Giovanni Lucchi
Giovanni Lucchi was an Italian bow maker noted for founding the first school of bow making in Italy.
Background
Giovanni Lucchi trained as a double bassist, graduating from the Conservatorio Statale di Musica "Gioachino Rossini" in Pesaro in 1963. He worked for several years as a musician and instructor, and in 1971, he began constructing and restoring bows. He went to Brienz, Switzerland to apprentice under S. Finkel.Career
In 1976, Lucchi founded a school for bowmaking in Cremona, Italy, where he taught courses in bow construction, maintenance and restoration, as well as style and design.In 1983, Lucchi invented the Lucchi Meter, a device used to measure the speed of sound in wood that has become a standard tool not only for bow makers. The LucchiMeter is used to give the right price to the pieces of tonewood.
Lucchi was active within the community of luthiers and bow makers, holding various posts among professional societies and writing and speaking often in journals and conferences relating to the art.
A Giovanni Lucchi violin bow was recently sold at auction for €12,100 on .
Pupils
Maestro Lucchi Giovanni had a lot pupils, many of whom later became significant artists in their own right, here a little partial list:Emilio Slaviero, Daniel Tobias Navea Vera, Pietro Cavalazzi, Giorgio Grisales, Francisco Gonzalez Espinoza, Octavio Aranda, Andreas Grütter, Llorenç Fenollosa, Zheng Quan, Arturo Moreno, Juliane Schanzenbach, Paolo Pamiro, Andrea Proietti, Arturo Ponce, Gastaldi Marco Maria, Ivan Delgado e Michalis Pantelides.
Professional activities
- Secretary, Italian Association of Violin and Bow Makers
- President, Violin and Bow Makers of the Artisans' Association of the Province of Cremona
- Representative for Cremona to the Triennale Assembly
- Member of the European Association of Master Violin and Bow Makers
Publications
- Lucchi, Giovanni. The Bow, Multimedia CD-ROM
Reputation
Lucchi Foundation
The “Fondazione Lucchi” comes from the desire to continue Bowmaker Maestro Giovanni Lucchi work. Those close to him know he loved to share the culture of handcraft and his discoveries.One of his greatest projects was to create a foundation that would promote research, material discovery, and knowledge of the violin bow.
We’ve continued the foundation in his memory because to share his cultural legacy with the world.