Born at Rome, 1895. Pupil of Rossi. Maker to the San Cecilia Academy in that city, 1925. Resident at New York, 1931. Splendid Stradivarian designs, also one of his own. Yellowish orange or reddish brown oil varnish. Eulogised by Arrigo Serati and other virtuosi.
Fernando Sacconi
fece, Roma. Anno 1925
Branded “Fernando Sacconi, Roma” under tail-pin. Made 60 violins, 15 violas and 25 ’cellos up to year 1942. Won gold medal for Quartet, 1937.
Simone Fernando Sacconi
fece in New York anno 1947
(S.F.S. in circle)
Simone Fernando Sacconi
Violin maker
(1895 – 1974)
Simone Fernando Sacconi became an assistant in the workshop of Giuseppe Rossi while he was still a schoolboy, and had attracted his own clients by the age of 16. His tremendous skills as a copyist, particularly of Stradivari and Guarneri, were evident from a very young age.
In 1931 Sacconi moved from Rome to New York to work for Emil Hermann, where he developed a reputation as one of the finest restoration artists in the history of violin making. He continued to make some bows and instruments, which bear a varnish unsurpassed in its similarity to the work of classical makers.
Sacconi and his pupil Dario D’Attili left in 1951 to join the firm of Rembert Wurlitzer, where Sacconi continued his outstanding restoration and repair work, serving the great artists of his time. In addition to being a remarkable conservator of fine instruments, Sacconi was a gifted teacher who trained some of the finest American violin makers, repairers, and experts.
Sacconi eventually left Wurlitzer and spent his last years in Cremona researching and preparing the book that established him as the definitive expert on Stradivari’s working methods, The Secrets of Stradivari. Published in 1973, it remains a seminal work in the violin literature.