Misidentified for decades, the instrument of the famous
20th century cellist is still in the ownership of his widow. Tax
policy is why it was misidentified.
A rose
by any other name is still a rose.
The
same could be said of the 1733 Goffriller cello. The prized instrument of
legendary cellist Pablo Casals, it was hiding in plain sight, believed to be an
instrument from the violin shop
of violin maker Carlo Bergonzi of Cremona, Italy. Casals played it for 50 years
before he knew who actually made it, and today it lives on as “The Pablo,”
currently played by Israeli cellist Amit Peled.
So why
the confusion?
The
real maker of the cello that Casals played throughout the bulk of his career –
touring the capitals of Europe and the Americas, playing for royalty and the
American President John F. Kennedy (at the insistence of First Lady Jackie
Kennedy) – “actually labeled only a small percentage of the instruments [he
made] in order to avoid paying Venetian taxes,” says the Wikipedia page about
luthier Matteo Goffriller (1659-1742). Consequently, over time Goffriller’s
instruments were often misidentified, even to a world class player such as
Casals.
(This
isn’t the first instance where a tax policy affected the arts and design. The original
mansard roof, at a near vertical slope, reduced a tax liability for homeowners
of multi-story homes in 1798 France, with the roof subtracting the top floor
from the assessment. Queen Anne would similarly tax two-story homes in the
American colonies, which led to the New England colonial saltbox home that lent
them the appearance of a single story from the front elevation. Machinations by
homeowners with chimneys [eight fireplaces vented through just two chimneys]
and windows (reduce the number facing the street) similarly saved the owner on
their taxes.)
Casals
acquired the cello around 1917, which featured a facsimile of the Bergonzi
label, dated 1733. So the confusion is understandable, although dealers today
are held to a higher standard of determining makers and provenance. Carlo
Bergonzi was himself renowned for crafting fine
Italian cellos, violas and violins.
The
wood used in the instrument – maple for the back and side, the top from veined
spruce – is more characteristic of Venice luthiers, where Goffriller worked as
a member of that city’s guild. Cremonese luthiers used different woods from
different sources, including willow for internal blocks and linings. The
cello’s scroll is characterized by a low belly and forward thrust, a
characteristic of Goffriller’s other instruments.
Just as
remarkable is this instrument’s history and misidentification is the life of
Pablo Casals. Born in 1876 near Barcelona, he was in that city in 1937 as the
Spanish Civil War raged. He had to escape on a propeller plane to Prague just
as Barcelona was about to erupt into war; we can assume the few items he was able
to take with him would have been the cello. The catastrophic bombing of
Guernica in that conflict – the subject of one of Pablo Picasso’s most famous
paintings – along with other hardships on the Spanish people drove Casals to
raise money for the afflicted through music.
Casals
remained in exile until his death in 1973 at age 96, just two years short of
the death of dictator Generalissimo Franco.
His
first marriage existed mostly on paper for decades, but Casals divorced in 1957
to marry his student, the 20-year-old Marta Montañez y Martinez of Puerto Rico.
Today, Marta Casals Istomin is in her mid-80s, is a former president of the Manhattan
School of Music – and remains the owner of the Goffriller 1733 cello, which she
lends to Peled.
The
Goffriller cello is the rose Marta Casals Istomin could not part with.
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