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Another string to the bow
Country Life UK
|October 02,2024
For British luthier Roger Hansell, a chance teenage encounter led to a lifetime devoted to making the perfect violin, discovers Harry Pearson

AS a teenage student at London's Central School of Art and Design, Roger Hansell's life was changed by a chance encounter at the V&A Museum. 'I was looking around at the paintings and sculptures when I came upon a 1699 violin by Antoni Stradivari. I was transfixed,' he recalls. 'It was so organic and so totally itself. I loved the work of J. M. W. Turnerthe luminosity he created by the layering of paint. I saw the same thing in the Stradivari, the way the multiple layers of varnish interacted with the natural tones of the wood. It was scintillating and, right away, I wanted to find out how it was achieved.' Mr Hansell grew up on a farm in Swainby, North Yorkshire. He had spent his boyhood carving stone heads-'most of them fell apart,' he laughs and tinkering in the farm's workshops. After his experience at the V&A, he cycled around the specialist shops of London acquiring materials. Disappearing into his flat, he emerged a few weeks later with his first violin. Mr Hansell modestly dismisses the idea that, for someone with no formal training in carpentry, this was an amazing feat. 'In woodworking terms, it is not all that complicated.
It is easy to make a violin,' he believes. 'What is hard is to make a good one. Everything in life is simple, unless you have high standards.' This man's standards were very high indeed.

This story is from the October 02,2024 edition of Country Life UK.
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