Antonio Stradivari, Cremona, 1711, the 'Mara'
Cello: 40275
Bearing its original label.
Back: Two-piece of maple of medium grain ascending from right to left
Top: of wide-grain pine
Scroll: matches back
Ribs: matches back
Varnish: Orange-brown
Length of back: 75.6 cm
Upper bouts: 33.8 cm
Middle bouts: 22.6 cm
Lower bouts: 43.6 cm
There are 29 additional images in the archive which are not available publicly. Please contact us for more information.
Notes:
The name derives from Giovanni Mara, a second-rate cellist, whose main claim to fame was that he had the good fortune to marry Gertrude Elizabeth Schmöhling, one of the premier violinists at the turn of the century. Mara is generally described as a drunkard, and his wife divorced him in 1799.How Many Strads?, Doring, Bein & Fushi, Doring, Bein & Fushi, How Many Strads? (1999 edition), Chicago
Exhibited at the South Kensington Invesntions Exhibition in 1885.
Celebrated Violins and Their Owners, Eugene Polonaski, The Violin Times, May, 1897, London
"He [Baldovino] had parted with his old and mythical companion, the 'Mara' Stradivari of 1711 after selling it to Heinrich Schiff a few years before, but the cello's anecdotes went on. . . One in particular is that of the 1963 shipwreck in the river Rio De La Plata, involving the Trio De Trieste in hours of frozen waters, fires on board, lives lost (all the stuff in a second rate American movie) and then the miraculous recovery of the 'Mara' cello!"
Il Violincello Mainardi-Baldovino, Claude Lebet, Il Violoncello Mainardi-Baldovino
"Mara, the husband of the gifted Madame Mara, was a good player, but a drunken fellow, and behaved ill to his wife. He brought over a fine instrument of this maker, the tone of which was everything that could be desired, especially that of the first string, it was musical aud rich, with much power ; the figure or mottle of the wood was extremely beautiful. It is believed that Mr. Crossdill purchased this instrument from Mara, and that he sold it at the beginning of the present century to General Bosville, afterwards Lord Macdonald. His son disposed of it to Mr. Lucas, who played on it for some time at the Italian Opera, where he succeeded Lindley as principal violoncellist, and subsequently parted with it to Mr. John Whitmore Isaac, of Worcester."
The History of the Violin and Other Instruments Played On With the Bow From the Remotest Times to the Present, William Sandys and Simon Andrew Forster, The History of the Violin and Other Instruments Played On With the Bow From the Remotest Times to the Present, London
"Photographs of the parts of this instrument, which became severely damages as a result of being immersed in water, due to the sinking of the ship off the river Plate on which Mr. Baldovino was travelling. The instrument was subsquently restored by us at a cost of £1000."
W. E. Hill & Sons Photographic Archive, W. E. Hill & Sons Photographic Archive
Provenance
Giovanni Mara | |
Sold by John & Arthur Beare | |
Charles Lucas | |
until 1808 | John Crosdill |
in 1808 | John Betts |
1808-1810 | William Champion |
from 1810 | Lord MacDonald |
until 1860 | Miss Miriam Lucas |
from 1860 | John Whitmore Isaac |
in 1885 | G. Swinton Isaac |
until 1887 | W. E. Hill & Sons |
1887-1902 | Signor Alessandro Pezze |
1902-1908 | H. J. Gardner |
1908-1910 | W. E. Hill & Sons |
1910-1934 | Carlos A. Tornquist |
until 1934 | W. E. Hill & Sons |
from 1934 | Murray Lees |
in 1950 | Anthony Pini |
1953-1954 | W. E. Hill & Sons |
from 1954 | Amedeo Baldovino |
from 1996 | Anonymous |
in 2014 | Current owner |
Known players
Amedeo Baldovino, Christian Poltéra, Giovanni Mara, Heinrich Schiff, John Crosdill
Certificates & Documents
- Certificate: W. E. Hill & Sons, London States that the instrument is original and in a perfect state of preservation.
Cozio holds copies of many certificates and other documents, some of which are available to view on request. Please contact us if you wish to view a particular document. (Note that we do not always have permission to share documents.)
References
- Antonio Stradivari and His Instruments, 1961
- Antonio Stradivari: His Life & Work (1644-1737), W. Henry, Arthur F. & Alfred E. Hill, William E. Hill & Sons, London, 1902
- Antonius Stradivarius (Volumes I-IV), Jost Thöne, Jan Röhrmann, Alessandra Barabaschi, Jost Thöne Verlag, Cologne, 2010 (illustrated)
- The Violin Times, May, 1897, Eugene Polonaski, edited by E. Polanski, London
- How Many Strads? (1999 edition), Doring, Bein & Fushi, Bein & Fushi, Chicago, 1999
- Il Violoncello Mainardi-Baldovino, Claude Lebet, Edizioni dell'Ariete
- Intermusica - Inspiring Creativity
- Private Archives - 10072
- The History of the Violin and Other Instruments Played On With the Bow From the Remotest Times to the Present, William Sandys and Simon Andrew Forster, John Russell Smith, London
- The Strad, October 2017, Alessandra Barabaschi, Newsquest Specialist Media, London (illustrated)
- The Strad 2007 Calendar, Newsquest Specialist Media, London (illustrated)
- W. E. Hill & Sons Photographic Archive (illustrated)