Dolce Violins

Month: November 2021

Victor François Fétique (1872-1933)

Victor François Fétique enjoyed the best bow-making training his native Mirecourt had to offer, working for Charles Claude Husson, Sigisbert Maline, Émile Miquel, and Charles Nicolas Bazin. He moved to Paris in 1901 to work for Caressa & Français, where he refined his mature style inspired by his colleague, Claude Thomassin. In 1913, Fétique opened …

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Jean-Joseph Martin (1837-1910)

Born in the legendary violin-making town of Mirecourt, France, Jean-Joseph Martin dove into the local industry after his father’s premature death. He studied bow-making under Nicolas Maire before leaving to work for Jean Baptiste Vuillaume in Paris. With a characteristic drive, twenty-one-year-old Martin, who did not have enough money to travel by coach, walked the …

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Eugène Cuniot “Cuniot-Hury” (1861-1910)

Eugene Cuniot “Cuniot-Hury” Archetier Eugène Cuniot (1861-1910), better known as “Cuniot-Hury” after his marriage to the daughter of a famed piano maker, is a pivotal figure in France’s bow-making legacy. Born in Mirecourt to archetier Pierre Cuniot, Cuniot-Hury apprenticed under his father and took over the family firm after Cuniot père’s death in 1884. Cuniot-Hury’s …

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Eugène Nicolas Sartory (1871-1946)

Mirecourt-born archetier Eugène Nicolas Sartory (1871-1946) studied bow-making with his father before apprenticing under Charles Peccatte and Joseph Alfred Lamy père in Paris. Sartory’s early head design indicates that he may also have learned from Joseph Arthur Vigneron, who was his relative by marriage. Lamy’s influence on the young artisan is particularly apparent, but Sartory …

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