Guarneri
Related Category: Music: Theory, Forms, and Instruments: Biographies
(gwärnĕ´rē) or
Guarnerius(gwärnĕr´ēəs), family of violinmakers of Cremona, Italy. The first craftsman of the family was
Andrea Guarneri, c.16261698, a pupil of Niccolò
Amati. He designed and built his instruments in the Amati fashion. Andrea's two sons, who were his pupils, surpassed him in his work. They were
Pietro Giovanni Guarneri, 16551720, who worked in Mantua and made several innovations, and
Giuseppe Giovan Battista Guarneri, 1666c.1738, who made superb violins in an original style. The son of Giuseppe Guarneri,
Pietro Guarneri, 16951762, made his best violins in his later years, following his uncle's pattern for the most part. The greatest violinmaker of the family was
Giuseppe Guarneri, 16981744, grandnephew of Andrea, called del Gesù because he signed his labels with a cross and the letters IHS. He was second only to
Stradivari in the history of violinmaking. He followed the school of Brescia instead of the Amati in his designs. Giuseppe built varied models to achieve a superb tone so that his instruments are not uniform.
See W. H. Hill, The Violin-Makers of the Guarneri Family (1931).