The Laub–Petschnikoff Stradivarius is an antique violin made by the Italian luthier Antonio Stradivari of Cremona (1644–1737), which is variously dated as from 1722 and 1727.
In the early 1960s, the Laub–Petschnikoff was acquired by Rembert Wurlitzer, a New York City dealer of fine string instruments. It was then purchased by Canadian philanthropist J. W. McConnell, who donated the instrument to the Montreal Symphony Orchestra in 1961 for use by the concertmaster, then Calvin Sieb. Sieb subsequently purchased the violin, which was estimated to be worth $500,000 in 1984. Yehudi Menuhin performed with it at a concert in Montreal in 1963, after his own violin broke a string.
Description
The back is maple and the front is spruce. Unusually, the maple used is thought to come from Turkey. In Fritz Meyer's Famous Violins and their Fates (1920), the violin is described as resembling the Sarasate "Lieblingsgeige", with an "ingratiating singing voice" and an "indescribably sweet inner quality" for which according to Meyer, it was globally known.
References
Further reading
- Antonio Stradivari 1727 ca. VL Laub, Petschnikoff
- Lili Schober Petschnikoff (1874–1957)
- Some High-Priced Violins The Violinist 2: 12 (1901)
- Stradivarius: The Ex-Laub Stradivarius, Calvin Sieb: The Development of a Violinist
