Article number: | VN~C109-12 |
Availability: | In stock |
This instrument is featured as part of our 2023 Contemporary American Makers Exhibition and Sale
The violin bears the facsimile label “Antonio Stradivarius Cremonenfis Anno 1721”. It also
bears on the treble side the label “Douglas C. Cox, Brattleboro, Vermont, 2021, #1030” and is
branded and initialed on the inside. It is a 300th Anniversary tribute after the “1721” violin of
Antonio Stradivari. It is built of well aged North American grown wood. The back is cut on
the quarter from two pieces of New England maple with medium-narrow flames descending
from the center joint. The ribs and neck are of maple similar to that of the back. The table is of
two pieces of Engelmann spruce from British Colombia with even medium narrow growth.
The varnish is of a red-brown color over a golden ground and is shaded and imitated. The
fittings are of ebony. The principal dimensions are:
Length: 356 mm
Upper Bout: 168 mm
Middle Bout: 112 mm
Lower Bout: 207 mm
Rib Height: 30-32 mm
String Length: 329 mm
"Douglas is a gentleman of deep integrity, full of love for his art and craft, and meticulous in husbanding his 'children' — the instruments he makes so well. I cannot recommend Doug Cox highly enough." -- Marylou Speaker Churchill (1945-2009)
Douglas Cox received his early training at the State Vocational School for Violin Making in Mittenwald, Germany in the late 1960's, then spent ten years as chief restorer and head of the repair department for the firm of J. Bradley Taylor, Inc. in Boston, servicing the finest instruments in the New England area. Since 1981, he has devoted himself to making professional concert-quality instruments at his studio in the hills outside Brattleboro, Vermont.
Doug combines the discipline and workmanship of his early training with years of study of fine old instruments. He continues to stretch his understanding of what makes violins work by building close copies of unusual and noteworthy master instruments. Doug offers a wider range of sizes within the violin and viola spectrums than most makers and delights in using American woods whenever possible.
Doug has built over 1000 instruments in his 52-year career. His instruments have received awards from the Violin Society of America and are played by artists around the world in a wide variety of musical settings.
“I absolutely love my Cox violin. It is a joy and a pleasure to play on. It feels and sounds like I am playing on a great old Italian violin.” -- Jaime Laredo
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