Matteo Goffriller
Violin maker
(c. 1659 – 1742)
Considered to be the father of the Venetian school, Matteo Goffriller was born in the Alpine town of Bressanone close to Bolzano, where he may have been a student of Matthias Albani. After moving to Venice in 1685 to apprentice with Mathias Kaiser, he married Kaiser's daughter and by 1690 had inherited his teacher and father-in-law's business. Thereafter Goffriller enjoyed unrivaled dominance in the Venetian violin making trade, and had a marked influence on all of the prominent early 18th-century Venetian makers, including Domenico Montagnana, Santo Serafin, Carlo Tononi, Francesco Gobetti, and the younger Pietro Guarneri. The deep red varnish typical of Goffriller's work later became a salient attribute of the Venetian style. His cellos are his most favored works today, and are superior to all but those of Stradivari and Montagnana.
Price History
- The auction record for this maker is $620,800 in Apr 2005, for a cello.
- 66 auction price results.
View all auction prices for Matteo Goffriller
Goffriller family tree
Instruments
Viola -
1690
Venice
Viola -
1699
Venice
Viola -
1700
Venice
the 'Colonel Miklashersky, Lillian Fuchs'
Viola -
1705
Venice
Viola -
1708
Venice
Viola -
1710
Venice
the 'Funkhauser'
Viola -
1723
Venice
the 'Rothschild'
Viola -
1727
Venice
the 'Trampler'
Viola -
1737
Venice
Cello -
1690
Venice