gallagher Guitar Co. and their G-50 guitar, the ex-Doc Watson known as ‘Ol’ Hoss’, Wartrace, TN, 1968, (estimate: $6,000-8,000).  This guitar was owned and used by eight time Grammy award winner Arthel Lane “Doc” Watson for the seminal recording sessions for the 1972 LP Will the Circle Be Unbroken.  Born in Deep Gap, North Carolina in 1923, Watson developed a heightened sense of hearing due to his blindness at infancy.  He became adept in many instruments and performed a multitude of musical genres from ragtime, bluegrass, gospel, rock and roll, popular song, and country music.  In his sixty years as a performer, Watson indelibly influenced generations of flat-picking and finger-picking guitarists.  In 1975, the guitar was placed with the Country Music Hall of Fame where it resided on exhibition until recently.

The sale also features ten guitars from the Dopyera Collection with estimates ranging from $200 to $7,000.  The resophonic guitar, also referred to as Nationals or Dobros, short for Dopyera Brothers was created by the Dopyera family in 1925.  They developed a new type of guitar with substantially more volume, such as the Resonator Guitar, Model 175 Deluxe Special, circa 1932-34 (estimate: $7,000-9,000) allowing it to compete with other modern day instruments.  The distinctive sound of these instruments is loud and crisp, making it a favorite in Bluegrass, Hawaiian, Gospel, Blues, Ragtime and Jazz. 

Additional highlights include a Gibson archtop guitar, L-5, Kalamazoo, Michigan, circa 1928-29 (estimate: $10,000-15,000); a D-28 guitar with its original case by C.F. Martin and Company, Nazareth, PA., 1941 (estimate: $35,000-55,000); and Fender’s electric guitar, Stratocaster, Fullerton, CA, 1957, being sold with a 1957 Fender Deluxe electric guitar amplifier (estimate: $14,000-26,000).

A RESONATOR GUITAR, MODEL 175 DELUXE SPECIAL, LOS ANGELES, CIRCA 1932-34, Drobos, Estimate: $7,000 - 9,000
Christie's Images Ltd. 2012

STRINGED INSTRUMENTS AND BOWS OF THE VIOLIN FAMILY

This season, Christie’s will offer a diverse selection from the violin family including violins, violas, cellos and bows.  One of the many highlights is a violin, circa 1760, created by Giovanni Baptista Guadagnini, Parma (estimate: $400,000-600,000).  Guadagnini is considered one of the finest violin makers of the 18th century and known as the last great classically trained violin maker of the Northern Italian School.  He developed a distinctive style based on his interpretations of the work by Antonio Stradivari and his violins are tonally superior to many of his contemporaries.

Christie’s is pleased to offer a violoncello ascribed to Joseph Rocca from the Estate of Jeanne Louise Bayless, circa 1853 (estimate: $50,000-70,000); a violin by Jean Baptiste Vuillaume, Paris, circa 1850, sold to benefit Loyola University Chicago; a viola by Jacob Stainer, Absam, circa 1663 (estimate: $200,000-300,000); and a violin from an Enrico Rocca violin, Genova, 1914 (estimate: $70,000-90,000) from notable violinist Chaim Storosum (1923- 2012).  Born in Cologne and a survivor of the occupation of France, Storosum founded the celebrated Collegium Musicum Judaicum in Amsterdam whose repertoire spanned the deep European-Judaic tradition from pre-Renaissance to the contemporary.  Chaim Storosum continued to play the violin until his death in 2012.

This season will also feature an impressive selection of bows, which span the 19th to 20th centuries.  Among the most noteworthy made by French bow maker Joseph Henry is a silver-mounted violin bow, circa 1855, (estimate: $70,000-90,000); a gold-mounted violoncello bow by Victor François Fétique, Paris, circa 1905, from the Estate of Jeanne Louise Bayless (estimate: $12,000-18,000); and a silver-mounted violin bow Eugène Nicolas Sartory, Paris, circa 1920 (estimate: $10,000-15,000).


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