Giovanni Francesco Pressenda
Highest auction price
£205,000
Auction price history
Type | Details | Sold | Price |
---|---|---|---|
Violin | Mon 11th May 2015 | £37 | |
Violin | 35.6 cm Turin, 1825 c. | Tue 1st November 2011 | £90,219 |
Violin | 35.2 cm 19th C. [Ascribed to] | Sat 1st October 2011 | £9,375 |
Violin | 35.5 cm 1830 c. [Attributed to] | Sat 1st October 2011 | £67,250 |
Viola | 39.4 cm Turin, 1833 | Mon 1st March 2010 | £79,250 |
Violin | 35.7 cm 1815-1820 c. [Or by one of his followers] | Thu 1st October 2009 | £9,000 |
Violin | 35.5 cm 19th C. [Ascribed to] | Thu 1st October 2009 | £31,513 |
Cello | 76.4 cm 1880 c. [Attributed to] | Fri 1st May 2009 | £8,540 |
Violin | 35.6 cm Italy [Attributed to] | Wed 1st October 2008 | £32,450 |
Violin | 35.6 cm Turin, 1834, with Provenance | Sat 1st March 2008 | £132,500 |
Violin | 35.5 cm Turin, 1827 | Mon 1st October 2007 | £90,500 |
Violin | 35.6 cm Turin, 1829 | Thu 1st March 2007 | £92,000 |
Violin | 35.5 cm [Ascribed to] | Thu 1st February 2007 | £31,200 |
Violin | 36.1 cm Mid-19th C. [Arrtibuted to] | Wed 1st November 2006 | £81,600 |
Violin | 35.5 cm [Ascribed to] | Sat 1st July 2006 | £19,200 |
Violin | 35.4 cm Turin, 1828 | Mon 1st May 2006 | £108,401 |
Violin | Turin, 1833 | Mon 1st November 2004 | £145,600 |
Violin | Italy [Attributed to] | Mon 1st November 2004 | £28,680 |
Violin | Turin, 1848 Exceptionally fine example | Mon 1st November 2004 | £106,050 |
Violin | Turin, 1843 | Sat 1st May 2004 | £57,344 |
Violin | 1825 | Thu 1st May 2003 | £112,250 |
Violin | 1832 | Fri 1st November 2002 | £113,750 |
Violin | 1832 | Fri 1st November 2002 | £138,650 |
Violin | 1841 | Sat 1st June 2002 | £149,650 |
Violin | 1827 | Sat 1st June 2002 | £141,413 |
Violin | 1828 | Fri 1st March 2002 | £102,750 |
Violin | 1832 | Thu 1st November 2001 | £120,000 |
Violin | 1831 | Thu 1st March 2001 | £177,500 |
Violin | 1835 c. (composite) | Mon 1st November 1999 | £40,000 |
Cello | 1854 | Sun 1st March 1998 | £205,000 |
Violin | 1836 | Tue 1st July 1997 | £84,000 |
Violin | 1825 | Fri 1st November 1996 | £89,500 |
Violin | 1832 | Fri 1st March 1996 | £128,000 |
Violin | 1837 | Fri 1st March 1996 | £97,750 |
Violin | 1833 | Wed 1st March 1995 | £124,700 |
Violin | 1831 | Wed 1st June 1994 | £161,000 |
Violin | 1839 | Sun 1st November 1992 | £82,500 |
Violin | 1833 | Sun 1st November 1992 | £74,800 |
Violin | 1835 | Fri 1st June 1990 | £36,300 |
Violin | 1837 | Fri 1st June 1990 | £60,500 |
Cello | 1845 | Wed 1st November 1989 | £105,600 |
Violin | 1834 | Wed 1st November 1989 | £66,000 |
Violin | 18-- | Wed 1st November 1989 | £27,500 |
Violin | 1847 | Wed 1st November 1989 | £71,500 |
Violin | 1831 | Wed 1st November 1989 | £66,000 |
Violin | 1827 | Tue 1st November 1988 | £77,000 |
Violin | 1846 | Sun 1st November 1987 | £42,900 |
Violin | 1829 | Wed 1st April 1987 | £56,100 |
Violin | 1828 | Sat 1st November 1986 | £19,250 |
Violin | 1835 | Thu 1st May 1986 | £38,500 |
Violin | 1829 | Mon 1st July 1985 | £33,000 |
Violin | 1840 | Fri 1st June 1984 | £28,519 |
Viola | 38.4 cm 1837 | Mon 1st March 1982 | £9,167 |
Biographies
John Dilworth
PRESSENDA, Giovanni Francesco Born 1777 Lequio-Berria, Alba, died 1854 Turin Italy. One of the finest makers of the post-classical Italian school. Initiated a return to a disciplined and highly finished style, very strongly influenced by Stradivari. His early training is still unclear. He encountered Lorenzo Storioni, either in Cremona or Turin c.1790 whilst still in his teens. Although active in Alba from 1814 and Carmagnola from 1817, he is presumed to have been at that time a violin player rather than a maker. Established in Turin from 1820. From at least 1832 had a workshop at 30 via d’Angennes. In this early period he won copper medal for two violins in the Turin exposition of 1829, shared with Alessandro D’Espine, and similar award for a violin and cello in 1832. In Turin would have come under the influence of D’Espine and Gaetano Guadagnini (II), both already active there. Subsequently won silver medals in 1838, 1844, and 1850. Teacher of P. Pacharel, G. Rocca and G. B. Rinaldi, his first biographer, and possibly had some influence on N. Bianchi. Giuseppe Rocca was associated with him from the beginning of his career in Turin, and they may well have first become acquainted in Alba, Rocca’s birthplace. Rocca was working independently in Turin by 1844. The violinist G. B. Polledro had a significant role in promoting Pressenda’s work, which was subsequently taken up by violinist Wilhelmj and Paganini, and the collector Luigi Tarisio. Thus although highly successful and acclaimed in his own lifetime, his known authenticated work dates only from his Turin period after 1820 when he was already 43 years old. It is highly sophisticated, and his accurate depiction of the Stradivari model is far more advanced than any other contemporary Italian maker, and better compared with the work of Pique and Lupot in Paris. Early work on the Amati model is reported, but, particularly with the assistance of Rocca, he concentrated on refining the Stradivari model and arching. Violas and cellos few in number. Fine materials with a predilection for one piece backs. Varnish from orange to intense thin red-brown, with a tendency towards craquelure. Scrolls generally marked with a strongly scribed centre line. Purfling of beech. Soundholes with strongly worked fluting around the lower circle and wing. A bust of the maker by Reduzzi was erected in Turin in 1912. Joannes Franciscus Pressenda q. Raphael / fecit Taurini anno Domini 1828 [Rinaldi]
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