Joseph Alfred Lamy père
Bow maker
(1850 – 1919)
Joseph Alfred Lamy did his early apprenticeship in Mirecourt with Claude Charles Nicolas Husson, where the Vuillaume-Voirin school was probably the dominant influence. After an eight-year period in Château-Thierry, where Lamy formed a friendship with Joseph Voirin, he moved to Paris in 1876 to work for Voirin's older brother François Nicolas and became his assistant. After F.N. Voirin's death in 1885 Lamy opened his own shop, and in his early years there he relied heavily on a Vuillaume model that bears strong similarities in execution to Voirin's work. Lamy's work soon made a strong impression, and Eugène Sartory is known to have observed and absorbed the salient features of his style and workmanship.
Lamy's early and middle period work is of great delicacy and became increasingly robust as time went on. Unlike many of his contemporaries who sought supplementary work from the Parisian major violin workshops, Lamy remained steadfastly independent, though he relied more and more on the help of his sons Hippolyte Camille>/link_maker> and
Price History
- The auction record for this maker is $60,374 in Dec 2018, for a violin bow.
- 470 auction price results.
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